Phanuromyia tonsura Nesheim

Nesheim, Katherine C., Masner, Lubomir & Johnson, Norman F., 2017, The Phanuromyiagaleata species group (Hymenoptera, Platygastridae, Telenominae): shining a lantern into an unexplored corner of Neotropical diversity, ZooKeys 663, pp. 71-105 : 94-95

publication ID

https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.663.11554

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:B330445E-8AB6-4200-8D8E-547F7B77F66D

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/90880ED0-8CEA-4475-855D-D42583686F2E

taxon LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:act:90880ED0-8CEA-4475-855D-D42583686F2E

treatment provided by

ZooKeys by Pensoft

scientific name

Phanuromyia tonsura Nesheim
status

sp. n.

Phanuromyia tonsura Nesheim sp. n. Figures 80-85

Description.

Female body length: 1.32-1.77 mm (n=20).

Median keel on frons: absent. Sculpture of lower frons: with irregular rugosity medially. Shape of mandible: slender. Median tooth of mandible: diminished. Frons below median ocellus: with 2 rows of setiferous punctures.

Sculpture on posterior half of mesoscutum: coriaceous to rugulose, at most with fine irregular longitudinal sculpture. Sculpture of anterior half of mesoscutellum: uncertain, smooth. Thin median foliaceous lamella on propodeum: absent.

Color of coxae: bright yellow, concolorous with legs.

T1: flat, at most slightly swollen. Anterior margin of T2: with costae or foveolae throughout its width. T2 sculpture: with neither transverse series of small punctures nor scrobiculate lateral areas. Sculpture of T1: costate at sides, smooth medially. Posterior margin of T2: distinctly concave. Number of visible terga past T2: 2 or 3. Setation on T2: limited to at most 1 row of setae posteriorly and sparse setation laterally.

Diagnosis.

Phanuromyia tonsura can be recognized by the sculpture of T1, which is costate laterally and smooth medially.

Etymology.

The name tonsura is derived from the Latin word for a shearing and refers to the tonsure hairstyle often worn by monks, because this species has a smooth “bald” area in the middle of T1. This name is to be used as a noun in apposition.

Link to distribution map.

[http://hol.osu.edu/map-full.html?id=403728]

Material examined.

Holotype, female: ECUADOR: Sucumbíos Prov., Napo River, 270m, 00°30'S, 76°30'W, Sacha Lodge, 10. X– 21.X.1994, Malaise trap, P. Hibbs, OSUC550269 (deposited in CNCI). Paratypes: (33 females) BRAZIL: 1 female, OSUC149370 (CNCI). COLOMBIA: 1 female, OSUC149404 (CNCI). ECUADOR: 26 females, OSUC149386, 149414-149416, 164005, 240606, 549947, 550041-550045, 550047-550049, 550051-550061 (CNCI). PARAGUAY: 3 females, OSUC322900, 322902, 322904 (OSUC). PERU: 2 females, OSUC149402, 149418 (CNCI).

Comments.

This species most closely resembles P. hjalmr , but the two species can be easily distinguished by their T1 sculpture: P. tonsura has the medial portion of T1 smooth from its anterior to posterior margin, while P. hjalmr is sculptured across the entire anterior third of T1.