identifier	taxonID	type	CVterm	format	language	title	description	additionalInformationURL	UsageTerms	rights	Owner	contributor	creator	bibliographicCitation
5884CC5F0D5251DFB9D541583195C831.text	5884CC5F0D5251DFB9D541583195C831.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Stenarella aurea Santos & Bordera 2025	<div><p>3.1.1. Stenarella aurea sp. nov.</p><p>Figures 1 H, 3, 23 A, 28</p><p>Etymology.</p><p>From the Latin adjective aureus, - a, - um, meaning “ golden ”, in reference to the light orange, yellowish body color of this species.</p><p>Diagnosis.</p><p>Stenarella aurea sp. nov. can be distinguished from all other Stenarella species by the combination of the following characters: mesoscutum mostly smooth and shiny (Fig. 3 D); posterior area of propodeum transversely striate, striae regularly separated and reaching pleural sulcus (Fig. 1 H); face and eye orbits whitish (Fig. 3 B, C); antenna with white band on f 5 – f 14 (15); mesosoma mostly light orange.</p><p>Description.</p><p>FEMALE. Fore wing 5.1–6.2 mm long. — Head (Fig. 3 A – C): Mandible, clypeus and face moderately covered with very long setae. Mandible punctate, MLW 2.25–2.30. Malar space short, MSM 0.4–0.5. Clypeus smooth, CWL 2.8–3.0. Clypeus and face centrally mostly flat. Face with a small tubercle between antennal sockets, centrally weakly wrinkled, elsewhere smooth. Frons smooth and shiny, with incomplete faint longitudinal carina. Antenna with 28–34 flagellomeres. — Mesosoma (Figs 1 H, 3 A, C – E): Pronotum with distinct striae along central concave part, elsewhere smooth. Epomia moderately strong, reaching pronotal depression. Mesoscutum almost entirely smooth and shiny. Notaulus reaching 0.75 of mesoscutum with short transverse striae. Mesopleuron and metapleuron moderately setose. Mesopleuron dorsally longitudinally striate, ventrally finely rugulose. Epicnemial carina distinct, reaching 0.7 of distance to subtegular ridge. Sternaulus deep evenly upcurved, reaching anterior 0.6 of mesopleuron. Metapleuron strigose punctate. Propodeum relatively long, dorsal profile in lateral view evenly convex and sloped. Anterior area of propodeum rugulose punctate. Propodeal spiracle elliptic, SLW 2.0–2.25. Area posterior of propodeum covered by fine, more or less uniformly spaced transverse striae. Posterior transverse carina of propodeum present but weakly discernible from other transverse striae, distance to anterior transverse carina 1.8 times the distance from anterior carina to anterior margin of propodeum. Areolet small, closed distally by an unpigmented vein 3 rs-m, APH 0.4–0.45. Vein 2 m-cu antefurcal to vein 3 rs-m. Hind wing vein Cua distinctly longer than crossvein cu-a, HW 1 C 2.2–2.3. — Metasoma (Fig. 3 A, F): Posterior end of S 1 placed distinctly posterior to spiracle of T 1. T 1 LW 2.85–3.1; T 1 WW 2.25–2.3; T 2 LW 1.55–1.6; T 2 WW 2.15–2.2. Thyridium about 2.5 times as long as wide. T 2 anteriorly granulate, gradually transitioning to punctate reticulate on a granulate background. Dorsal valve of ovipositor with 5 teeth. Ventral valve with 10 teeth. OST 4.30–4.75. — Color (Figs 1 H, 3): Head black: labrum, clypeus, mandibles except apex, mouthparts, face and eye orbits whitish; facial tubercle and scapus and pedicel ventrally orange. Antenna dark brown, f 6–14 dorsally and f 5 and f 15 partially, white. Mesosoma mostly light orange; dorsal lateral part of pronotum, subtegular ridge, lateral parts of scutellum, and slightly posterior part of propodeum, yellowish; propodeum with a medial anterior dark brown spot. Legs mostly orange; hind trochantellus, proximal part of t 1 and t 5 entirely dark brown; distal part of t 1 and t 2 – t 4 whitish. Hind tibia something infuscate. Metasoma mostly orange: anterior part of T 2 – T 3, T 6 – T 8 dark brown. Posterior part of T 6 – T 7 white; rarely fine posterior band on T 1 – T 2 yellowish. Wing hyaline. — MALE. Unknown</p><p>Hosts.