identifier	taxonID	type	CVterm	format	language	title	description	additionalInformationURL	UsageTerms	rights	Owner	contributor	creator	bibliographicCitation
0793F181049194E7452CA86FE79963D5.text	0793F181049194E7452CA86FE79963D5.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Pambolus rastafari Martínez & Ceccarelli & Zaldívar-Riverón 2012	<div><p>Pambolus rastafari sp. n. Figures 7 15</p> <p>Diagnosis.</p> <p>Following the keys to Neotropical species of Pambolus (Braet and van Achterberg 2003; van Achterberg and Braet 2004), Pambolus rastafari runs to couplet three due to the presence of a white basal antennal band; however, it can easily be distinguished from Pambolus duplotaeniatus van Achterberg, Pambolus granulatus van Achterberg and Pambolus microstriatus van Achterberg by the basal white band being composed of a single white flagellomere. The three aforementioned species have a white band composed of at least three flagellomeres. This new species also differs from the above three species by its entirely smooth and polished head and mesoscutum.</p> <p>Female. Color: Mostly chestnut brown (fig. 7); palpi, pedicel, second flagellomere, coxae, trochanters and trochantelli, all femora and all tibiae basally ivory white; flagellomeres beyond 12th and fore tarsus light brown; annellus of first flagellomere and apex of all trochantelli distinctly orange-brown; wings almost entirely infuscate, with subhyaline areas at junction of veins 2RS and 2M and along vein r-m; remaining veins light brown.</p> <p>Head: Antenna broken, 13 flagellomeres remaining, first flagellomere 1.2 times longer than second, first and second flagellomeres 5.0 and 3.9 times longer than their maximum width, respectively. Scapus oblique apically. In dorsal view (fig. 9) length of eyes 1.9 times the length of temple; POL as long as OD and 0.4 times OOL; in dorsal view width of head 0.6 times its median length; face rather flattened and clypeus weakly convex in lateral view (fig. 10); face smooth and setose (fig. 8); clypeus smooth; anterior tentorial pit big and circular; frons smooth and slightly concave; vertex, te mple and gena also smooth and shining; malar space 2.0 times basal width of mandible; occipital carina complete, strongly developed, meeting hypostomal carina ventrally.</p> <p>Mesosoma: Length of mesosoma 1.4 times its maximum height and 1.6-1.7 times its maximum width; mesosoma setose; pronotum largely smooth, slightly coriaceous anteriorly, pronotal furrow present only medially and scrobiculate; propleuron convex and smooth; mesopleuron smooth (fig. 11), precoxal sulcus deep and scrobiculate, occupying two thirds the length of the mesopleuron, subalar and posterior mesopleural furrows scrobiculate; prepectal and postpectal carinae strongly developed; metapleuron irregularly rugose; mesoscutum smooth and shining (fig. 12); notauli wide and crenulate on anterior edge of mesoscutum, indistinct posteriorly; mesoscutum with a median V-shaped posterior pit; scutellar disc smooth; scutellar sulcus with five coarse and oblique carinae, its median length 0.5 times as long as scutellar disc; propodeum (fig. 13) areolate rugose, with a long and narrow areola medially, areola with a median longitudinal carina anteriorly and with three transverse carinae posteriorly, spines of propodeum 0.7 times as long as fore basitarsus.</p> <p>Wings: Wings densely setose. Fore wing (fig. 14): veins r and 3-SR basally widened; r:3RSa:3RSb = 3:8:12; 2RS:2M:r-m = 9:17:5; veins (RS+M)b and r-m unpigmented; vein (RS+M)a straight; vein cu-a insterstitial; first subdiscal cell open. Hind wing (fig. 15): vein cu-a vertical; M+CU:1-M = 2:5.</p> <p>Legs: Hind coxa largely finely striate dorsally; length of femur, tibia and basitarsus of hind leg 4.4, 8.4 and 5.3 times their width, respectively; hind femur very weakly coriaceous.</p> <p>Metasoma: Length of first tergite 0.8 times its apical width, its median area wide and coarsely longitudinally striate (fig. 13), lateral areas smooth; remaining terga completely smooth and shining; combined length of second and third tergites as long as their maximum width; length of ovipositor sheath 0.4-0.5 times the length of metasoma.</p> <p>Male. Unknown.</p> <p>Etymology.</p> <p>The specific epithet refers to the religious and social movement from Jamaica.</p> <p>Material examined.</p> <p>Holotype female: Jamaica, Saint Andrew, New Castle, 18.06840, -76.7119, 860m, 11.xi.2010, F. S. Ceccarelli col. (CNIN IB-UNAM); GenBank accession no. JQ268750. Paratype: one female, same data as holotype (MACN).</p></div> 	http://treatment.plazi.org/id/0793F181049194E7452CA86FE79963D5	Public Domain	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.		Pensoft via Plazi	Martinez, Juan Jose;Ceccarelli, Fadia Sara;Zaldivar-Riveron, Alejandro	Martinez, Juan Jose, Ceccarelli, Fadia Sara, Zaldivar-Riveron, Alejandro (2012): Two new species of Pambolus (Hymenoptera, Braconidae) from Jamaica. Journal of Hymenoptera Research 24: 85-93, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/jhr.24.2300, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/jhr.24.2300
