Exploring insect biodiversity: the parasitic Hymenoptera, chiefly Chalcidoidea, associated with seeds of asphodels (Xanthorrhoeaceae), with the description of nine new species belonging to Eurytomidae and Torymidae
Delvare, G.
Escolà, A. Ribes
Stojanova, A. M.
Benoit, L.
Lecomte, J.
Askew, R. R.
Zootaxa
2019
2019-05-06
4597
1
1
90
Askew
Delvare & Escolà & Stojanova & Benoit & Lecomte & Askew
2019
[151,494,692,718]
Insecta
Eurytomidae
Bruchophagus
Animalia
Hymenoptera
26
27
Arthropoda
species
ribesi
sp. nov.
( Figs 11, 12A–L; Tab. 4, 5)
Typematerial. Holotype ♀: SPAIN, Lleida, Tunel de Viellanorth end, 1390 m, 42.67647°N 0.77150°E, ex fruits of A. albus delphinensis, collected 18.viii.2008, emerged 27.iv.2010( A. Ribes) (in BMNH). Allotype ♂, same data as holotype (in BMNH). Paratypes. 20 ♀ 21 ♂, same data as holotype except some with different emergence dates in 2010 ( 4 ♀ 5 ♂in BMNH, 2 ♀ 2 ♂in NMS, 2 ♀ 2 ♂in MNCN, 12 ♀ 12 ♂in RAPC). Othermaterial. FRANCE: Alpes- Maritimes, Saint-Dalmas-le-Selvage, GR 5-56 Bousieyas-point44a, N Combe Male, 1930–2000 m, 44.31833°N 6.85833°E, ex seeds of A. albus delphinensis, 20.vi.2012, adults emerged on 01–15.v.2013( G. Delvare) ( 1 ♀ 3 ♂, in GDPC); Aveyron, Lapanouse-de-Cernon, Causse Viel, 810 m, 43.98222°N 3.57417°E, collected on flowers of A. cerasiferus, 01.vi.2009( G. Delvare) (vouchers GDEL1636 ♀, GDEL1637 ♀& GDEL1638 ♀, in CIRAD; 1 ♀, in GDPC); same data but collected on 23.v.2011(vouchers GDEL1584 ♀, GDEL1585 ♀, GDEL1586 ♀& GDEL1587 ♀, in CIRAD; 1 ♀, in GDPC); Dordogne, La Douze, Forêt Domaniale de la Barade, 235 m, 44.87777 °N 0.86028°E, 14 & 19.vi.2011ex seeds of A. albus albus, 14.xi.2009( R.R. Askew) ( 60 ♀ 51 ♂, in RAPC), Hautes-Pyrénées, Gavarnie-Gèdre, Plateau de Saugué, 1615 m, 42.78555°N 0.00888°W, ex seeds of A. albus delphinensis, 10.vii.2009( R.R. Askew) ( 2 ♀ 2 ♂, in RAPC); Gavarnie-Gèdre, Vallée d'Ossoue, 1655 m, 42.75111°N 0.12166°W, 9.vii.2009, same asphodel and collector ( 10 ♀ 10 ♂, in RAPC; 2 ♀ 1 ♂, in GDPC); Hérault, Grabels, 07–13.iv.1989, sweeping herbaceous layer ( H. Tussac) ( 1 ♀, in GDPC); Pyrénées-Orientales, Banyuls-sur-Mer, E Col de la Créu, 240 m, 42.46278°N 3.14222°E, on flowers of A. ramosus, 27.iv.2014( J. Lecomte) ( 1 ♀, in GDPC); Vienne, Châtellerault, Aire de Chagnatson A 10, 131 m, 48.81778°N 0.54611°E7, ex seeds of A. a. albus, 14.xi.2009( R.R. Askew) ( 1 ♀ 2 ♂, in RAPC); SPAIN: Huesca, Fraga, 125 m, 41.41892°N 0.10911°E, ex seed of A. cerasiferus, 29.iii.2011, adult emerged 15.iv. 2011( A. Ribes) ( 1 ♀, in GDPC); Bielsa, Col de Larri, Val de Pineta, 1200 m, 42.64507°N 0.212893°E, ex seeds of A. a. delphinensis, 06.vii.2007( R.R. Askew) ( 15 ♀ 6 ♂, in RAPC). Lleida, Tunel de Viellanorth end, 18.viii.2008ex fruits A. a delphinensis, additional specimens reared with the typeseries ( A. Ribes) (vouchers GDEL1582 ♀& GDEL1583 ♂, in CIRAD; 2 ♀ 5 ♂, in GDPC; 79 ♀ 94 ♂in RAPC).
