identifier	taxonID	type	CVterm	format	language	title	description	additionalInformationURL	UsageTerms	rights	Owner	contributor	creator	bibliographicCitation
877587D4FFB4FFA6B593FC1B2EA6F9E8.text	877587D4FFB4FFA6B593FC1B2EA6F9E8.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Diaparsis	<div><p>Key to Afrotropical species of Diaparsis with white-banded flagellum</p><p>1. Flagellum with a conspicuous white band (Figs 1, 2).......................................................... 2</p><p>- Flagellum without a white band, pale basally and gradually darkening towards apex, or more or less entirely brown or black....................................................................................................... Other species of the genus (see Khalaim 2013a and the description of D. umbrosa Khalaim &amp; Sääksjärvi, sp. nov. in the present paper).</p><p>2. Flagellum very slender, subbasal flagellomeres 3.5× as long as broad (Fig. 1). Foveate groove of mesopleuron absent (Fig. 6). Flagellum with a white band near its middle, 13 apical flagellomeres black (Fig. 5).................................................................................................... kanyawara Khalaim &amp; Sääksjärvi, sp. nov.</p><p>- Flagellum not especially slender, subbasal flagellomeres 1.2–1.5× as long as broad. Foveate groove of mesopleuron well developed. Flagellum with a white band far behind its middle, 1 to 7 apical flagellomeres black....................... 3</p><p>3. Head with temple, in dorsal view, 0.4× as long as eye width (Khalaim 2013b: Fig. 7). Propodeum with basal keel as long as apical area (Khalaim 2013b: Fig. 9). Ovipositor sheath distinctly shorter than first tergite.............................................................................................................. nebulosa Khalaim, 2013</p><p>- Head with temple, in dorsal view, 0.5–0.6× as long as eye width. Propodeum with basal keel 0.5–0.7× as long as apical area. Ovipositor sheath much longer, 1.8–3.2× as long as first tergite................................................. 4</p><p>4. Three subapical flagellomeres black (Fig. 11). Malar space 0.9× as long as basal width of mandible (Fig. 9). Propodeum with basal keel obliterated. Fore wing with second recurrent vein distinctly postfurcal. Ovipositor distinctly sinuate apically, sheath 3.2× as long as first tergite (Fig. 13)....................................... sinuator Khalaim &amp; Sääksjärvi, sp. nov.</p><p>- Seven subapical flagellomeres black (Khalaim 2013a: Fig. 16). Malar space 0.4× as long as basal width of mandible. Propodeum with distinct basal keel (Khalaim 2013a: Fig. 20). Fore wing with second recurrent vein interstitial (Khalaim 2013a: Fig. 19). Ovipositor not sinuate apically, sheath 1.8× as long as first tergite (Khalaim 2013a: Fig. 15)..................................................................................................... interstitialis Khalaim, 2013</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/877587D4FFB4FFA6B593FC1B2EA6F9E8	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.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Khalaim, Andrey I.;Sääksjärvi, Ilari E.;Roininen, Heikki	Khalaim, Andrey I., Sääksjärvi, Ilari E., Roininen, Heikki (2014): Three new Afrotropical species of Tersilochinae (Hymenoptera: Ichneumonidae) from the Kibale National Park, Uganda. Zootaxa 3794 (4): 536-544, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.3794.4.4
