Hymenoepimecis sooretama, Sobczak & Loffredo & Penteado-Dias & Gonzaga, 2009
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.1080/00222930903244010 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03C96D41-EA52-FFCB-77E3-FBFAFC72FD74 |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Hymenoepimecis sooretama |
status |
sp. nov. |
Hymenoepimecis sooretama sp. nov.
( Figure 2 View Figure 2 )
Type materials
Female holotype from Sooretama (19°06′S, 40°02′ W), State of Espírito Santo, Brazil, 28 August 2007, M.O. Gonzaga and J.F. Sobczak. coll., in DCBU GoogleMaps . Male paratype from the same locality, collectors and date, in DCBU GoogleMaps .
Additional material examined
Male from Parque Estadual Intervales (24°16′S, 48°25′W), Ribeirão Grande , State of São Paulo, Brazil, 19 February 2007 GoogleMaps .
Diagnosis
Hymenoepimecis sooretama sp. nov. shares with Hymenoepimecis atriceps (Cresson, 1865) the hyaline wings. Fore legs yellowish, middle legs yellowish with light brown tarsi, hind legs with coxae, trochanter and trocanthellus yellow, femur and tarsi black, tibia brown in the base, metasoma brown and yellow; it is dull ferruginous in H. atriceps . Hymenoepimecis sooretama has the ovipositor yellow, about half of the
length of the metasoma; H. atriceps has the ovipositor blackish, about one-third of the length of the metasoma.
Description
Female (holotype) ( Figure 2B View Figure 2 ). Body length 9.6 mm; fore wing length 6.9 mm; hind wing length 4.7 mm; antenna with 35 segments; lower face elongated 0.7 times as broad as high, smooth and bearing hairs, convex, sculptured, with fine scattered hairs near the basis of scapus and laterally, near the margin of eyes; head in dorsal view with gena long, posterior ocellus separated from eyes by 0.8 times its own maximum diameter; distance from tegula to head about 0.7 times the distance between the tegula and the hind margin of propodeum; scutellum in profile convex; mesopleuron smooth and polished, ventrally with fine and scattered hairs; propodeum smooth and polished with sparse hairs and lateral longitudinal carina present only posteriorly; submetapleural carina absent. Fore wing ( Figure 2C View Figure 2 ) cu-a interstitial to base of Rs + M, 2rs-m about 0.2 times as long as abscissa of M between 2 rs-m and 2 m-cu, vein 3 rs-m absent. Hind wing ( Figure 2C View Figure 2 ) with abscissa of Cu 1 equidistant between M and 1 A. Hind leg with tibia plus tarsus 0.6 times the length of the fore wing. Tergite I 1.5 times as long as posteriorly broad, presence of lateral carina only anteriorly, with one-third the length of the tergite I; sternite I ( Figure 2E View Figure 2 ) with a low rounded prominence posteriorly, tergite II 1.0 mm long, and tergites I–III smooth with scattered hairs sparse over the tergite, tergites IV–VI uniformly covered with hairs. Ovipositor 1.4 times as long as the hind tibia.
Head black, mandible except the tips and palpi white, with white spot at the radicula, adjacent to antennae. Antenna dark brown, mesosoma yellow. Fore- and middle legs yellowish; hind legs, with coxae, trochanter and trocanthelus and tibia anteriorly yellow, femur, tibia and tarsum blackish. Wings hyaline, pterostigma brown. Metasoma ( Figure 2D View Figure 2 ) with tergite I mostly yellow with a blackish apical margin; tergites II–V mostly brown with yellowish base and VI–VIII black. Sternite I smooth, pale yellow; II–VI white and coreaceous. Ovipositor brownish and ovipositor sheath blackish. Fore- and middle legs yellowish; hindlegs, with coxae, trochanter and trocanthelus and tibia anteriorly yellow, femur, tibia and tarsum blackish. Wings hyaline, pterostigma brown.
Cocoon shape and colour as in H. japi , 12 mm long and 4 mm maximum diameter.
Male. ( Figure 2A View Figure 2 ). Similar to female in structure and colour; however, different in body length: 8.8 mm; fore wing length: 6.0 mm; antenna with 32 segments; tergites II and III with more hairs than the female.
Etymology
The specific name is a noun in apposition taken from the type locality.
Natural history
The cocoons of H. sooretama sp. nov. were attached to the webs of M. porracea in the forest borders of an Atlantic Forest reserve. Manogea porracea builds horizontal dome-shaped webs with small mesh and lacking viscid threads. The parasitoid entered into the three-dimensional structure of the web by walking on the threads ( Figure 2G View Figure 2 ) until it reached a position close to the spider’s resting place. Our observation of the attacking behaviour, however, was interrupted at this point and we did not witness host immobilization or egg-laying behaviours. The larva remains attached to the dorsal surface of the spider’s abdomen ( Figure 2H View Figure 2 ), feeding on haemolymph. Webs with cocoons ( Figure 2I View Figure 2 ) are apparently similar to webs of unparasitized spiders, but the horizontal sheet used by the spider to capture prey was severely destroyed in the two webs containing cocoons that we found. In addition, the cocoons were not attached at the position usually occupied by the female spider ( Figure 3A,B View Figure 3 ) but in a lower position, in the hub of a dense tangle.
DCBU |
Universidade Federal de Sao Carlos |
No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.
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