Etymology. This species is named for Antoni Ribes who made a very substantial contribution to this study before his death in December 2014. Condition of female holotype.Specimen complete, glued by right side to rectangular card.
Description of female holotype. Body length 3.6 mm(range in type series 3.2–3.6 mm). Body black, two poorly defined pale spots on anterior face of pronotum, pilosity whitish; legs black with only knees and a narrow stripe on anterior face of protibia brownish, tarsi uniformly infuscate; wings clear, venation brown, setation white ( Fig. 12I). Headin dorsal view rather more than 2× as broad as long, eyes separated by 1.8× their own height; POL 1.8× OOL and OOL 2.2× long diameter of posterior ocellus; temples about 0.4× eye length ( Fig. 12B); head in front view ( Fig. 12A) almost 1.4× as wide as high; gena weakly curved malar space 0.7× as long as height of eye and 0.6× as long as width of oral fossa. Toruli about equidistant from anterior margin of clypeus and anterior ocellus. Clypeus almost smooth and weakly protuberant, anterior tentorial pits visible; lower face with a median ridge from clypeus to between toruli and with rather weak radiating striae from sides of clypeus to about two-thirds distance to eye, but mostly with reticulate microsculpture in large areoles with poorly-defined margins and central setae; setation of lower face oriented downwards and mesally. Frons with large punctures, bottoms shining but with reticulate microsculpture and central setae directed laterally; malar sulcus traceable for only a short distance below the small suborbital fovea. Genal carina weak, visible for only a short distance above oral fossa. Antennal scrobe with outer margin slightly raised. FIGURE 11. Bruchophagus ribesiAskew sp. n., ♀ collected on a flower spike of A. cerasiferus, Lapanouse-de-Cernon, Aveyron, France. FIGURES 12A–L. Bruchophagus ribesi. A–K, ♀. L, ♂. A, head in frontal view. B, same in dorsal view. C, antenna of first morphotype. D, antenna of alternate morphotype. E, clava mounted on slide. F, pro- and mesonotum. G, propodeum. H, metacoxa. I, fore wing. J, fore wing venation. K, metasoma. L, antenna. A, C, G, I, J& L, ex A. albus delphinensisfrom Vielha, Lleida, Spain. B, E& K, ex A. albus delphinensisfrom Vallée d'Ossoue, Gavarnie-Gèdre, Hautes-Pyrénées, France. D& F, female collected on flower spike of A. cerasiferus, Lapanouse-de-Cernon, Aveyron, France. Antenna( Figs 12C, D) with scape slightly stouter in proximal two-thirds, about 3.7× as long as broad. Pedicel plus flagellum as long as width of head. Pedicel 1.4× as long as wide. Flagellum less stout than in B. absceduswith F1 hardly broader than pedicel, about 1.6× as long as broad; F2 as long as broad; F3 to F5 increasingly transverse; seventh flagellar segment (C1) separated from the eighth (C2) by a deep constriction (in some prepared specimens, as in the holotype, a dried white exudate has erupted from this suture), but C2 and C3 are fused so that the funicle is considered here to be 5-segmented and the clava effectively 2-segmented (composed of C1 + C2+3) ( Fig. 12E), C1 about 2× as broad as long, C2+3 about 1.6× as long as broad, not quite as long as F5 plus C1. Mesosoma( Fig. 12F) 1.54× as long as wide, 1.4× as long as high. Pronotum 3.35× and mesoscutum 1.65× as wide as long; mesoscutellum 1.1× as long as wide. Dorsal surface of mesosoma in profile with pronotum and mesoscutum evenly arched, mesoscutellum more strongly arched, propodeum declived at an angle of about 85° to plane of mesoscutellum and mesoscutum. Pro- and mesonotum with closely-packed umbilicate punctures, the areolar walls contiguous and at most with only an extremely few very small, microreticulate interspaces, mesonotum anteriorly with a few transverse wrinkles between rows of punctures. Notauli impressed except for extreme posterior part and with inner and outer margins step-like. Scutello-axillar grooves deep, terminating anteriorly just mesad of posterior ends of notauli. Mesoscutellum with umbilicate punctures larger than on mesoscutum and interspersed by larger patches of microsculpture; axilla