Cotesia deliadis ( Bingham, 1906 )
publication ID |
https://doi.org/10.5852/ejt.2020.667 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:59113117-7A31-4969-BA24-4E8E45EBF24A |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5700534 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03EE8792-C40A-3824-D05D-FA7483C629DC |
treatment provided by |
Valdenar (2020-06-17 18:20:59, last updated by Guilherme 2024-12-05 17:17:56) |
scientific name |
Cotesia deliadis ( Bingham, 1906 ) |
status |
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Cotesia deliadis ( Bingham, 1906) View in CoL
Figs 2C View Fig , 15 View Fig
Apanteles deliadis Bingham, 1906: 125 (lectotype, ♀, OUMNH).
Apanteles deliadis – Wilkinson 1928: 99 (redescription).
Cotesia deliadis View in CoL – Austin & Dangerfield 1992: 21 (lectotype designation and transfer from Apanteles View in CoL s.l.).
Diagnosis
Cotesia deliadis can be separated from all other species of Cotesia currently described from Australia and Papua New Guinea by the following combination of characters: anteromesoscutum punctate; scutellar disk smooth with some shallow punctures associated with setae; centre of medial posterior band of the scutellum smooth; T1 mostly parallel sided; T3 dark with sparse setae only in posterior half; fore wing 2RS not creating a ‘stub’ at junction with r.
Material examined
Paralectotype
AUSTRALIA • 1 ♀; Queensland, Townsville ; “bred Jan.2.03 [2 Jan 1903] fr. larva Delias argenthona , F. & pres 1906 by F.P. Dodd ”; NHMUK .
Other material
AUSTRALIA • 4 ♀♀, 1 ♂; “Q” [Queensland], Townsville; 20 Aug. 1993; M.F. Braby leg.; reared from larva Delias argenthona on Dendrophthoe Mart. 1830 ; BOLD: AUMIC544 -19; ANIC 32 130300 • 2 ♀♀; Victoria ; St Arnaud; 2013; E. and J. Reid leg.; reared from larva of Delias aganippe ; BOLD: AUMIC033-18 , AUMIC039-18 ; WINC.
Redescription
Female (from paralectotype)
COLOUR. Head, antenna and mesosoma dark, T1–2 dark, rest of metasoma pale on non-sclerotised areas with dark sclerotised areas on dorsal surface, pale laterally, (fore-, mid-, hind coxa) dark, dark, dark; femora (fore-, mid-, hind femur) pale, pale, pale; tibiae (fore-, mid-, hind tibia) pale, pale, pale; tegula and humeral complex pale to light brown; pterostigma light brown; fore wing veins light brown.
BODY LENGTH. Head to apex of metasoma: 2.3 mm.
HEAD. Antenna slightly longer than body length; OOL/posterior ocellus diameter 1.9; POL/posterior ocellus diameter 2.4; antennal flagellomere 2 length/width 3.0; antennal flagellomere 14 length/width 2.9.
MESOSOMA. Anteromesoscutum punctate, punctures reasonably regular but denser along notauli lines compared to lateral areas and very centre; number of pits in scutoscutellar sulcus 9 or 10; scutellar disc mostly smooth with some shallow punctures associated with setae; maximum height of mesoscutellum lunules/maximum height of lateral face of mesoscutellum 0.5.
WINGS. Fore wing length 2.7 mm; length of veins r/2RS 1.3; length of veins 2RS/2M 1.3; length of veins 2M/(RS+M)b 0.9; pterostigma length/width 2.6.
LEGS. Hind tibia inner spur length/metabasitarsus length [couldn’t measure due to leg placement]> 0.5 ( Wilkinson 1928a).
PROPODEUM. Medial carina present, irregularly rugose and punctate, posterior third smooth and shiny with sparse carinae.