877587D4FFB4FFA6B593F9072F95F821.text	877587D4FFB4FFA6B593F9072F95F821.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Diaparsis (Diaparsis) interstitialis Khalaim 2013	<div><p>Diaparsis (Diaparsis) interstitialis Khalaim, 2013</p><p>References. Khalaim 2013a: 137, Figs 15 –20. Khalaim 2013b: 130.</p><p>New material examined. Uganda: 1 ♀ (ZMUT) Kibale National Park, Kanyawara, 30.XII.2011 – 5.I.2012, coll. H. Roininen et al. 1 ♀ (ZMUT) same locality and collector, forest compartment K31, 9–16.V.2012. 1 ♀ (ZMUT) same locality and collector, forest compartment K13, Malaise trap, 15–22.VI.2012.</p><p>Distribution. Cameroon, South Africa, Uganda, Zimbabwe. First record from Uganda.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/877587D4FFB4FFA6B593F9072F95F821	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.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Khalaim, Andrey I.;Sääksjärvi, Ilari E.;Roininen, Heikki	Khalaim, Andrey I., Sääksjärvi, Ilari E., Roininen, Heikki (2014): Three new Afrotropical species of Tersilochinae (Hymenoptera: Ichneumonidae) from the Kibale National Park, Uganda. Zootaxa 3794 (4): 536-544, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.3794.4.4
877587D4FFB7FFA4B593FF0B2AFCF809.text	877587D4FFB7FFA4B593FF0B2AFCF809.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Diaparsis (Diaparsis) kanyawara Khalaim & Saaksjarvi	<div><p>Diaparsis (Diaparsis) kanyawara Khalaim &amp; Sääksjärvi, sp. nov.</p><p>(Figs 1, 3–8)</p><p>Comparison. The new species is similar to D. interstitialis, D. nebulosa and D. sinuator sp. nov. as only these four species of the genus have a conspicuous white band on the flagellum. Diaparsis kanyawara sp. nov. differs from these species by the longer, slenderer and apically clavate flagellum with a white band situated near its centre and 13 apical flagellomeres being black (Figs 1, 5). In addition, the new species does not possess a foveate groove on mesopleuron (Fig. 6). Diaparsis kanyawara sp. nov. also differs from D. interstitialis by the second recurrent vein being postfurcal, from D. nebulosa by the shorter basal keel of propodeum and longer ovipositor, and from D. sinuator sp. nov. by the shorter malar space, propodeum with distinct basal keel (Fig. 7), evenly upcurved ovipositor (Fig. 8) and yellow hind coxa.</p><p>Description. Female. Body length 6.2 mm. Fore wing length 4.2 mm.</p><p>Head strongly rounded behind eyes in dorsal view; temple 0.45× as long as eye width; eyes strongly prominent in dorsal view (Fig. 4). Antenna 1.1× as long as fore wing (Fig. 1); flagellum very slender, slightly clavate at apex (Fig. 5), with 28 segments; subbasal and mid flagellomeres 2.5–3.5× as long as broad, subapical flagellomeres as long as broad. Mandible slender, with upper tooth much longer than lower tooth. Malar space half as long as basal width of mandible (Fig. 3). Clypeus broad, lenticular, weakly convex in lateral view, 2.8× as broad as long, punctate and finely granulate in upper half and smooth in lower half. Face and frons finely and very densely punctate on granulate background (punctures mostly indistinct because of granulation), dull. Vertex and temple granulate, with fine and moderately dense punctures. Occipital carina complete. Hypostomal carina absent, surface polished.</p><p>Mesoscutum finely granulate, with dense distinct punctures, dull. Notaulus absent. Mesopleuron densely punctate, granulate, dull. Foveate groove completely absent (Fig. 6). Propodeal spiracle separated from pleural carina by 2.0 diameters of spiracle. Propodeum densely punctate on granulate background, dull, with distinct basal keel which is 0.73× as long as apical area (Fig. 7); apical area pointed at right angle anteriorly, flat; apical longitudinal carinae anteriorly weak but reaching transverse carina.</p><p>Fore wing with first abscissa of radius slightly curved, longer than width of pterostigma. Metacarp somewhat not reaching apex of fore wing. Second recurrent vein postfurcal. Intercubitus moderately long. Hind wing with nervellus slightly reclivous.</p><p>Legs slender. Hind femur 5.1× as long as broad and 0.78× as long as tibia. Spurs of hind tibia slender, slightly curved apically. Tarsal claws long, not pectinate.