dorsally with rather few and small umbilicate punctures, these separated by microreticulation which becomes finely striate ventrally. Mesosoma viewed laterally with prepectus about as long as tegula, delimited dorsally by a broad, smooth ridge and ventrally by a finer ridge, its disc dull with irregular sculpturation. Lateral panel of pronotum squamous reticulate. Mesepisternum with anterior margin of epicnemium almost straight, some convexity only in front of mesocoxae, epicnemium finely reticulate, epicnemial carina complete and fronted by a row of large punctures, distance between pro- and mesocoxae relatively short. Lower mesepimeron with reticulate sculpture coarser than on epicnemium, upper mesepimeron with reticulation irregular and strigose on lower part but finer and more even dorsally. Metapleuron with moderately coarse punctures but appearing longitudinally striate when viewed from certain angles. Propodeum ( Fig. 12G) rather less than 2× as broad as long, its dorsal surface relatively flat with large punctures except on poorly defined median groove which is finely reticulate. Procoxa without depression on frontal surface. Metacoxa with dorsal surface finely reticulate and bare. Fore wing( Fig. 12J) 2.1× as long as wide; lengths of costal cell: marginal vein: stigmal vein: postmarginal vein as 60:13:14.5:17. Stigmal vein straight, stigma not quite half as wide as its distance from anterior margin of wing, uncus with 2 pairs of placodea. Basal cell with about 12 upper surface setae; costal cell on upper surface with a complete anterior row of setae plus some additional setae at apex, anterior one-third of lower surface setose; speculum small, reaching only base of parastigma and partially closed below. Metasoma( Fig. 12K). Petiole about 0.7× as long as broad, dorsally with strong reticulate sculpture. Gaster about as long as head plus mesosoma, in lateral view 1.5× as long (excluding ovipositor) as deep; GT4 dorsally 1.3× as long as GT3 with a band of sparse setae dorsolaterally; syntergum in dorsal view about 1.6× as broad as long; exposed part of ovipositor sheath about 0.7× length of syntergum. Male. Length 2.4–3.2 mm. Wing pilosity darker than in female but colouration otherwise similar. Antenna( Fig. 12L) with pedicel plus flagellum about 1.3× as long as head breadth; funicle of 5 segments and clava 2- segmented although a deep constriction may separate flagellar segments 7 and 8; F 1 inprofile not quite 2× as deep as pedicel, its body 1.5× as long as broad; F6 rather less than 2× as long as broad; setae on funicle segments longer and finer than in B. abscedus, those on F1–F5 longer than their segments, arranged in 3 irregular whorls on F1 and in 2 whorls on the other funicle segments; claval segment slightly shorter than F6, about 2× as long as broad. Metasoma.Gaster including petiole about as long as mesosoma; body of gaster ovate, its dorsal surface rounded and not sharply peaked at apex of GT2; petiole 1.6× as long as broad, its dorsal surface punctured and flat, about one-third as long as body of gaster with its apex slightly beyond apex of hind coxa. Variation. The size varies according to the associated asphodel. There is a strong contrast between females reared respectively from A. albusand A. ramosuson the one hand and A. cerasiferuson the other. In the former phenotype the gaster is relatively shorter, about as long as head plus mesosoma ( Fig. 12F), but in the latter it is distinctly longer and the ovipositor sheaths are strongly upturned ( Fig. 11). For some time it was hypothesized that the two phenotypes may belong to separate species but the molecular data clearly indicate that only one species is involved ( Figs 8–9). Another variation, this apparently independent of the associated asphodel and appearing within populations at the same site, concerns the segmentation of the flagellum. In some females a strong constriction, in addition to a suture, may be present between the 7 thand 8 thflagellomeres ( Fig. 12D); the funicle hence appearing 6-segmented whereas it is more distinctly 5-segmented in most females ( Fig. 12C).
