Conganteon Benoit, 1951
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.3614.1.1 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:E75E5224-20F1-431C-A7CB-9EE0D3F25118 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6498354 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/8860B757-8E60-FFF0-48A7-5233FA39FD62 |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Conganteon Benoit, 1951 |
status |
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3. Genus Conganteon Benoit, 1951
Conganteon Benoit 1951c: 11 ; Olmi 1995a: 25; He & Xu 2002: 89.
Chelanteon Olmi 1984: 105 (synonymized by Olmi 1995a); type species: Chelanteon richardsi Olmi 1984 , by monotypy and original designation; Olmi 1995a: 25.
Type species. Conganteon vulcanicum Benoit, 1951 , by original designation.
Diagnosis. Female: fully winged ( Plate 13A, B View PLATE 13 ); occipital carina complete; mandible quadridentate, with one intermediate rudimentary tooth ( Plate 3E View PLATE 3 ); antenna without rhinaria; palpal formula 5/3 or 6/3; pronotal tubercles present; fore wing with two cells enclosed by pigmented veins (costal and median) ( Plate 13A, B View PLATE 13 ); fore wing with stigmal vein and pterostigma ( Plate 13A, B View PLATE 13 ); distal part of stigmal vein longer than proximal part ( Plates 12B View PLATE 12 , 13A, B View PLATE 13 ); protarsus chelate ( Plate 13A, B View PLATE 13 ); chela with a rudimentary claw ( Plates 13C View PLATE 13 , 14A View PLATE 14 ); tibial spurs 1/1/2. Male: fully winged ( Plate 12E View PLATE 12 ); occipital carina complete; mandible quadridentate, with one intermediate rudimentary tooth ( Plate 3E View PLATE 3 ); palpal formula 5/3 or 6/3; fore wing with two cells enclosed by pigmented veins (costal and median) ( Plate 12E View PLATE 12 ); fore wing with stigmal vein and pterostigma ( Plate 12E View PLATE 12 ); distal part of stigmal vein longer than proximal part ( Plate 12E View PLATE 12 ); tibial spurs 1/1/2.
Distribution. Present in the Afrotropical and Oriental regions. Present at Oriental border of the Palaearctic ( Nepal).
Hosts. Unknown.
World species. Eleven species are known, four in the Oriental region.
Key to the species
Females
1. Enlarged claw with one subapical tooth ( Plate 13C View PLATE 13 )........................................... C. richardsi (Olmi)
- Enlarged claw without subapical tooth ( Plates 12A, C View PLATE 12 , 14A View PLATE 14 )................................................... 2
2. Antennal segment 3 as long as segment 1.................................................... C. nepalense Olmi
- Antennal segment 3 more than 1.5 times as long as segment 1.................................................. 3
3. Head completely reticulate rugose.......................................................... C. gigas Xu & He
- Head partly reticulate rugose and partly punctate and without sculpture among punctures; occasionally not rugose area very small................................................................................ C. taiwanense Olmi
Males (unknown in C. gigas Xu & He and C. richardsi (Olmi))
1. Head and scutum completely reticulate rugose................................................ C. nepalense Olmi
- Head and scutum at least partly smooth, punctate, unsculptured among punctures, not rugose.......... C. taiwanense Olmi
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.
Kingdom |
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Order |
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SuperFamily |
Chrysidoidea |
Family |
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SubFamily |
Conganteoninae |
Conganteon Benoit, 1951
Xu, Zaifu, Olmi, Massimo & He, Junhua 2013 |
Chelanteon
Olmi, M. 1995: 25 |
Olmi, M. 1984: 105 |
Conganteon
He, J. & Xu, Z. 2002: 89 |
Olmi, M. 1995: 25 |
Benoit 1951: 11 |