Echthroplexiella obscura (Hoffer, 1954)

Lotfalizadeh, Hossein, Karimpour, Younes, Delvare, Gérard & Rasplus, Jean-Yves, 2020, Chalcidoidea (Hymenoptera) obtained from common reed, Phragmites australis (Cav.) Trin. ex Steud. (Poaceae) in Iran with new records and descriptions of two new species, European Journal of Taxonomy 710, pp. 1-35 : 8

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5852/ejt.2020.710

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:E3A0F9FD-53DA-4716-8218-9EE898C6CBFF

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4332957

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03BF4C30-FFD6-763C-6247-FC0B15252A21

treatment provided by

Valdenar

scientific name

Echthroplexiella obscura (Hoffer, 1954)
status

 

Echthroplexiella obscura (Hoffer, 1954) View in CoL

Fig. 4 View Fig

Material examined

IRAN • 1 ♀; West-Azarbaijan Province ; Urmia, Kelïsä Kandï; 37º29′ N, 45º01′ E; 1600 m a.s.l.; Apr. 2017; Y. Karimpour leg.; ex Phragmites australis ; HMIM GoogleMaps .

Remarks

This species is distributed in the north and east of Europe ( Askew 1970; Kalina 1989; Trjapitzin 1989) and represents a new record from Iran. The biology of E. obscura is still unknown, but the species could be associated with a pseudococcid species on P. australis .

Some of the more important diagnostic characters of E. obscura are: body length of female 1.5 mm (range 1.2–1.6 mm; Trjapitzin 2006); body brownish-yellow to light brown with dark brown metasoma ( Fig. 4A View Fig ); scape much (4×) longer than wide, funicular segments wider than long, claval segments fused, obliquely truncate, shorter than the funiculus ( Fig. 4C View Fig ); notauli complete ( Fig. 4B View Fig ); brachypterous, forewing with 2 wide transverse dark bands, middle large band occupying their whole width, distal band broad, faintly fading away to the margin of the wing, hyaline band between the two bands very narrow; marginal vein 2× as long as broad, postmarginal vein as long as broad, stigma vein a little longer than broad; protruding part of ovipositor sheath longer than 1⁄5 of the length of metasoma ( Fig. 4A View Fig ).

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