Meteorus ruficeps (Nees)

Stigenberg, Julia & Ronquist, Fredrik, 2011, Revision of the Western Palearctic Meteorini (Hymenoptera, Braconidae), with a molecular characterization of hidden Fennoscandian species diversity 3084, Zootaxa 3084 (1), pp. 1-95 : 68

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.3084.1.1

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03DE87D0-8641-FFCC-A7C5-FEEFFB32C1BC

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Meteorus ruficeps (Nees)
status

 

Meteorus ruficeps (Nees) View in CoL

Fig. 122 View FIGURES 80–133

Meteorus ruficeps Nees, 1834:39 View in CoL . Type material lost. Synonymized by Papp 1983:318.

Perilitus pallipes Wesmael. 1835:29 . Lectotype ♀, Belgium: coll. Wesmael (IRSNB, Brussels). Synonymized by Papp 1983:318.

Meteorus nigritarsis Ruthe, 1862:21 View in CoL . Holotype ♀, Germany: Ruthe coll. (BMNH, London), synonymized with pallipes by Huddleston, 1980:43 —examined.

Diagnosis: Meteorus ruficeps and M. ictericus are quite similar morphologically. The main differences between them involve the size of the ocelli and the convergence of the eyes. Meteorus ruficeps has converging eyes, the face is higher than broad, and the ocelli are slightly smaller (OOL=1.5–2.0). The eyes of M. ictericus are not so converging, the face is as wide as high, and the ocelli are larger (OOL=1.0–1.5).

Studied material: ~ 30 specimens.

Description: Size about 4–5mm. Antennal articles 26–31, all articles slightly longer than broad. Head strongly rounded behind eyes. Ocelli large, OOL=1.5–2 times OD. Eyes strongly convergent. Malar space short, about half basal breadth of mandible. Face with a slightly raised medial longitudinal area. Tentorial pits deep. Mandibles stout, moderately twisted. Precoxal sulcus foveolate. Propodeum rugose with usually only the medial transverse carina developed. Petiolar tergum stout with distinct dorsal pits and glymmae. Ovipositor 2.5–3.0 times length of petiolar tergum. Hind coxa smooth, punctate; tarsal claws with distinct basal lobe. Colour black, legs always yellow; head at least in part yellow. Male same as female except antennae longer, eyes not strongly convergent.

Distribution: Western Palearctic. Country records: Austria; Bulgaria; Czechoslovakia; France; Germany; Hungary; Japan, Latvia; Macedonia; Norway; Poland; Slovakia; Sweden; Switzerland; United Kingdom; Yugoslavia.

Biology: We found 11 specimens within the SMTP. They were caught from July to September, mostly in coniferous forests. M. ruficeps is primarily a parasitoid of Tortricidae (Lepidoptera) but it has also been recorded as attacking Gelechiidae , Geometridae , Noctuidae and Tineidae ( Huddleston 1980, Yu et al. 2005).

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Hymenoptera

Family

Braconidae

Genus

Meteorus

Loc

Meteorus ruficeps (Nees)

Stigenberg, Julia & Ronquist, Fredrik 2011
2011
Loc

Perilitus pallipes

Papp, J. 1983: 318
1983
Loc

Meteorus nigritarsis

Huddleston, T. 1980: 43
Ruthe, J. F. 1862: 21
1862
Loc

Meteorus ruficeps

Papp, J. 1983: 318
Nees von Esenbeck 1834: 39
1834
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