Neodiasta van Achterberg, 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/10A95EB9-7224-4CF3-A65A-A96C9E69A499

taxon LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:act:10A95EB9-7224-4CF3-A65A-A96C9E69A499

treatment provided by

ZooKeys by Pensoft

scientific name

Neodiasta van Achterberg
status

gen. nov.

Neodiasta van Achterberg gen. nov. Figs 79-91 View Figures 79–91

Type species.

Phasmidiasta ecuadorensis Fischer, 2006.

Diagnosis.

Third antennal segment shorter than fourth segment and slender (Fig. 91 View Figures 79–91 ); mandible strongly widened apically, with minute ventral lobe and no oblique ventral carina, with 3 large teeth, middle tooth much smaller than upper tooth, upper tooth without dorso-apical protuberance, ventral margin straight but near third lobe-shaped tooth with minute lobe (Figs 85 View Figures 79–91 , 90 View Figures 79–91 ); clypeus obtuse ventrally, semicircular (Figs 85 View Figures 79–91 , 87 View Figures 79–91 , 90 View Figures 79–91 ); face normally convex and not protruding medially (Figs 87 View Figures 79–91 , 89 View Figures 79–91 ); pronope deep and medium-sized (Fig. 88 View Figures 79–91 ); precoxal sulcus wide and coarsely crenulate medially; vein 2-SR of fore wing straight posteriorly (Fig. 79 View Figures 79–91 ); vein r of fore wing issued behind medially from pterostigma and pterostigma parallel-sided to narrow elliptical (Fig. 79 View Figures 79–91 ); vein CU1b of fore wing distinctly shorter than vein 3-CU1 and vein CU1a distinctly below level of vein CU1 (Fig. 79 View Figures 79–91 ); first subdiscal cell of fore wing closed distally and moderately wide (Fig. 79 View Figures 79–91 ); vein M+CU of hind wing distinctly shorter than vein 1-M (Fig. 80 View Figures 79–91 ); first metasomal tergite with distinct dorsope; second tergite distinctly striate basally (Fig. 83 View Figures 79–91 ) and third tergite smooth; shape of ovipositor and length of ovipositor sheath unknown (only ♂ known).

Distribution.

Neotropical (one species).

Notes.

The biology of the only known specimen (the male holotype from Ecuador) is unknown. The types species does not fit in Phasmidiasta because the precoxal sulcus is present and coarsely crenulate (absent in Phasmidiasta ), the face is medially not protruding (distinctly protruding in Phasmidiasta ), vein SR1 of the fore wing about as long as vein 3-SR (about 4 × as long in Phasmidiasta ), vein M+CU of the hind wing is distinctly shorter than vein 1-M (longer than vein 1-M in Phasmidiasta ), mandible without oblique carina connected to third tooth (present in Phasmidiasta ), and the pterostigma is parallel-sided to narrowly elliptical (moderately widely elliptical to triangular in Phasmidiasta ).

Etymology.

Name derived from a combination of “neo” (Greek for “new”) and the generic name Phasmidiasta , because it occurs in the Neotropical region and was formerly included in Phasmidiasta . Gender: feminine.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Hymenoptera

Family

Braconidae