</p><p>Unknown.</p><p>Distribution.</p><p>Afrotropical. Known records from: Angola, Cameroon, Central African Republic, Gabon, Ivory Coast and Sierra Leone (Fig. 23 A).</p><p>Material examined.</p><p>11 ♀♀. Holotype. SIERRA LEONE • ♀; Freetown Peninsula, Freetown; III.1969; Denis Owen (USUC). Dry pinned, complete . — Paratypes. ANGOLA • 1 ♀; Salazar; Instituto de Investigação Agronomica de Angola; 9–15.III.1972; Southern African Exp. (NHMUK) . CAMEROON • 1 ♀; Nkoemvom; XII.1979 – I.1980; Ms. D. Jackson (NHMUK) • 1 ♀; same data except 16.III–4.V.1980 (NHMUK) • 2 ♀♀; same data except 30.III–19.IV.1980 (NHMUK) • 1 ♀; same data except X–XI.1980; Ms. D. Jackson (NHMUK) . CENTRAL AFRICAN REPUBLIC • 1 ♀; Sangha – Mbaéré, Dzanga – Ndoki National Park, 38.6 km 173°S <a href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=16.153334&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=2.3600001" title="Search Plazi for locations around (long 16.153334/lat 2.3600001)">Lidjombo</a>; 350 m; 2º21.60’N, 16º09.20’E; 22–23.V.2001; S. van Noort; Malaise; lowland rainforest / SAM–HYM–P 053035 / CAR 01 – M 186 (SAMC) . GABON • 1 ♀; 1919, Coll. J. De Gaulle (MNHN) • 1 ♀; Haut – Ogooué, N’Kogo, 1901; J. Bouyssou (MNHN) . IVORY COAST • 1 ♀; Odienné, Ranch de Sipilou; 22.V.1973; V. Viltard Rec. (MNHN) .</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/5884CC5F0D5251DFB9D541583195C831	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	Santos, Bernardo F.;Bordera, Santiago	Santos, Bernardo F., Bordera, Santiago (2025): Phylogenomics and taxonomic revision of Stenarella Szépligeti (Hymenoptera, Ichneumonidae, Cryptinae). Arthropod Systematics & Phylogeny 83: 463-511, DOI: 10.3897/asp.83.e151385
103B0A6E4D205EA7AE01754ECBC82A84.text	103B0A6E4D205EA7AE01754ECBC82A84.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Stenarella brykella Roman, Townes 1972	<div><p>3.1.2. Stenarella brykella Roman, 1943</p><p>Figures 1 A, 4, 23 B, 28</p><p>Stenarella brykella Roman, 1943: 20. Lectotype ♀ (NHRS, photos examined).</p><p>Diagnosis.</p><p>Stenarella brykella can be easily distinguished from all other species of Stenarella by the mesoscutum mostly granulate without punctures on lateral lobes (Fig. 4 E).</p><p>Description.</p><p>FEMALE. Fore wing 8.5–10.6 mm long. Head (Fig. 4 A, B, D): Mandible, clypeus and face moderately covered with very long setae. Mandible punctate, MLW 1.95–2.15. Malar space moderately long, MSM 0.5–0.55. Clypeus sparsely punctate, CWL 2.85–2.9. Clypeus and face centrally mostly flat. Face centrally distinctly wrinkled, elsewhere smooth. Frons shiny, granulate and sparsely punctate, rugulose near vertex, with complete but anteriorly faint longitudinal carina. Antenna with 32 flagellomeres. — Mesosoma (Figs 1 A, 4 A, C – E): Pronotum entirely covered by uniform longitudinal striae. Epomia strong, reaching pronotal depression. Mesoscutum mostly granulate, anterior part with shallow dense punctures. Notaulus reaching 0.75–0.8 of mesoscutum with long and deep transverse striae. Scutellum rugulose punctate. Mesopleuron and metapleuron moderately setose. Mesopleuron mostly finely rugulose granulate, shortly longitudinally strigose along epicnemial