Diagnosis. Both sexes. Species of medium size, 3.2–3.6 mmin length; mesonotum with dense puncturation and narrow interspaces showing no coriaceous sculpture; notauli clearly impressed; anterior outline of mesepisternum mostly straight, somewhat convex only ventrally.
Female. OOL 1.7× as long as posterior ocellus diameter; POL 1.9× as long as OOL; clava bisegmented (the penultimate segment being fused with the terminal one), occasionally with a constriction between the 7 thand 8 thflagellomeres, hence the funicle, although usually 5-segmented, sometimes appears 6-segmented; setation of fore wing entirely white; stigmal and postmarginal veins respectively 1.25× and 1.55× as long as marginal vein. Male. Scape with moderately protruding apicoventral swelling; flagellum 5-segmented and clava 2-segmented, C1 and C2 separated only by a suture. Recognition. Both sexes of B. ribesimay be distinguished from B. gijswijtiand B. lecomteiby their larger size and the straight anterior outline of the mesepisternum ( Fig. 11). The species may be separated from B. abscedusby the very dense punctuate sculpture of the mesoscutellum without coriaceous interspaces ( Fig. 12F). The white setation of the fore wing in the female separates B. ribesifrom both B. insulare, to which it is extremely close but which has bicoloured setation, and from B. abscedusin which the setation is entirely dark. The female of B. ribesimay also be separated from that of B. abscedusby having a 5-segmented funicle and 2-segmented clava, although in some specimens of B. ribesia deeper constriction may separate the 6 thfrom the 7 thflagellomere, giving the funicle a 6-segmented appearance. The two terminal flagellomeres are fused in B. ribesibut separated in B. abscedus. Bruchophagus ribesiis distinguished from B. asphodelinaeby the relative proportions of OOL and POL and by the venation of the fore wing. The form of the gaster is also useful in distinguishing B. ribesi, although it varies somewhat according to the associated asphodel. In specimens emerging from A. albusthe gaster is short with the ovipositor sheaths hardly upturned ( Fig. 12K), but in those associated with A. cerasiferusthe gaster is longer with the sheaths clearly upturned ( Fig. 11). The gaster of female B. asphodelinaeis also relatively long but the ovipositor sheaths are only slightly upturned ( Fig. 15). Specimens of B. ribesiand B. abscedusfrom their respective typelocalities are quite distinct, but in Franceindividuals approaching B. ribesiin morphology, but reared from A. albus albus, are not uncommon. All Bruchophagusassociated with A. albus delphinensisin our study can be confidently attributed to B. ribesi, but those obtained from A. albus albusmay comprise both species with B. abscedususually dominant.
Distribution( Fig. 35). Spainand France.
