Euscelinus sarawacus Westwood, 1882
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.1080/00222933.2024.2314967 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.11142860 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/835E0A68-1706-FFA1-86AD-5575FE70FBDD |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Euscelinus sarawacus Westwood, 1882 |
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Euscelinus sarawacus Westwood, 1882 View in CoL
( Figures 5 View Figure 5 A-G, 6 A–E, 7A, B)
Euscelinus sarawacus Westwood, 1882, p. 26 View in CoL , sex not indicated.
Material examined. 1♀, 1♂.
Diagnosis. Female: Body length: 4.1 mm (excluding ovipositor).
Body dark brown to dark ferruginous ( Figure 5A, B View Figure 5 ), with some paler areas (see Figures 5D, E View Figure 5 , 6A, B View Figure 6 , 7A View Figure 7 ); legs as in Figure 6C View Figure 6 ; antenna pale brown, darkened towards apex ( Figure 5F View Figure 5 ). Forewing ( Figure 6D View Figure 6 ) with pterostigma dark brown, pale yellow at base; antenna shorter than body, 0.65× as long as body, slender, with all flagellomeres distinctly longer than wide, 27-segmented; scape relatively short and swollen, 1.6× as long as wide, distinctly shorter than F1, 0.58× as long as F1, F1 coarsely rugose along its ventral basal two-thirds, smooth dorsally; anterior surface of mesoscutum conspicuously elevated or raised above pronotum (subvertical) when seen in lateral view, smooth and shiny anteriorly and laterally, coarsely rugose medially to posterior margin; notauli present anteriorly, crenulate, shallow posteriorly; fore tibia with a single row of three or more short, oblique, dark spines on dorsal surface near to middle; metafemur robust, swollen, 2.2× as long as its maximum width, with nine unequal whitish sharp teeth ventrally, of which third is the longest ( Figure 6C View Figure 6 ); metasoma ( Figure 7A View Figure 7 ) oval, non-petiolate; T1 1.5× as long as apical width, coarsely rugose, with pale baso-lateral protrusion, with two longitudinal median carinae that are widely separated at basal fourth and narrowly separated in the reminder; T2 wider than long, 0.57× as long as wide, with basal area finely rugose, rest of T2 and remaining tergites nearly smooth and shiny; ovipositor long, 1.1× as long as metasoma, minutely serrated along its whole length, more distinct along the black area.
Male. Body length: 3.44 mm.
Distinctly slenderer than the female, and differs from female in the following: body smaller and paler ( Figure 5C View Figure 5 ), basal half of metatibia whitish; metasoma distinctly slender ( Figures 5C View Figure 5 , 7B View Figure 7 ); antenna 23-segmented ( Figure 5G View Figure 5 ); F1 slightly shorter than F2 ( Figure 5G View Figure 5 ); T1 1.64× as long as its apical width ( Figure 7B View Figure 7 ); T2 0.7× as long as wide ( Figure 7B View Figure 7 ); propodeal dorsal surface nearly smooth and shiny baso-laterally.
Distribution. Australia, India, Israel-Palestine, Malaysia, Myanmar, Pakistan, Philippines, Thailand, USA ( Yu et al. 2016; Ghahari et al. 2022), Syria (new record).
Host records. Recorded as a parasitoid of several coleopteran hosts of the family Bostrichidae : Amphicerus bimaculatus on Punica granatum L. ( Halperin 1986; Čapek 1992; present study), Dinederus minutus (Fabricius) on Bambusa sp. ( Poaceae ), Scobisia chevieri (Villa and Villa) on Ceratonia siliqua L. ( Fabaceae ), Sinoxylon ceratoniae (Linnaeus) on Dalbergia sisoo Roxb and Delonix regia RAF ( Fabaceae ), S. sexdentatus (Olivier) on Acacia sp. ( Fabaceae ) ( Halperin 1986; Čapek 1992). In addition to Heterobostrychus aequalis (Waterhouse) ( Beeson and Chatterjee 1935; Belokobylskij et al. 2004b), and Sinoxylon unidentatum (Fabricius) ( Beardsley 1961; Belokobylskij et al. 2004b). Based on Gupta and van Achterberg (2022), this species has been reared from Mangifera indica Linnaeus ( Anacardiaceae ) by Sharma (1983, as Euremeros mangifera Sharma).
Comments. Euscelinus sarawacus is a new record for the Syrian fauna, reared from Amphicerus bimaculatus attacking P. granatum . Characters of the Syrian specimens agree with almost all diagnosis of Australasian specimens mentioned in Belokobylskij et al. (2004b), except for the following: antennal F1 nearly straight, slightly longer than F1 ( Figure 5F View Figure 5 ) (curved, shorter than F 1 in the generic diagnosis); hind tibia without spines along its dorsal surface (with several thick spines along dorsal surface in the generic diagnosis); hind basitarsus about as long as following tarsomeres combined ( Figure 6C View Figure 6 ) (0.6× as long as following tarsomeres combined in the generic diagnosis); vein 1 m-cu more or less interstitial ( Figure 6D View Figure 6 ) (postfurcal in generic diagnosis); ovipositor slightly longer than metasoma ( Figure 7A View Figure 7 ) (shorter than metasoma in the generic diagnosis).
It also agrees with Čapek’s (1992) characters of the Israel specimens; however, it differs in the following: only protibia of the Syrian specimens with a row of short setae along its surface (all tibiae of Israel specimens with such row of spines); male antenna 23- segmented ( Figure 5G View Figure 5 ) (16–22-segmented in Israelian males); metasomal T 1 in male 1.64× as long as its apical width ( Figure 7B View Figure 7 ) (1.8× in Israel males). It also agrees with Figure 3 View Figure 3 ( Čapek 1992, p. 193), except for the absence of the row of spines along dorsal side of metatibia.
The Syrian male greatly resembles Figure 4 View Figure 4 of the Indian male ( Gupta and van Achterberg 2022, p. 581).
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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Euscelinus sarawacus Westwood, 1882
Saleh, Alaa T. & Gadallah, Neveen S. 2024 |
Euscelinus sarawacus
Westwood JO 1882: 26 |