24. Deinodryinus sabaeus Olmi & van Harten, 2006
(Figs 88E, 96B)
Deinodryinus sabaeus Olmi & van Harten 2006: 314; Guglielmino & Olmi 2015: 252.
Description. ♂. Fully winged; body length 1.1–2.4 mm. Head black, except mandible testaceous; antenna brown, except scape and pedicel testaceous; mesosoma and metasoma black; legs brown, except tarsi, protibia and stalk of profemur testaceous. Antenna filiform, with setae longer than breadth of antennomeres; antennomeres in following proportions: 7:4.5:4.5:4.5:4.5:4.5:4:4.5:4.5:6.5. Head shiny, slightly granulate and rugose or with irregular striae (in many specimens strongly granulate and rugose); vertex without two oblique keels from lateral ocelli to occipital carina; frontal line complete; occipital carina complete; POL = 7; OL = 3.5; OOL = 5; OPL = 2; TL = 2. Mesoscutum shiny, partly very slightly granulate and partly punctate and unsculptured among punctures (rarely mesoscutum completely unsculptured). Notauli thin, incomplete, reaching approximately 0.25–0.30 × length of mesoscutum (0.4 × in specimen from Kenya, 0.22121°N 37.11998°E). Mesoscutellum and metanotum shiny, unsculptured. Metapectal-propodeal disc (Fig. 96B) dull, reticulate rugose, with transverse posterior keel; propodeal declivity completely reticulate rugose, without longitudinal or transverse keels. Forewing hyaline, without dark transverse bands; distal part of 2r-rs&Rs vein much shorter than proximal part (1.5:7). Paramere (Fig. 88E) with one very large and long inner branch not showing mosaic pattern. Tibial spurs 1/1/2.
♀. Unknown.
Material examined. Types: ♂ holotype: YEMEN: Ar Rujum, 15°26’N 43°40’E, 9.IV–5.VI.2001, MT, A. van Harten leg. (MOLC). Paratypes: YEMEN: same locality label as holotype , 13♂♂ (MOLC). Other material: KE- NYA: Rift Valley Prov., Lolldaiga Ranch, 0.22121°N 37.11998°E, 2061 m, 10–14.XII.2013, MT, in meadow near small dam, R. Copeland & J. Muriuki leg. , 1♂ (NMK) .
Hosts. Unknown.
Distribution. Kenya, Yemen.
Remarks: Deinodryinus sabaeus is similar to Anteon madagascolum (Benoit 1954), but with the inner branch of the paramere much longer and more transverse (Fig. 88E). The record from Madagascar reported by Azevedo et al. (2010) is incorrect: it should be referred to Anteon madagascolum .