carina. Epicnemial carina distinct, reaching 0.6 of distance to subtegular ridge. Sternaulus shallow, evenly upcurved, reaching anterior 0.6 of mesopleuron. Metapleuron strigose – granulate. Propodeum relatively long, dorsal profile in lateral view evenly convex and sloped. Anterior area of propodeum rugulose punctate. Propodeal spiracle elliptic, SLW 1.85–2.0. Posterior area of propodeum finely striate medially, rugulose laterally. Posterior transverse carina of propodeum absent. Areolet small, closed distally by an unpigmented vein 3 rs-m, APH 0.45–0.5. Vein 2 m-cu antefurcal to vein 3 rs-m. Hind wing vein Cua distinctly longer than crossvein cu-a, HW 1 C 1.74–2.05. — Metasoma (Fig. 4 A, F): Posterior end of S 1 placed posterior to spiracle of T 1. T 1 LW 2.65–2.7; T 1 WW 1.8–2.2; T 2 LW 1.1–1.55; T 2 WW 2.15–2.55. Thyridium about 2.0 times as long as wide. T 2 mostly finely punctate reticulate, anteriorly granulate. Dorsal valve of ovipositor with 5 teeth. Ventral valve with 9 teeth. OST 4.30–4.45. — Color (Figs 1 A, 4): Head mostly black; labrum, mandible basally, clypeus laterally facial, frontal and genal orbits (sometimes medially interrupted), f 6 – f 10 dorsally, and f 5 and f 11 partially, whitish. Mesosoma mostly orange: propleuron, pronotum anteriorly, mesopleuron ventrally 0.2, mesosternum and metasternum black; subtegular ridge and dorsal narrow band on pronotum whitish. Legs mostly dark brown; fore coxa dorsally and posteriorly with a white stripe; hind femur mostly orange; hind t 2 – t 3 sometimes white. Wing hyaline. Metasoma dark brown to black. T 5 – T 7 posteriorly whitish banded. — MALE. Unknown.</p><p>Hosts.</p><p>Unknown.</p><p>Distribution.</p><p>Afrotropical. Known records from Kenya (Fig. 23 B).</p><p>Material examined.</p><p>3 ♀♀. Lectotype. [KENYA] • ♀; “ Elgon, Bryk / M. E. H. / 10 / 8 (?) / typus; Stenarella brykella n. sp., A. Roman det.; Lectotype Stenarella brykella Roman, Townes, 1972 / NHRS –HEVA, 000019821 ” (NHRS). —</p><p>Non-type material.</p><p>2 ♀♀. KENYA • 1 ♀; Karen, Nairobi, Keya 6000 ft; 25–31.VIII.1971; C. van Someren (USUC) • 1 ♀; same data except 2000 ± m; III.1973 (USUC) .</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/103B0A6E4D205EA7AE01754ECBC82A84	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	Santos, Bernardo F.;Bordera, Santiago	Santos, Bernardo F., Bordera, Santiago (2025): Phylogenomics and taxonomic revision of Stenarella Szépligeti (Hymenoptera, Ichneumonidae, Cryptinae). Arthropod Systematics & Phylogeny 83: 463-511, DOI: 10.3897/asp.83.e151385
9D00EEEBC8CA52FBA3694501AA782D9C.text	9D00EEEBC8CA52FBA3694501AA782D9C.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Stenarella bugalana Santos & Bordera 2025	<div><p>3.1.3. Stenarella bugalana sp. nov.</p><p>Figures 2 D, 5, 23 C</p><p>Etymology.</p><p>Named after Bugala Island, where the paratype was collected. From the Latinized adjective bugalanus, - a, - um.</p><p>Diagnosis.</p><p>Stenarella bugalana sp. nov. can be distinguished from all other Stenarella species by the combination of the following characters: mandible punctate at basal half; pronotum mostly with distinct and coarse longitudinal striae (Fig. 5 C); mesoscutum mostly smooth and shiny (Fig. 5 D); posterior area of propodeum transversally strigose (Fig. 2 D); posterior end of S 1 placed distinctively posterior to spiracle of T 1 (Fig. 5 A); thyridium about 2.5 times as long as wide; base of mandible dark orange to dark brown (Fig. 5 B); T 1 dark brown (Fig. 5 A); wing hyaline or evenly infuscate (Fig. 5 E).</p><p>Description.