</p><p>First metasomal tergite slender, round in cross-section at level of mid length of petiole, mostly smooth, with striae before glymma, 4.1× as long as posteriorly broad, with distinct glymma somewhat behind its middle. Second tergite 1.65× as long as anteriorly broad. Thyridial depression very narrow, more than 3.0× as long as broad. Ovipositor upcurved, with very shallow dorsal subapical depression (Fig. 8); sheath about 2.3× as long as first tergite.</p><p>Head, mesosoma (including tegula) and first metasomal segment black; lower half of clypeus, palpi and mandible (except blackish teeth) brownish yellow. Antenna with scape and pedicel brownish yellow, flagellum black with a median white band that covers flagellomeres 11–15 (13 apical flagellomeres black). Pterostigma dark brown. Legs brownish yellow, hind tibia dorsally and tarsus infuscate. Metasoma behind first tergite brownish yellow ventrally to dark brown dorsally, hind margins of tergites 2+ yellow banded dorsally.</p><p>Male. Unknown.</p><p>Etymology. Named after the type locality, Kanyawara village (Makere University Biological Station is located in this area).</p><p>Material examined. Holotype female (ZMUT), Uganda, Kibale National Park, Kanyawara Biological Station, 0°33'55.6"N, 30°21'29.0"E, 15 m, Malaise trap, 13–21.III.2010, coll. S. Katusabe et al.</p><p>Distribution. Uganda.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/877587D4FFB7FFA4B593FF0B2AFCF809	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.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Khalaim, Andrey I.;Sääksjärvi, Ilari E.;Roininen, Heikki	Khalaim, Andrey I., Sääksjärvi, Ilari E., Roininen, Heikki (2014): Three new Afrotropical species of Tersilochinae (Hymenoptera: Ichneumonidae) from the Kibale National Park, Uganda. Zootaxa 3794 (4): 536-544, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.3794.4.4
877587D4FFB1FFA3B593FF0B2869FE25.text	877587D4FFB1FFA3B593FF0B2869FE25.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Diaparsis (Diaparsis) mostovskii Khalaim 2013	<div><p>Diaparsis (Diaparsis) mostovskii Khalaim, 2013</p><p>References. Khalaim 2013a: 146, Figs 43–49. Khalaim 2013b: 132.</p><p>New material examined. Uganda: 1 ♀ (ZMUT) Kibale National Park, Kanyawara, forest compartment K13 DE, Malaise trap, 19–26.X.2012. 1 ♀ (ZMUT) same locality, 9-years-old conifer plantation clear cut, 11–18.IV.2012, coll. H. Roininen et al.</p><p>Distribution. Cameroon, Ethiopia, South Africa, Uganda.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/877587D4FFB1FFA3B593FF0B2869FE25	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.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Khalaim, Andrey I.;Sääksjärvi, Ilari E.;Roininen, Heikki	Khalaim, Andrey I., Sääksjärvi, Ilari E., Roininen, Heikki (2014): Three new Afrotropical species of Tersilochinae (Hymenoptera: Ichneumonidae) from the Kibale National Park, Uganda. Zootaxa 3794 (4): 536-544, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.3794.4.4
877587D4FFB1FFA2B593FE492AFCFD9F.text	877587D4FFB1FFA2B593FE492AFCFD9F.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Diaparsis (Diaparsis) sinuator Khalaim & Saaksjarvi	<div><p>Diaparsis (Diaparsis) sinuator Khalaim &amp; Sääksjärvi, sp. nov.</p><p>(Figs 2, 9–13)</p><p>Comparison. The new species is similar to D. interstitialis, D. nebulosa and D. kanyawara sp. nov. as only these four species of the genus have a white band on the flagellum, but differs from these species by the longer malar space, propodeum having an obliterated basal keel, dark brown hind coxa, and longer and conspicuously apically sinuate ovipositor (Fig. 13). It also differs from D. interstitialis by the second recurrent vein being postfurcal, from D. nebulosa by the longer temple and ovipositor, and from D. kanyawara sp. nov. by the less slender flagellum and well developed foveate groove of mesopleuron. Diaparsis sinuator sp. nov. also resembles D. ramassamy Rousse &amp; Villemant (known only from the Reunion island) by possessing a long and apically sinuate ovipositor, but differs from this species by having the flagellum with a subapical white band, shorter malar space and propodeum with obliterated basal keel.