Habrobracon hebetor Say, 1836

Gadallah, Neveen S., Edmardash, Yusuf A., Mansour, Amany N. & Imam, Ahmed I., 2023, Parasitoid wasps (Ichneumonoidea) collected from faba bean fields, Kharga Oasis, New Valley, Egypt, with new records and the description of a new species, Zootaxa 5389 (5), pp. 501-544 : 516

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.5389.5.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:45230245-48E8-4BEF-B381-4CB8FCB264C1

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.10421801

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03BA87BC-D771-FFE6-FF58-4364FEEF6B83

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Habrobracon hebetor Say, 1836
status

 

Habrobracon hebetor Say, 1836 View in CoL

Fig. 8B View FIGURE 8

Material examined: 1♀, Kharga Oasis (New Valley) [25°14’02.8”N 30°31’32.2”E], May, 2022, blue pan trap in V. faba intercropped with B. napus .

Diagnosis. Female body colour predominantly dark brown, with head orange except black in the following areas: most of lower face extending to between antennal bases and a smaller rounded marking in the middle of upper face, ocellar triangle, posterior margin of head; antenna entirely dark brown, with pale antennal bases; mesoscutum black, with indistinct orange notauli, orange laterally encircling humeral plate; metasoma entirely dark brown; legs dark brown with yellow to orange markings; ovipositor pale yellow, ovipositor sheath dark brown. Fore wing with pterostigma of fore wing entirely and uniformly pale brown.

Antenna slightly shorter than body, with 14 antennomeres; vertex with short, erect setae (when seen from lateral aspect), reaching ocellar triangle; fore wing 3-SR about as long as vein r; metasomal T 3-5 impunctate; ovipositor sheath 0.76× as long as hind tibia.

Distribution in the MENA: Algeria, Cyprus, Egypt, Iran, Iraq, Israel, Saudi Arabia, Tunisia, Turkey. It is a cosmopolitan species occurring in different parts of the world ( Yu et al. 2016).

Comments: A cosmopolitan species occurring in different parts of the world ( Yu et al. 2016). The polyphagous gregarious ectoparasitoid H. hebetor Say is recorded as being a parasitoid of several lepidopterous species of the families Depressariidae , Gelechiidae , Noctuidae , Nolidae , Oecophoridae , Papilionidae , Pieridae , Pyralidae , Tineidae , Tortricidae and Yponomeutidae ( Yu et al. 2016) . It is, like H. brevicornis , an important potential biocontrol agent attacking the larval stages of a wide range of lepidopterous insects, it has a short generation time with a tremendous reproductive ability ( van Achterberg & Polaszek 1996; Dweck & Gadallah 2008). In Egypt, it has been recorded as a parasitoid of some insect pests of cereal products ( Abdel-Rahman et al. 1977), as well as a parasitoid of the date moth Cadra calidella Guenée , and the locust bean moth Ectomyelois ceratoniae (Zeller) , pests of palm trees Phoenix dactilefera in Siwa Oasis (Western Desert, Egypt) ( Mesbah et al. 1998). It also attacks the stored product pests Cadra cautella (Walker) and Plodia interpunctella (Hübner) ( Khalafallah 2012) . In 2017, it was reported as being a parasitoid of the olive leaf moth Palpita unionalis Hübner , a serious pest of olives as well as the greater wax moth, Galleria mellonella in Egypt ( Mansour & Saber 2017); and as a powerful biocontrol agent assaulting the fourth and fifth instars of the wax moth Gallaria mellonella (Linnaeus) ( Awadallah et al. 1985; Adly & Marzouk 2019; Abou El-Ela et al. 2021).

In the present study, H. hebetor is a first record in association with faba beans intercropped with Canola ( Brassica napus ).

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Hymenoptera

Family

Braconidae

Genus

Habrobracon

GBIF Dataset (for parent article) Darwin Core Archive (for parent article) View in SIBiLS Plain XML RDF