Biology. Host plants. Bruchophagus ribesiis most usually associated with A. albus delphinensis( Fig. 40) and it is the only Bruchophagusspecies reared from seeds of this plant. It was observed in large numbers on flowering spikes with green fruits in both the French and Spanish Pyrénées. In the Val de Pineta near Bielsa (Huesca), Spanish Pyrénées, a sample ( 7 ♀ 4 ♂) was collected in the field on 6.vii 2007from flowering stems of A. albus delphinensis(together with larger numbers of Eurytoma asphodeli), and 6 ♀were found drilling fully formed green fruits of the same asphodel on 9.vii. 2009in Val d’Ossoue, French Pyrénées. Bruchophagus ribesi, however, is not confined to high altitude and apparently also occurs in A. a. albusseeds, together with B. abscedus, in more northerly parts of this plant’s range, being identified in rearings from seed capsules of A. albus albuscollected in lowland localities in France(Vienne, Dordogne). On the Causse du Larzac, in southern France, at an elevation around 800 m, it was the single Bruchophagusspecies associated with A. cerasiferus( Fig. 41) and a single female was reared from A. ramosusat Banyuls-sur-Mer near the coast ( Fig. 42). Another female was collected by sweeping near Montpellier by Hubert Tussac before its association with asphodels was known. Thus B. ribesiis primarily a montane species but it may also, on occasion, be found on mediterranean or submediterranean asphodels. Its larval life is passed within a single seed in which it is believed to be phytophagous. Phenology.A sample of fruits collected in the Val de Pineta in July 2007produced 2 ♀ B. ribesiin August of the first year, 6 ♀ 4 ♂overwintered once to emerge during April and May 2008and 1 ♀ 2 ♂overwintered twice to emerge in 2009 ( Fig. 46).
2237851295
2008-08-18
2010-04-27
2008-08-18
BMNH
de Viella & A. Ribes
Spain
1390
42.67647
Tunel de Viella
1
0.7715
26
27
1
1
Lleida
holotype
2237851315
2008-08-18
2010-04-27
2008-08-18
BMNH
de Viella & A. Ribes
Spain
1390
42.67647
Tunel de Viella
1
0.7715
26
27
1
1
Lleida
allotype
2237851356
2008-08-18
2010-04-27
2008-08-18
BMNH, NMS, MNCN, RAPC
de Viella & A. Ribes
Spain
1390
42.67647
Tunel de Viella
1
0.7715
26
27
82
40
42
Lleida
paratype
2237851318
2012-06-20
2013-05-15
2012-06-20
GDPC
G. Delvare
France
1965
44.31833
Combe Male
1
6.85833
Bousieyas-point
26
27
4
1
3
Alpes
2237851366
2009-06-01
2011-05-23
2009-06-01
CIRAD, GDPC
G. Delvare
France
810
43.98222
Causse Viel
1
3.57417
Lapanouse-de-Cernon
26
27
9
9
Aveyron
2237851322
2009-11-14
2011-06-19
2009-11-14
RAPC
R. R. Askew
France
235
44.87777
Foret Domaniale de la Barade
1
0.86028
La Douze
26
27
111
60
51
Dordogne
2237851343
2009-07-10
RAPC
R. R. Askew
France
1615
42.78555
Plateau de Saugue
1
-0.00888
Gavarnie-Gedre
26
27
4
2
2
Hautes-Pyrenees
2237851384
2009-07-09
RAPC, GDPC
France
1655
42.75111
Vallee d'Ossoue
1
-0.12166
Gavarnie-Gedre
26
27
23
12
11
Hautes-Pyrenees
2237851323
1989-04-07
1989-04-13
1989-04-07
GDPC
H. Tussac
France
Grabels
26
27
1
1
Herault
2237851329
2014-04-27
GDPC
J. Lecomte
France
240
42.46278
Col de la Creu
1
3.14222
Banyuls-sur-Mer
26
27
1
1
Pyrenees-Orientales
2237851344
2009-11-14
RAPC
R. R. Askew
France
10131
48.81778
Aire de Chagnats
1
0.54611
Chatellerault
26
27
3
1
2
Vienne
2237851350
2011-03-29
2011-04-15
2011-03-29
GDPC
A. Ribes
Spain
125
41.41892
Fraga
1
0.10911
26
27
1
1
Huesca
2237851333
2007-07-06
RAPC
R. R. Askew
Spain
Bielsa
1200
42.64507
Val de Pineta
1
0.212893
Col de Larri
26
27
21
15
6
Huesca
2237851331
2008-08-18
CIRAD, GDPC, RAPC
A. Ribes
Spain
Tunel de Viella
26
27
182
82
100
Lleida