</p><p>FEMALE. Fore wing 8.0– 8.7 mm long. — Head (Fig. 5 A – D): Mandible, clypeus and face moderately setose. Mandible punctate, MLW 2.05–2.2. Malar space short, MSM 0.4–0.45. Clypeus sparsely punctate, CWL 2.6–2.75. Clypeus and face centrally mostly flat. Face centrally distinctly wrinkled, elsewhere sparsely punctate on a granulate background. Frons shiny, granulate and sparsely punctate, with interrupted longitudinal carina. Antenna with 32 flagellomeres. — Mesosoma (Figs 2 D, 5 A, C – E): Pronotum with distinct longitudinal striae, median dorsal part smooth. Epomia strong, reaching pronotal depression. Mesoscutum mostly smooth and shiny, except for anterior part of mid lobe with shallow dense punctures. Notaulus reaching 0.75 of mesoscutum, with short transverse striae. Scutellum rugulose. Mesopleuron and metapleuron moderately setose. Mesopleuron dorsally rugulose striate, ventrally finely rugulose. Epicnemial carina distinct, reaching 0.6 of distance to subtegular ridge. Sternaulus deep evenly upcurved, reaching anterior 0.7 of mesopleuron. Metapleuron rugulose strigose. Propodeum relatively long, dorsal profile in lateral view evenly convex and sloped. Anterior area of propodeum finely rugulose punctate. Propodeal spiracle elliptic, SLW 2.2–2.5. Posterior area of propodeum transversally strigose. Posterior transverse carina of propodeum absent. Areolet small, closed distally by an unpigmented vein 3 rs-m, APH 0.50–0.55. Vein 2 m-cu antefurcal to vein 3 rs-m. Hind wing vein Cua distinctly longer than crossvein cu-a, HW 1 C 1.85–2.15. — Metasoma (Fig. 5 A, F): Posterior end of S 1 placed distinctively posterior to spiracle of T 1. T 1 LW 3.0–3.1; T 1 WW 2.25–2.30; T 2 LW 1.4–1.45; T 2 WW 2.55–2.60. Thyridium about 2.5 times as long as wide. T 2 mostly minutely punctate reticulate on a granulate background, small anterior dorsal portion granulate. Dorsal valve of ovipositor with 5 teeth. Ventral valve with 7 teeth. OST 4.4–4.6. — Color (Figs 2 D, 5): Head dark brown to black: labrum, facial and frontal orbits and genal orbit dorsally, whitish. Antenna with f 6 – f 11 (12 proximally) dorsally white. Mesosoma mostly dark orange: pronotal collar dark brown; propleuron, mesosternum and metasternum black. Fore and mid legs mostly dark orange with coxae, trochanter and trochantellus, dark brown, tarsi darkened or entirely dark brown. Hind leg dark brown. Wing hyaline or evenly infuscate. Metasoma mostly black; T 1 mostly orange-brown; T 1 – T 2 narrowly and T 5 – T 7 extensively, posteriorly whitish. — Male. Unknown.</p><p>Hosts.</p><p>Unknown.</p><p>Distribution.</p><p>Afrotropical. Known records from Uganda (Fig. 23 C).</p><p>Material examined.</p><p>2 ♀♀. Holotype. UGANDA • ♀; Kampala; 24.VII.1933; H. Hargreaves (NHMUK) . Dry pinned. Distal flagellomeres of left antenna, tarsi of fore leg, hind left leg, and t 5 of hind right leg missing. — Paratype. UGANDA • 1 ♀; Kalanga district, Bugala Island, Lake Victoria; 25.III.1912; G. D. H. Carpenter; Running over wooden table in hut (NHMUK) .</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/9D00EEEBC8CA52FBA3694501AA782D9C	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	Santos, Bernardo F.;Bordera, Santiago	Santos, Bernardo F., Bordera, Santiago (2025): Phylogenomics and taxonomic revision of Stenarella Szépligeti (Hymenoptera, Ichneumonidae, Cryptinae). Arthropod Systematics & Phylogeny 83: 463-511, DOI: 10.3897/asp.83.e151385
