Biosteres Foerster, 1862

Li, Xi-Ying, Achterberg, Cornelis van & Tan, Ji-Cai, 2013, Revision of the subfamily Opiinae (Hymenoptera, Braconidae) from Hunan (China), including thirty-six new species and two new genera, ZooKeys 268, pp. 1-186 : 28

publication ID

https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.268.4071

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/0CB95956-5912-0C8A-06A0-AFBD403C7E59

treatment provided by

ZooKeys by Pensoft

scientific name

Biosteres Foerster, 1862
status

 

Biosteres Foerster, 1862

Biosteres Foerster, 1862: 259; Fischer, 1972b: 485. Type species (by original designation): Bracon carbonarius Nees, 1834.

Rhinoplus Foerster, 1862: 258; Fischer 1972b: 540; Wharton 1988: 350 (synonymy). Type species (by original designation): Rhinoplus laevigatus Foerster, 1862 [examined].

Rhabdospilus Foerster, 1862: 259; Fischer 1972b: 485. Type species (by original designation): Opius placidus Haliday, 1837 [examined].

Zetetes Foerster, 1862: 258; Fischer 1972b: 486. Type species (by original designation): Zetetes ultor Foerster, 1862 [examined].

Stenospilus Foerster, 1862: 259. Type species (by original designation): Stenospilus vagator Foerster, 1862 [= Opius bicolor Wesmael, 1835; examined].

Opiellus Ashmead, 1900c: 368; Fischer 1972b: 486 (new name for Zetetus ). Type species (by implication): Zetetes ultor Foerster, 1862.

Celiestiella Cameron, 1903: 343; Fischer 1972b: 486. Type species (by monotypy): Celiestiella testaceipes Cameron, 1903 [examined].

Diagnosis.

Hypoclypeal depression absent or narrow, and medially ventral margin of clypeus near upper level of condyli of mandibles ("mouth closed"); clypeus comparatively sparsely and short setose, if rather long and dense then clypeus flattened; mandible with ventro-basal carina, rarely obsolescent or on a small protuberance (resembling a small tooth); epistomal suture present; if suture is shallow then basal half of vein M+CU1 of fore wing largely unsclerotized; vein 3-SR of fore wing 1.3 times vein 2-SR or less, if rarely 1.4-1.5 times then pronope very large or pterostigma triangular; mesosternum normal, much longer than fore coxa; hind coxae normal, rounded ventrally; second-fourth tarsal segments comparatively slender; telotarsus and arolium not enlarged; dorsope usually large and close to lateral margin of first tergite; hypopygium of female at most slightly incised.

Biology.

Parasitoids of Anthomyiidae and Scathophagidae .

Distribution.

Holarctic, Neotropical, Oriental, Australian.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Hymenoptera

Family

Braconidae