Anisocyrta perdita Haliday, 2018
Figs 7–8
Alysia perdita Haliday, 1838: 241; Thomson 1895: 2298–2299.
Anisocyrta perdita; Marshall 1895: 368–369; Shenefelt 1974: 956; Belokobylskij 1998: 286–287, 2003: 357.
Material examined. 1 ♀ (ZJUH), China, Hebei, Mt. Xiaowutai, Jinhekou, 23.viii.2005, Zhang Hongying, No. 200609041.
Short redescription. Body brown (Fig. 7); body length of ♀ 2.9 mm, length of fore wing of ♀ 3.7 mm, antenna yellowish brown, incomplete, with 24 antennomeres remain (Fig. 8O); mandible yellowish, with fourth tooth distinctly visible (Fig. 8L); pronope shallow and small (Fig. 8I), side of pronotum (partly) granulate anteriorly (Fig. 8C); mesoscutum smooth, shiny and glabrous; notauli absent; medio-posterior depression rather long, elliptica (Fig. 8D); vein m-cu of fore wing slightly postfurcal, vein issued at base of pterostigma, vein 1-SR of fore wing 1.6 × vein 3-SR (Figs 8A–B); legs rather yellowish; length of first tergite of metasoma 1.1 × longer than apical width (Fig. 6F); length of ovipositor sheath 0.5 × as long as fore wing and 1.5 × the body (Fig. 6G).
Biology: Unknown.
Distribution. Austria, Canada, Bulgaria, Czech Republic, Finland, Germany, Italy, Mongolia, Netherlands, Norway, Poland, Russia, Slovenia, Sweden, Switzerland, United Kingdom, China (Hebei, Ningxia). Ningxia is a new record.