Parabobekoides van Achterberg & Tan, 2020

Zhang, Ruo-Nan, Achterberg, Cornelis van, Tian, Xiao-Xia & Tan, Jiang-Li, 2020, Review of the Bobekia - group (Braconidae, Alysiinae, Alysiini), with description of a new genus and a new subgenus, ZooKeys 926, pp. 25-51 : 25

publication ID

https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.926.47270

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:54572214-9175-41F1-83D1-9A8AD5F633E7

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/79C99F4A-C69C-4B45-97BF-FC1C800C3412

taxon LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:act:79C99F4A-C69C-4B45-97BF-FC1C800C3412

treatment provided by

ZooKeys by Pensoft

scientific name

Parabobekoides van Achterberg & Tan
status

subg. nov.

Subgenus Parabobekoides van Achterberg & Tan subg. nov.

Type species.

Separatatus (Parabobekoides) yinshani Zhang & van Achterberg, sp. nov. Gender: masculine.

Diagnosis.

Propodeal areola reduced anteriorly (Figs 8 View Figures 5–16 , 9 View Figures 5–16 , 21 View Figures 20–25 ); setose part of ovipositor sheath distinctly longer than metasoma and 0.6-0.7 × as long as fore wing (Fig. 1 View Figures 1–4 ); upper valve of ovipositor flattened apically (Fig. 2 View Figures 1–4 ). Superficially, the new subgenus is very similar to Bobekoides van Achterberg and shares the derived shape of the upper valve of the ovipositor, but differs by the semicircular clypeus (Fig. 12 View Figures 5–16 ; acute and triangular in Bobekoides ), vein r-m of the fore wing nearly straight and angle with vein 2-M about 90° (Figs 1 View Figures 1–4 , 5 View Figures 5–16 , 17 View Figures 17–19 , 20 View Figures 20–25 ; distinctly inclivous and angle distinctly less than 90° in Bobekoides ), the transverse head in dorsal view (Fig. 8 View Figures 5–16 ; more square in Bobekoides ), the basally widened and more or less differentiated vein 1-R1 (narrow and not differentiated in Bobekoides ), the distinct sexual dimorphism of the fore wing venation (Fig. 20 View Figures 20–25 ; absent in Bobekoides ), the posteriorly wide propodeal areola (Fig. 21 View Figures 20–25 ; narrow in Bobekoides ) and the mandible less massively enlarged dorsally, its dorsal tooth somewhat wider than second (= middle) tooth (Fig. 15 View Figures 5–16 ; strongly enlarged dorsally, dorsal tooth much wider than second tooth in Bobekoides ).

Distribution.

China (Hubei, Shaanxi).

Etymology.

“Para” is Greek for "beside, near, by" and the generic name Bobekoides , because it is similar to this genus.

Key to species of subgenus Parabobekoides , subg. nov.

Discussion

Zheng et al. (2013) reported Bobekoides sinicus Zheng, Chen & Yang, 2013 from Central China (Hubei). This was the first time that a species of Bobekoides van Achterberg, 1998 was reported from outside Africa. Zhu et al. (2017) included this species in the genus Separatatus Chen & Wu, 1994, because it has an obtuse clypeus as in the type species of Separatatus . In Bobekoides , the clypeus is acute and triangular (Fig. 43 View Figures 40–52 ).

In 2017 a series of a similar species was collected at Luonan (Qinling Mountains, Shaanxi, NW China) in which males have the venation modified (Figs 17 View Figures 17–19 , 20 View Figures 20–25 ) in comparison to females. The venation is also modified in the male of the type species of Hovalysia Granger, 1949, known only from the Afrotropical region, of which the female is unknown. Wharton (2002) reported the occurrence of Hovalysia in China (Taiwan), but the lack of females did not allow for a proper inclusion in the key by Zhu et al. (2017), and it was left out pending the availability female specimens. Fischer (1999) described Hovalysia cruciata from South Africa based on one female specimen, but he did not indicate the shape of the ovipositor. The series from Luonan include females with normal (= slender) veins 3-SR and 2-M, vein 2-SR about as long as vein 3-SR, with a modified upper valve of the ovipositor, and vein r 0.6 × width of pterostigma (Fig. 5 View Figures 5–16 ). The males have the basal part of vein 1-R1 wider than in females, veins 3-SR and 2-M widened, vein 2-SR distinctly shorter than vein 3-SR, and vein r about 0.7 × as wide as the pterostigma (Fig. 20 View Figures 20–25 ). Inclusion in Hovalysia is a possibility, but is problematic because the Chinese specimens have the first mandibular tooth wide, lobe-shaped, and strongly protuberant both dorsally and apically (rectangular, not protruding apically and hardly so dorsally in Hovalysia ); the males have a different pattern of widened veins (e.g., veins 1-SR, 1-M, and r are widened in Hovalysia and slender in Chinese males); and vein CU1b of the fore wing is shorter than vein 3-CU1 (as long as vein 3-CU1 in Hovalysia ).

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Hymenoptera

Family

Braconidae