Rhetinorhyssalites emersoni, Engel, Michael S., Thomas, Jennifer C. & Alqarni, Abdulaziz S., 2017

Engel, Michael S., Thomas, Jennifer C. & Alqarni, Abdulaziz S., 2017, A new genus of protorhyssaline wasps in Raritan amber (Hymenoptera, Braconidae), ZooKeys 711, pp. 103-111 : 106-108

publication ID

https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.711.20709

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:5E782B9E-A876-4382-9F18-3C620114A212

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/CDEBECC1-2E8A-412C-88E5-689DCD502431

taxon LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:act:CDEBECC1-2E8A-412C-88E5-689DCD502431

treatment provided by

ZooKeys by Pensoft

scientific name

Rhetinorhyssalites emersoni
status

sp. n.

Rhetinorhyssalites emersoni sp. n. Figs 1-3, 4

Holotype.

♂, AMNH NJ-892A; deposited in the Division of Invertebrate Zoology, American Museum of Natural History, New York.

Paratype.

♂, AMNH NJ-692; same locality and repository as the holotype.

Locality and horizon.

Upper Cretaceous (Turonian) amber, New Jersey, Middlesex County, Sayreville, white oaks pit. The locality has been discussed and the Raritan amber deposits mapped by Grimaldi et al. (2000) and Grimaldi and Nascimbene (2010).

Diagnosis.

As for the genus (vide supra).

Description.

♂: Total length 2.54 mm as preserved (2.53 mm); forewing length 1.98 mm (1.90 mm), hind wing length 1.66 mm (1.60 mm); integument, where evident, dark brown, lighter on appendages; wing veins dark brown to brown, membranes hyaline and clear.

Head apparently about as long as wide (direct frontal view not possible in either holotype or paratype), with small punctures separated by about 2 or more times a puncture width, integument between smooth, with scattered, suberect, minute setae, setae more numerous on lower face; face below antennal toruli somewhat flat; clypeus slightly protruding, rounded, short; hypoclypeal depression deep and wide; mandible short (mandibles closed in both specimens); labial palpus short, apparently with three palpomeres; maxillary palpus elongate, apparently slightly longer than head, with six palpomeres, palpomeres IV–VI elongate, thinner than preceding palpomeres, palpomere III thickened and dorsally hunched, with abundant distinctive setae dorsally; compound eye large and glabrous, length 0.36 mm, broader than gena, inner margin not emarginate; ocelli positioned close together on top of vertex; occipital carina complete, weak dorsally; antenna slightly shorter than body length; scape squat, only slightly longer than wide, length 0.11 mm, width 0.09 mm, truncate apically; pedicel about as long as wide, slightly narrower than scape, length 0.07 mm, width 0.06 mm; flagellum with 20 flagellomeres (24 flagellomeres); basal flagellomeres elongate, approximately 3-4 times as long as wide, flagellomere I length 0.16 mm, width 0.04 mm; flagellomere II length 0.14 mm, width 0.04 mm; flagellomere III length 0.13 mm, width 0.04 mm; remaining flagellomeres progressively shorter, apical flagellomeres about 1.25-2.0 times as long as wide; multiporous plate sensilla sparse.

Mesosoma length 0.98 mm (0.98 mm); pronotal surface smooth; mesoscutum with minute, setigerous punctures separated by a puncture width or less, integument between punctures smooth; notauli deeply impressed, crenulate, percurrent; lateral sectors of mesoscutum (outside of notauli) distinctly raised, convex, with sculpturing as on remainder of mesoscutum; mesoscutellar sulcus deeply impressed; mesoscutellum not raised, on same level with mesoscutum; mesopleuron largely smooth and impunctate, with borders areolate; sternaulus absent; metapleuron areolate; propodeum coarsely and deeply areolate. Legs slender, with numerous minute setae; tibial spurs short, protibial calcar slightly curved, without comb; metafemur tubular except with weak subapical concavity on inner ventral surface; metatibia length 1.26 mm (1.23 mm); basitarsi longest tarsomeres, but shorter than combined length of remaining tarsomeres, slightly longer than fifth tarsomeres; pretarsal claws short, simple; arolium small. Forewing (Fig. 4) with minute costal cell present apically near pterostima, remainder of C+Sc+R completely fused with faint indication of fusion line proximally; pterostigma large, longer than wide, border inside marginal cell faintly convex, anterior border bulging; marginal cell large, extending nearly to wing apex; R slightly extending beyond marginal cell apex along apical wing margin to wing apex; 1Rs present, slightly more than one-half length 1M; 1Rs/1M straight; Rs+M weakly arched (nearly straight); 1m-cu entering second submarginal cell near base, thus short 2M present (and “2Rs+M” lacking); 2M angled posteriorly, giving second submarginal cell narrowly elongate extension postero-proximally; 2Rs elongate; r-rs arising in apical half of pterostigma, short, shorter than 1Rs; 1rs-m present, about as long as 3Rs; 3M much longer than 2Rs; 1cu-a strongly postfurcal (positioned beyond one-third discal cell length); 1Cu about as long as 1cu-a; 2Cu longer than 1Cu; 2cu-a present only has hint of stub, with subdiscal cell minutely open apically; stubs of 1a and 2a present. Hind wing (Fig. 4) with margins setose; three distal hamuli present on R and set of "secondary hamuli" (sensu Basibuyuk et al. 1999) on proximal portion of C; R tubular for short distance along with margin, otherwise extending as nebulous vein, terminating well prior to wing apex; 2Sc+R extremely short; Rs tubular for short distance then extending as nebulous vein; sc+r-m without bulla, longer than 2Sc+R, much shorter than 1M; 2M tubular near base then nebulous; 1Cu much shorter than 1M; 2Cu present as minute stub; bulla lacking between 1A and 2Cu stub.

Metasoma length 1.21 mm (1.20 mm), with terga II and III fused and with distinct suture line; integument generally smooth an impunctate, with scattered, short, appressed setae; first metasomal tergum with dorsal carinae strong, extending to posterior tergal margin, dorsopes deeply impressed and areolate; lateral carinae strong, with lateropes deeply impressed; tergum I about as long as wide, remaining terga wider than long.

♀: Latet.

Etymology.

The specific epithet honors the late William K. Emerson (1925-2016), a leading malacologist with the American Museum of Natural History ( Mikkelsen and Landman 2017) and good friend to the senior author for the last 20 years of his life. In 1999, after one of many relaxing enjoyable chats and before I (M.S.E.) departed, Bill pulled from a shelf his copy of his 1976 guide to shells ( Emerson and Jacobson 1976), autographed it, and placed it in my hands. It remains a treasured possession and reminder of joyful days and Bill’s kindness and good humor.