Asaphes Walker, 1834

Li, Qin, Zhang, Tong-You, Gibson, Gary A. P., Shan, Shi-Lei & Xiao, Hui, 2024, Review of Asaphes Walker, 1834 (Hymenoptera, Chalcidoidea, Asaphesinae) from Xinjiang, China, ZooKeys 1214, pp. 35-57 : 35-57

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.3897/zookeys.1214.127982

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:AA48BBD0-EC05-4E33-BDE2-FC79A0897E80

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.13871793

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/AEA9E9AB-2504-5FCA-A521-6433939D9786

treatment provided by

ZooKeys by Pensoft

scientific name

Asaphes Walker, 1834
status

 

Asaphes Walker, 1834 View in CoL

Asaphes Walker, 1834: 151. Type species: Asaphes vulgaris Walker; by monotypy. View in CoL

Isocratus Förster, 1856: 53, 58. Unnecessary replacement name according to Gahan and Fagan 1923: 18; incorrectly considered as preoccupied by Asaphus Brongniart. View in CoL

Parectroma Brèthes, 1913: 91. Type species: Parectroma hubrichi Brèthes by monotypy. Synonymized by De Santis 1960: 113. View in CoL

Diagnosis.

Asaphes can be recognized by the following features: head with horseshoe-like occipital carina (Figs 1 C View Figure 1 , 2 C View Figure 2 ) and with genal carina; antenna 14 - segmented including one or two anelli (basal flagellomeres without mps), seven or six funiculars (with mps) and three distinct clavomeres plus tiny apical fourth clavomere (terminal button); torulus distinctly below midline of head near lower margin of eyes, with upper margin slightly above (Figs 1 D View Figure 1 , 4 B View Figure 4 ) to distinctly below lower ocular line; left mandible bidentate and right mandible tridentate; pronotum transverse-quadrangular, ~ 1 / 2 as long as mesoscutum and rounded to abruptly angled to neck but without marginal rim (Fig. 1 A, B View Figure 1 ); mesoscutum with compete notauli (Figs 1 B View Figure 1 , 2 A View Figure 2 , 3 F View Figure 3 ); marginal vein subequal in length or shorter than stigmal vein (Figs 1 F View Figure 1 , 2 F View Figure 2 , 3 G View Figure 3 , 4 G View Figure 4 ); petiole tubular, divided into dorsal and ventral parts by lateral sulcus and with dorsal surface strongly sculptured, reticulate and / or with irregular longitudinal ribs (Figs 1 E View Figure 1 , 2 E View Figure 2 ); gaster strongly sclerotized, non-collapsing (Figs 1 A, B, I View Figure 1 , 2 E View Figure 2 , 3 A, H, K View Figure 3 ).

Comments.

Graham (1990: 200) incorrectly listed Notopodion Dahlbom, 1857 as a junior synonym of Asaphes , which was followed by Gibson and Vikberg (1998) and Xiao and Huang (2000); rather, Notopodion is a synonym of Podagrion Spinola, 1811 ( Torymidae ) ( Noyes 2019). Gibson and Vikberg (1998) provide a more comprehensive diagnosis of the genus as well as a subfamily diagnosis as then recognized, which was modified by Burks and Heraty (2020) and Burks et al. (2022). Burks et al (2022) considered the antenna of Asaphenesinae to be 14 - segmented, including a small, terminal, fourth clavomere. While we follow their interpretation, because of its size the terminal clavomere, or “ terminal button ”, is inconspicuous and the antenna superficially appears to be 13 - segmetned with three distinct clavomeres (e. g., Fig. 1 G, H View Figure 1 ). Most Asaphes species also have two basal flagellomeres without mps and six funiculars with mps, though the antenna of A. umbilcatus has only a single strongly transverse anellus and seven funiculars with mps (Xiao and Huang: fig. 6). Narendran and van Harten (2007) described the antennal formula of A. ecarinatus as 1: 1: 3: 7: 3 (i. e., 15 - segmented), but their line drawing illustration of the flagellum appears to show a single basal flagellomere without mps, six funiculars with mps, and three clavomeres (i. e., 12 - segmented). We did not examine type material to clarify these inconsistencies, but almost certainly the described antennal formula is incorrect, and the basal flagellomere likely is so strongly transverse that it is not clearly illustrated in the line drawing so that the antennal formula likely is 1: 1: 2: 6: 3, excluding the terminal button. The number of basal flagellomeres lacking mps requires close examination because even though Xiao and Huang (2000) key both A. suspensus and A. vulgaris as having “ at most F 1 without sensilla ”, the flagellum of both species have two anelli, i. e., lacking mps ( Gibson and Vikberg 1998 figs 28, 30). As such, the number of basal flagellomeres without mps for the new species described by Xiao and Huang (2000) requires confirmation, including A. globularis , which has the basal four flagellomeres so strongly transverse as to possibly lack mps ( Xiao and Huang 2000: fig. 16).

Asaphes can be differentiated from other genera classified in Pteromalidae prior to Burks et al. (2022) using such keys as Graham (1969), Bouček and Rasplus (1991), Bouček and Heydon (1997), Xiao and Huang (2000), or Huang and Xiao (2005).

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Hymenoptera

Family

Pteromalidae

Loc

Asaphes Walker, 1834

Li, Qin, Zhang, Tong-You, Gibson, Gary A. P., Shan, Shi-Lei & Xiao, Hui 2024
2024
Loc

Parectroma Brèthes, 1913: 91 . Type species: Parectroma hubrichi Brèthes by monotypy. Synonymized by De Santis 1960: 113 .

De Santis L 1960: 113
Brèthes J 1913: 91
1913
Loc

Isocratus Förster, 1856: 53 , 58. Unnecessary replacement name according to Gahan and Fagan 1923: 18 ; incorrectly considered as preoccupied by Asaphus Brongniart.

Gahan AB & Fagan MM 1923: 18
Förster A 1856: 53
1856
Loc

Asaphes

Walker F 1834: 151
1834