Apteromutillini Brothers & Lelej, 2017

Brothers, Denis J. & Lelej, Arkady S., 2017, Phylogeny and higher classification of Mutillidae (Hymenoptera) based on morphological reanalyses, Journal of Hymenoptera Research 60, pp. 1-97 : 12

publication ID

https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/jhr.60.20091

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:9C85B640-1F1B-478D-ACE7-5AA899DE42FC

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/8CE3B67F-59AC-43DE-B8E4-7111B7E83428

taxon LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:act:8CE3B67F-59AC-43DE-B8E4-7111B7E83428

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Journal of Hymenoptera Research by Pensoft

scientific name

Apteromutillini Brothers & Lelej
status

trib. n.

Apteromutillini Brothers & Lelej trib. n.

Type genus.

Apteromutilla Ashmead, 1903. Although the terminals in this group were closely associated in most analyses (see above), and it has low resampling support here (GC = 19), it is not supported by any unique synapomorphies, but there are six unambiguously placed homoplasious synapomorphies for both additive and non-additive characters, the most significant being: 40.2, mesosomal form in females (also in rhopalomutillines and Protophotopsis s.s., and modified in Liotilla ); 110.2, pedicel distinctly longer than wide in males (also in Hindustanilla only); 131.1, humeral angle blunt in males (also in some scattered terminals, and carinate in some Liotilla ); 174.3, apterous without any trace of wings or tegula in males (also only in Hindustanilla and some Viereckia ); 219.1, gonostylus (paramere) short and narrow (also in ticoplines, some myrmosines and sphaeropthalmines, Dasylabroides and Dasylabris , and lamellate in Brachymutilla ). Of interest is that Brachymutilla and Liotilla are apparently the only Mutillidae to lack cerci in the males (Fig. 11 View Figure 11 , 216.1), a state found in our analyses also only in Sapyginae , and which is a unique and unambiguous synapomorphy in Mutillidae for those two genera here. The tribe is Afrotropical, with three genera; females and males are known for all genera.