</p><p>Description. Female. Body length 3.9 mm. Fore wing length 3.0 mm.</p><p>Head moderately strongly rounded behind eyes in dorsal view (Fig. 10); temple 0.6× as long as eye width. Antenna shorter than fore wing (Fig. 2); flagellum weakly narrowed towards apex, with 24 segments; subbasal and mid flagellomeres 1.5–1.8×, subapical flagellomeres 1.2–1.4× as long as broad. Mandible short, with upper tooth somewhat longer than lower tooth (Fig. 9). Malar space 0.9× as long as basal width of mandible (Fig. 9). Clypeus small, flat in lateral view, 2.4× as broad as long (Fig. 9), sparsely punctate in upper half and smooth in lower half. Face, frons and vertex finely and densely punctate on finely granulate background (punctures on vertex rather indistinct), dull. Temple smooth and shining, with fine and moderately dense punctures. Occipital carina complete. Hypostomal carina absent, surface polished.</p><p>Mesoscutum finely granulate and densely punctate, dull. Notaulus absent. Mesopleuron densely punctate on finely granulate, dull background (punctures larger centrally). Foveate groove in anterior half of mesopleuron, strongly oblique, rather weak, with transverse wrinkles (Fig. 12). Propodeal spiracle small, separated from pleural carina by one diameter of spiracle. Dorsolateral area of propodeum finely and densely punctate, almost smooth between punctures. Propodeum with basal keel obliterated; basal part 0.7× as long as apical area; apical area widely rounded anteriorly, flat, mostly finely granulate, finely punctate anteriorly; apical longitudinal carinae very weak (partly vanishing) but usually reaching transverse carina.</p><p>Fore wing with first abscissa of radius almost straight, much longer than width of pterostigma. Metacarp not reaching apex of fore wing. Second recurrent vein postfurcal. Intercubitus subequal to abscissa of cubitus between intercubitus and second recurrent vein. Hind wing with nervellus distinctly reclivous.</p><p>Legs slender. Hind femur 4.6× as long as broad and 0.9× as long as tibia. Spurs of hind tibia almost straight. Tarsal claws not pectinate.</p><p>First metasomal tergite slender, more or less round in cross-section at level of mid length of petiole, mostly smooth, with groove and/or striae before glymma, 3.6× as long as posteriorly broad, with distinct glymma near its middle. Second tergite 1.7× as long as anteriorly broad. Thyridial depression about twice as long as broad. Ovipositor weakly upcurved with apex conspicuously sinuate (Fig. 13), with shallow dorsal subapical depression; sheath about 3.2× as long as first tergite and 2.9× as long as hind tibia.</p><p>Head, mesosoma and first metasomal segment black; lower half of clypeus, palpi, mandible (except reddish black teeth) and tegula brownish yellow; propleuron, anterior part of pronotum and anterior upped corner of mesopleuron dark reddish brown. Antenna with scape and pedicel brownish yellow, flagellum black with a subapical white band that covers flagellomeres 18–21 (three apical flagellomeres black). Pterostigma dark brown. Fore and mid legs brownish yellow. Hind leg with coxa predominantly dark brown, apically brownish yellow; trochanters brownish yellow; femur brown, basally brownish yellow; tibia and tarsus strongly infuscate. Metasoma behind first tergite brownish yellow ventrally to brown and dark brown dorsally; tergites 2 and 3 dorsally almost entirely brownish yellow, second tergite anteriorly narrowly brownish banded; tergites 4+ dorsally and dorsolaterally brown, with brownish yellow marks on their posterior margins.