Lonchidia Thomson, 1862

Noort, Simon van, Buffington, Matthew L. & Forshage, Mattias, 2015, Afrotropical Cynipoidea (Hymenoptera), ZooKeys 493, pp. 1-176 : 122

publication ID

https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.493.6353

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:1FBFFA4C-A71F-495C-AD22-F2EB680FEF95

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/660BD4BB-3724-B36B-E4C2-637018518BB6

treatment provided by

ZooKeys by Pensoft

scientific name

Lonchidia Thomson, 1862
status

 

Taxon classification Animalia Hymenoptera Figitidae

Lonchidia Thomson, 1862

Remarks.

The only Afrotropical specimen seen so far is from South Africa and may be an accidental introduction. It corresponds to a form present in Europe, which is currently considered as belonging to Lonchidia clavicornis Thomson, but which differs from the type specimen in some minor respects. Further studies may possibly show that this is a separate, currently unnamed, species.

Diagnosis.

Small, rather slender, and more or less strongly pubescent figitines, easily recognised by the confluent scutellar foveae. Pubescence is dense in patches on the sides of the large metasomal tergite, as a collar on the pronotum, on the propodeum, and rather dense also on metapleura and metacoxae. The marginal cell of the forewing is characteristically short, and the antennae in females end with an enlarged apical flagellomere.

Distribution.

Mostly an Holarctic genus, here reported for the first time from the Afrotropical region. Afrotropical records: South Africa (here).

Biology.

No host records exist. Hosts are expected to be saprophagous Brachycera larvae.

Species richness.

Lonchidia clavicornis Thomson, 1862 (South Africa)

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Hymenoptera

Family

Figitidae