89C9266D94AD4F03F7C088B44A88320A.text	89C9266D94AD4F03F7C088B44A88320A.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Pambolus albospina Martínez & Ceccarelli & Zaldívar-Riverón 2012	<div><p>Pambolus albospina sp. n. Figures 1-6</p> <p>Diagnosis.</p> <p>Following the key to Neotropical species (Braet and van Achterberg 2003), the female of this new species runs to Pambolus hemitaeniatus van Achterberg, but differs from the latter and all other Neotropical species of the subgenus Phaenodus by having an entirely smooth first metasomal tergite without striations, and by its entirely white propodeal spines. Males, however, are difficult to relate to those of the other species. They can be distinguished from Pambolus longicornis (Enderlein)-the only neotropical species of the subgenus Phaenodus with known males- also by the color of the propodeal spines and the smooth first metasomal tergite.</p> <p>Female. Color: Mostly reddish brown (fig. 1); scape and base of pedicel pale yellow, apex of pedicel and first five flagellomeres honey yellow, sixth to eleventh flagellomeres gradually darkening from brownish yellow to black, further flagellomeres (12th to 24th) entirely white. Palpi white; lower area of temple, gena, face, clypeus and labrum reddish brown; frons, vertex and upper area of temple orange brown, ocellar triangle darkened. Mesoscutum, scutellum and propodeum except propodeal spines, orange brown; pronotum, mesopleuron and metapleuron darker, rusty brown; propodeal spines entirely white. First metasomal tergite reddish brown, reminder of metasoma brown. Coxae, trochanters and trochatelli white, femora white basally and brown on apical third fourth, tibiae whitish, tarsi light brown. Fore wing with faint infuscate bands, hind wing hyaline, pterostigma and veins brown, except vein r-m and junction of veins 2RS and 2M, which are not pigmented.</p> <p>Head: Antenna (fig. 5) with 24 flagellomeres, first flagellomere 1.1 times longer than second, first and second flagellomeres 5.5 and 5.0 times longer than their maximum width respectively. Scapus oblique apically; in dorsal view (fig. 3) length of eyes 1.9 times temple; POL 1.5 times OD and 0.7 times OOL; in dorsal view width of head 1.7 times its maximum length; face flattened and clypeus weakly convex in lateral view; face (fig. 2) weakly coriaceous near toruli, turning smooth near clypeus; clypeus largely smooth; anterior tentorial pit big and circular; frons, vertex and temple rugulose; gena smooth and shining (fig. 4); malar space 1.5 times basal width of mandible; occipital carina complete, meeting hypostomal carina ventrally.</p> <p>Mesosoma: Length of mesosoma 1.4 times its maximum height and 1.6 times its maximum width; mesosoma setose; pronotum largely smooth, pronotal furrow deep and scrobiculate; propleuron convex and weakly coriaceoous; mesopleuron smooth (fig. 4), precoxal sulcus deep and scrobiculate, occupying two thirds length of mesopleuron, posterior mesopleural furrow strongly scrobiculate; subalar area rugose; episternal scrobe deep; prepectal and postpectal carinae strongly developed; metapleuron reticualte; mesoscutum (fig. 3) acinose-coriaceous; notauli wide and scrobiculate anteriorly, rather obscured in a median area posteriorly; scutellum coriaceous and slightly convex; scutellar sulcus with five carinae, its median length 0.6 times as long as scutellum; propodeum areolate rugose, with a long and narrow areola medially (fig. 3), areola irregularly rugose anteriorly and with four transverse carinae posteriorly, spines of propodeum 0.8 times as long as fore basitarsus.</p> <p>Wings: Wings (fig. 6) densely setose. Fore wing: veins r and 3RSa basally widened; r:3RSa:3RSb = 2:5:16; 2RS:2M:r-m = 6:10:3; vein (RS+M)a straight; vein cu-a just interstitial and almost indistinct; first subdiscal cell open. Hind wing: vein cu-a oblique, directed towards wing base; M+CU:1-M = 2:5.</p> <p>Legs: Hind coxa unsculptured dorsally; length of femur, tibia and basitarsus of hind leg 4.4, 7.6 and 6.0 times their width, respectively; hind femur very weakly coriaceous.</p> <p>Metasoma: Length of first tergite 0.7 times its apical width, its median area well delimited by carinae but entirely smooth, lateral areas also smooth (fig. 3); second metasomal tergum with a few basal striations, otherwise smooth, remaining terga completely smooth; combined length of second and third tergites as long as their maximum width; length of ovipositor sheath 0.4 times the length of metasoma.</p> <p>Male Similar to female, except for its slightly lighter body color and its much longer antennae, with 31 flagellomeres, five apical flagellomeres entirely white.</p> <p>Etymology.</p> <p>The specific epithet refers to the white propodeal spines of this species.</p> <p>Material examined.</p> <p>Holotype female: Jamaica, Trelawny, Windsor, 18.35752, -76.66406, 82m, 19-21.xi.2010, yellow pan traps, F. S. Ceccarelli col. GenBank accession no. JQ268751. (CNIN IB-UNAM) Paratypes: three males, Jamaica, Saint Andrew, New Castle, 18.06840, -76.7119, 860m, 11.xi.2010, F. S. Ceccarelli col. (CNIN IB-UNAM, MACN); GenBank accession no. JQ268752.</p></div> 	http://treatment.plazi.org/id/89C9266D94AD4F03F7C088B44A88320A	Public Domain	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.		Pensoft via Plazi	Martinez, Juan Jose;Ceccarelli, Fadia Sara;Zaldivar-Riveron, Alejandro	Martinez, Juan Jose, Ceccarelli, Fadia Sara, Zaldivar-Riveron, Alejandro (2012): Two new species of Pambolus (Hymenoptera, Braconidae) from Jamaica. Journal of Hymenoptera Research 24: 85-93, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/jhr.24.2300, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/jhr.24.2300
