Siricinae, Billberg, 1820

Archibald, S. B. & Rasnitsyn, A. P., 2022, The early Eocene Eourocerus anguliterreus gen. et sp. nov. (Hymenoptera, Siricidae) from Republic, Washington, Zootaxa 5105 (2), pp. 289-295 : 293

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.5105.2.8

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:B04FE935-8E7E-49F4-B090-42890609B568

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6335901

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/1D2D8786-FFD7-F616-FF02-FEA4F7F0FB57

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Siricinae
status

 

Key to extant and extinct genera of Siricinae by forewing characters

1. Crossvein cu-a* antefurcal or slightly postfurcal (half or less its length distal to M+Cu)............................ 2

- Crossvein cu-a well postfurcal (more than half its length distal to M+Cu)........................................ 6

2(1). 2r-m lost, 3rm well developed.......................................................................... 3

- 2r-m and 3r-m both present (sometimes both weak or lost)................................................... 5

3(2). 2r-rs distal to 2m-cu, nearer end of long pterostigma........................................ Tremex Jurine, 1807 View in CoL

- 2r-rs placed more basally, near or basal to level of 2m-cu..................................................... 4

4(3). 2r-rs less than its length from pterostigmal end, membrane deeply infuscate basally and along anterior margin.......................................................................................... Afrotremex Pasteels, 1951

- 2r-rs more than its length from pterostigmal end, membrane pale, except darkened in anterior (especially mid-anterior) and apical parts of wing.............................................................. Eriotremex Benson, 1943

5(2). 1-M straight to gently curved........................................................... Xeris A. Costa, 1894

- 1-M strongly bent................................................................ Siricosoma Forsius, 1933

6(1). Cu1* distinct....................................................................... Sirex Linnaeus, 1758 View in CoL

- Cu1 absent or rudimentary............................................................................. 7

7(6). 1r-m long, joins R basal to Rs origin; cell 3rm shorter than high............................. Sirotremex Smith, 1988

- 1r-m short or absent, replaced with Rs+M................................................................. 8

8(7). 2r-m distal to 2m-cu.................................................... Xoanon Semenov-Tian-Shanskij, 1921

- 2r-m basal to 2m-cu.................................................................................. 9

9(8). 2r-m and 3r-m lost (former positions identifiable by slight bends of Rs and M); membrane with distinct transverse corrugation basal to 1-Rs, 1-M, cu-a, longitudinal corrugation distal to this............... Ypresiosirex Archibald & Rasnitsyn, 2016

- 2r-m and 3r-m present; wing membrane not transversally corrugated basally.................................... 10

10(9). 2r-rs distal to 2r-m.................................................................................. 11

- 2r-rs basal to 2r-m.................................................................................. 12

11(10). 1r-rs extremely short, almost its width long; Rs+M distinct although short....................... Teredon Norton, 1869

- 1r-rs distinct even though shorter than 2r-rs; Rs+M extremely short, almost its width long............................................................................................... Eoteredon Archibald, Aase & Nel, 2021

12(10). Length/width 3.2; apex angularly rounded; 1r-rs distinct although shorter than 2r-rs............ Urocerus Geoffroy, 1785

- length/width ca. 3.0; apex broadly rounded; 1r-rs extremely short, almost its width long........... Eourocerus gen. nov.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Hymenoptera

Family

Siricidae

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