</p><p>Male. Unknown.</p><p>Etymology. Named on account of its ovipositor which is conspicuously sinuate apically.</p><p>Material examined. Holotype female (ZMUT), Uganda, Kibale National Park, Kanyawara, forest compartment K 13, 20–27.I.2012, coll. H. Roininen et al.</p><p>Paratypes. Uganda: 1 ♀ (ZISP) same locality and collector as in holotype, forest compartment K13, 14–21.XII.2011. 1 ♀ (ZMUT) same locality and collector, forest compartment K31, 21–28.II.2012 (apices of both antennae absent).</p><p>Distribution. Uganda.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/877587D4FFB1FFA2B593FE492AFCFD9F	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.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Khalaim, Andrey I.;Sääksjärvi, Ilari E.;Roininen, Heikki	Khalaim, Andrey I., Sääksjärvi, Ilari E., Roininen, Heikki (2014): Three new Afrotropical species of Tersilochinae (Hymenoptera: Ichneumonidae) from the Kibale National Park, Uganda. Zootaxa 3794 (4): 536-544, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.3794.4.4
877587D4FFB0FFA0B593F94B2AFCFDF5.text	877587D4FFB0FFA0B593F94B2AFCFDF5.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Diaparsis (Diaparsis) umbrosa Khalaim & Saaksjarvi	<div><p>Diaparsis (Diaparsis) umbrosa Khalaim &amp; Sääksjärvi, sp. nov.</p><p>(Fig. 14)</p><p>Comparison. In the key to the Afrotropical species of Diaparsis (Khalaim 2013a) the new species runs to D. robusta Khalaim in the couplet 9, but may be distinguished from this species by the shorter malar space, much shorter antennal flagellomeres, propodeum with apical area anteriorly rounded, and the darker metasoma.</p><p>Description. Female. Body length 3.6 mm. Fore wing length 2.75 mm.</p><p>Head roundly tapered behind eyes in dorsal view; temple 0.6× as long as eye width. Flagellum of antenna filiform, with 16 segments; all flagellomeres, excepting the basal and apical ones, weakly elongate, 1.1–1.3× as long as broad. Mandible slender, with upper tooth much longer than lower tooth. Malar space 0.5–0.6× as long as basal width of mandible. Clypeus lenticular, slightly convex in lateral view, almost 3.0× as broad as long, smooth, finely punctate in upper 0.6. Face and frons finely and densely punctate on granulate background, dull. Vertex finely granulate, with fine and sparse punctures, dull. Temple very finely granulate, with very fine and sparse punctures, weakly shining. Occipital carina complete. Hypostomal carina absent.</p><p>Mesoscutum densely and distinctly punctate on finely granulate background, dull. Notaulus with very strong wrinkle extending from anterolateral margin of mesoscutum. Mesopleuron peripherally granulate and finely punctate, centrally rather densely punctate on almost smooth background, with impunctate area just above the foveate groove. Foveate groove situated in anterior half of mesopleuron, strongly oblique, weak (in paratypes) to moderately deep (in holotype), with transverse wrinkles. Propodeal spiracle enlarged, separated from pleural carina by almost 2.0× diameter of spiracle. Dorsolateral area of propodeum granulate, with very fine (sometimes indistinct) punctures. Propodeum with distinct basal keel which is about 0.6× as long as apical area; apical area very widely rounded anteriorly, flat, granulate, impunctate; apical longitudinal carinae anteriorly weak but usually reaching transverse carina.</p><p>Fore wing with first abscissa of radius almost straight, almost as long as width of pterostigma. Metacarp distinctly not reaching apex of fore wing. Second recurrent vein postfurcal. Intercubitus short, much shorter than abscissa of cubitus between intercubitus and second recurrent vein. Hind wing with nervellus distinctly reclivous.