METASOMA. T1 length /T1 width at posterior margin 1.8; T1 generally parallel sided, very slightly narrowing at posterior corners, very smooth, some very shallow punctures in posterior half; T2 width at posterior margin / T2 length 2.6, the sclerotised area of T2 not well distinguished at lateral edges, curved at anterior margin, T2 mostly smooth, some irregular pits by anterior and lateral edges; T2 length / T3 length 0.7; T3 sculpture smooth and shiny; ovipositor sheaths length/hind tibial length 0.18.
Male (from M.F. Braby specimens)
As female, but with denser (still shallow) punctures on scutellar disc, T2 slightly longer in relation to posterior width, sclerotised area of T2 more sharply defined, closer in shape to subtriangular or hemispherical.
Distribution
Qld (type specimens, recorded material), Vic (material examined).
Host
Delias argenthona ( Pieridae Swainson, 1820 ) (record from type specimens and examined material), Delias aganippe (Donovan) (record from examined material – new host record for this species) gregarious.
Remarks
We examined and sequenced specimens reared from Delias aganippe in Victoria by E. and J. Reid, which are morphologically very similar to C. deliadis , but much darker in colouration. With a 145 bp COI barcode available for a specimen identified as C. deliadis and reared from D. argenthona from the type locality in Qld (BOLD: AUMIC544-19), which differs by only 1 bp from the sequences of the Victorian specimens (BIN BOLD:ADL3255, Fig. 1 View Fig ), we assign the Victorian specimens to C. deliadis . Darker colouration in conspecific specimens further south in Australia is common, and this therefore expands the distribution of C. deliadis . Correspondingly, we assign the full-length COI barcode from the Victorian specimens to C. deliadis .
We also note that the species C. deliadis strongly resembles Glyptapanteles deliasa Austin & Dangerfield (1992) which parasitises D. aganippe in South Australia, but we were unsuccessful in obtaining DNA from paratypes of this species for comparison and therefore do not treat G. deliasa here.
Austin A. D. & Dangerfield P. C. 1992. Synopsis of Australasian Microgastrinae (Hymenoptera: Braconidae), with a key to genera and description of new taxa. Invertebrate Systematics 6: 1 - 76. https: // doi. org / 10.1071 / IT 9920001
Bingham C. T. 1906. New species of Braconidae and Chalcididae from N. Queensland, bred by F. P. Dodd. Transactions of the Royal Entomological Society of London 44: 125 - 132.
Wilkinson D. S. 1928 a. A revision of the Indo-Australian species of the genus Apanteles (Hym. Bracon.). Part I. Bulletin of Entomological Research 19: 79 - 105.
Fig. 2. A. Cotesia ocellata sp. nov., T1 (SAMA 32-44404). B. Cotesia reidarum sp. nov., T1 (QM T246703). C. Cotesia deliadis (Bingham, 1906), T1 (paralectotype, NHMUK).
Fig. 15. A–D. Cotesia deliadis (Bingham, 1906), paralectotype (NHMUK). A. Fore wing. B. Metasoma in lateral view. C. Anteromesoscutum. D. Metasoma in dorsal view. E. C. deliadis from Victoria (WINC), with propodeum and T1–2 showing darker colouration.
Fig. 1. Map of Australia showing the collection locations of the seven newly described species of Cotesia as well as a Bayesian phylogeny of these species and the other Cotesia spp. known to occur in Australia with publically available COI data. Species listed in black are those treated in this study, whilst those in grey are not treated due to being represented by single specimens, or are BOLD sequences that fall outside the rest of that species clade and are therefore possible misidentifications. BOLD codes for these single specimens are given at the end of the label in the tree. Symbols on the map correspond to the symbols on the phylogeny. Bayesian posterior probability values of ± 95 are represented by *, whilst those of 90–94 inclusive are represented by °. The number of sequences in collapsed clades are given in brackets (n = x). Outgroups have been removed for simplicity.
No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.
Kingdom |
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Phylum |
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Class |
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Order |
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Family |
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SubFamily |
Microgastrinae |
Genus |
Cotesia deliadis ( Bingham, 1906 )
Fagan-Jeffries, Erinn P. & Austin, Andrew D. 2020 |
Apanteles deliadis
Bingham C. T. 1906: 125 |
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