8F4D250A020D5C2588CD88565C64A396.text	8F4D250A020D5C2588CD88565C64A396.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Stenarella delicata Santos & Bordera 2025	<div><p>3.1.4. Stenarella delicata sp. nov.</p><p>Figures 1 F, 6, 23 D, 28</p><p>Etymology.</p><p>From the Latin adjective delicatus, - a, - um, meaning “ delicate ”, referencing the fact that this is the smallest of the Stenarella species.</p><p>Diagnosis.</p><p>Stenarella delicata sp. nov. can be distinguished from all other Stenarella species by the combination of the following characters: vertex finely granulate with very sparse setiferous punctures (Fig. 6 E); mesoscutum densely and shallowly punctate (Fig. 6 E); propodeum relatively long, dorsal profile in lateral view evenly convex and sloped (Fig. 6 D); areolet closed (Fig. 6 C); vein 2 m-cu antefurcal to vein 3 rs-m (Fig. 6 C); genal orbit only dorsally yellow cream (Fig. 6 D); mesosoma mostly dark orange (Fig. 6 D, E); wings hyaline (Fig. 6 A, C).</p><p>Description.</p><p>FEMALE. Fore wing 6.3–7.8 mm long. — Head (Fig. 6 A, B, D, E): Mandible, clypeus and face moderately setose. Mandible punctate, MLW 2.3–2.5. Malar space short, MSM 0.50–0.55. Clypeus sparsely punctate, CWL 2.8–3.0. Clypeus and face centrally mostly flat. Face centrally weakly rugulose, elsewhere sparsely punctate on finely granulate background. Frons shiny, shallowly granulate and sparsely punctate, with complete but anteriorly faint longitudinal carina Vertex finely granulate with very sparse setiferous punctures. Antenna with 29–30 flagellomeres. — Mesosoma (Figs 1 F, 6 A, C – E): Pronotum with distinct longitudinal striae, anterodorsal corner smooth. Epomia strong, reaching pronotal depression. Mesoscutum densely and shallowly punctate. Notaulus reaching 0.65 of mesoscutum with minute transverse striae. Scutellum with sparse, large shallow punctures. Mesopleuron and metapleuron moderately setose. Mesopleuron dorsally rugulose – strigose, ventrally finely rugulose. Epicnemial carina weak but complete through subtegular ridge. Sternaulus shallow and sinuous, reaching posterior rim of mesopleuron. Metapleuron rugulose. Propodeum relatively long, dorsal profile in lateral view evenly convex and sloped. Anterior area of propodeum rugulose. Propodeal spiracle elliptic, SLW 2.5–2.65. Posterior area of propodeum strongly rugulose. Posterior transverse carina of propodeum medially distinct as an M – shaped ridge, laterally absent, distance to anterior transverse carina 2 times the distance from anterior carina to anterior margin of propodeum. Areolet closed distally by an unpigmented vein 3 rs-m, APH 0.45–0.50. Vein 2 m-cu antefurcal to vein 3 rs-m. Hind wing vein Cua distinctly longer than crossvein cu-a, HW 1 C 2.0. — Metasoma (Fig. 6 A, F): Posterior end of S 1 placed approximately opposite to spiracle of T 1. T 1 LW 2.3–2.4; T 1 WW 2.05–2.2; T 2 LW 0.95–1.15; T 2 WW 2.3–2.35. Thyridium about 2 times as long as wide. T 2 mostly minutely punctate reticulate on a granulate background, small anterior dorsal portion granulate. Dorsal valve of ovipositor with 5 teeth. Ventral valve with 9 teeth. OST 2.85–3.0. — Color (Figs 1 F, 6): Head black: labrum, mandible except apex, mouthparts, facial and frontal orbits, genal orbit except ventral part and lateral spots on clypeus whitish; scape and pedicel yellowish ventrally. Antenna dark brown, f 7 – f 10 dorsally white, f 6 and f 11 only partially white. Mesosoma mostly dark orange: propleuron and ventral part of pronotum dark brown; dorsal lateral rim of pronotum yellow. Legs mostly dark orange; fore femur and tibia clearer. Wing hyaline. Metasoma black. T 1 brown; posterior bands on T 1 – T 2 and posterior part of T 5 – T 7 extensively, whitish. — MALE. Unknown.