</p><p>Legs slender. Hind femur 3.9× as long as broad and 0.85× as long as tibia. Spurs of hind tibia almost straight. Tarsal claws slender, not pectinate.</p><p>First metasomal tergite slender, round in cross-section, entirely smooth, 3.5× as long as posteriorly broad, without glymma. Second tergite 1.5× as long as anteriorly broad. Thyridial depression distinct, about 1.5–1.7× as long as broad. Ovipositor weakly upcurved, with very shallow dorsal subapical depression; sheath about 1.2× as long as first tergite and slightly longer than hind tibia.</p><p>Head, mesosoma and first metasomal segment black; lower 0.3 of clypeus, palpi, mandible (except blackish teeth) and tegula brownish yellow. Antenna with scape and pedicel brownish, flagellum blackish (somewhat paler basally). Pterostigma dark brown. Legs predominantly yellow-brown; mid coxa brown; hind leg with coxa dark brown, femur brown to dark brown, and tibia apically sometimes infuscate. Metasoma behind first tergite dark brown.</p><p>Male. Unknown.</p><p>Etymology. Named after the Latin word umbrosus (shady, shadowy), on account of dark coloration of the body.</p><p>Material examined. Holotype female (ZMUT), Uganda, Kibale National Park, Kanyawara, forest compartment K31, 6–13.XII.2012, coll. H. Roininen et al.</p><p>Paratypes. Uganda: 1 ♀ (ZISP) same data as holotype. 1 ♀ (ZMUT) same data, but 28.IX–4.X.2012.</p><p>Distribution. Uganda.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/877587D4FFB0FFA0B593F94B2AFCFDF5	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.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Khalaim, Andrey I.;Sääksjärvi, Ilari E.;Roininen, Heikki	Khalaim, Andrey I., Sääksjärvi, Ilari E., Roininen, Heikki (2014): Three new Afrotropical species of Tersilochinae (Hymenoptera: Ichneumonidae) from the Kibale National Park, Uganda. Zootaxa 3794 (4): 536-544, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.3794.4.4
877587D4FFB2FFAFB593FD0F289CFDBA.text	877587D4FFB2FFAFB593FD0F289CFDBA.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Tersilochus (Tersilochus) moestus Holmgren 1868	<div><p>Tersilochus (Tersilochus) moestus Holmgren, 1868</p><p>(Figs 15–18)</p><p>References. Khalaim 2013a: 145, Figs 38–42 (re-description and new combination). Holotype (examined): female, South Africa, Western Cape (NHRS).</p><p>Morphological remarks. The new Ugandan female almost completely corresponds with the holotype female of this species. The holotype female is incomplete and lacking apices of antennae and the ovipositor. The species was recently re-described and placed into the genus Tersilochus by Khalaim (2013a: 145). Below we describe and illustrate characters which are lacking or unclear in the holotype specimen.</p><p>Flagellum with 19 segments (Fig. 16). Notaulus absent. Apical longitudinal carinae of propodeum not reaching transverse carina anteriorly. Mid coxa brown. First tergite 3.8× as long as posteriorly broad. Glymma welldeveloped, joining by distinct furrow to ventral part of postpetiole (Fig. 17). Ovipositor short and slender, evenly tapered towards apex (Fig. 18), its sheath half as long as first tergite.</p><p>New material examined. Uganda: 1 ♀ (ZMUT) Kibale National Park, Kanyawara Biological Station, 0°33'55.6"N, 30°21'29.0"E, 15 m, Malaise trap, 16–23.V.2010, coll. S. Katusabe et al.</p><p>Distribution. South Africa, Uganda. First record from Uganda.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/877587D4FFB2FFAFB593FD0F289CFDBA	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.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Khalaim, Andrey I.;Sääksjärvi, Ilari E.;Roininen, Heikki	Khalaim, Andrey I., Sääksjärvi, Ilari E., Roininen, Heikki (2014): Three new Afrotropical species of Tersilochinae (Hymenoptera: Ichneumonidae) from the Kibale National Park, Uganda. Zootaxa 3794 (4): 536-544, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.3794.4.4