</p><p>Hosts.</p><p>Unknown.</p><p>Distribution.</p><p>Afrotropical. Known records from Nigeria and Uganda (Fig. 23 D).</p><p>Material examined.</p><p>3 ♀♀. Holotype. UGANDA • ♀; Kampala; X.1965; Denis F. Owen (USUC). Dry pinned. Complete . — Paratypes. NIGERIA • 1 ♀, Oyo state, Ibadan; Oyo International Institute of Tropical Agriculture, 23–30.I.2007; bamboo thicket rainforest 230 m; 48666, 3.8901 (USNM) . UGANDA • 1 ♀; Wakison district, Entebbe; 11.IX.1909; C. A. Wiggins; No. 475 (OXUM) .</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/8F4D250A020D5C2588CD88565C64A396	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	Santos, Bernardo F.;Bordera, Santiago	Santos, Bernardo F., Bordera, Santiago (2025): Phylogenomics and taxonomic revision of Stenarella Szépligeti (Hymenoptera, Ichneumonidae, Cryptinae). Arthropod Systematics & Phylogeny 83: 463-511, DOI: 10.3897/asp.83.e151385
0117A4499F45576D9A58543CD3221FDA.text	0117A4499F45576D9A58543CD3221FDA.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Stenarella domator (Poda 1761)	<div><p>3.1.5. Stenarella domator (Poda, 1761)</p><p>Figures 1 D, 7, 8, 26, 28</p><p>Ichneumon domator Poda, 1761: 105. Type lost.</p><p>Ichneumon gladiator Scopoli, 1763: 283. Type lost. Synonymized by Gravenhorst (1829).</p><p>Ichneumon tarsosus Geoffroy in Fourcroy, 1785: 408. Type lost. Synonymized by Gravenhorst (1829).</p><p>Ichneumon insignitor Villers, 1789: 164. Type lost. Synonymized by Olivier (1792).</p><p>Ichneumon macrourus Gmelin, 1790: 2687. Type lost. Synonymized by Gravenhorst (1829).</p><p>Listrognathus transsylvanicus Kiss, 1924: 60. Holotype ♀ (TMA; not examined) . Synonymized by Roman (1939).</p><p>Stenarella gladiator corsicator Aubert, 1969: 55. Holotype ♀ (MNHN; not examined)</p><p>Mesostenus cruentator Klug in Waltl, 1835: 80. Lectotype ♀ (MFNB, designated and synonymized by Horstmann (1989), examined) .</p><p>Ichneumon ensator Thumberg, 1822: 259 . Holotype ♀ (ZIU, not examined). Synonymized by Roman (1912).</p><p>Ichneumon domator var. ensator Roman, 1912 .</p><p>Mesostenus juvenilis Tosquinet, 1896: 214. Holotype ♀ (IRSNB, not examined) . Synonymized by Roman (1912).</p><p>Mesostenus ruficollis Rudow, 1882: 33. Type lost. Synonymized by Horstmann (1993).</p><p>Stenarella domator: Horstmann (1989).</p><p>Diagnosis.</p><p>Stenarella domator can be distinguished from all other Stenarella species by the combination of the following characters: mesoscutum densely and coarsely punctate (Fig. 7 E); propodeum short, dorsal profile in lateral view broken into a short anterodorsal face and a longer sloped posterodorsal face (Figs 7 D, 8); area basalis usually defined (Fig. 1 D); areolet closed (Fig. 7 C); vein 2 m-cu interstital or postfurcal to vein 3 rs-m (Fig. 7 C); mesosoma entirely black, black and orange, or entirely orange except some whitish marks on dorsal lateral part of pronotum and subtegular ridge (Fig. 8).</p><p>Description.</p><p>FEMALE. Fore wing 5.8–10.4 mm long. — Head (Figs 7 A, B, D, E, 8): Mandible, clypeus and face moderately covered with very long setae. Mandible distinctly striate on basal 0.6, MLW 2.0–2.2. Malar space moderately long, MSM 0.6–0.7. Clypeus sparsely punctate, CWL 3.2–3.3. Clypeus and face centrally mostly flat. Face, frons and vertex densely rugulose punctate on a granulate background, frons with only traces of longitudinal carina. Antenna with 30–35 flagellomeres. — Mesosoma (Figs 1 D, 7 A, C – E, 8): Pronotum dorsally densely rugulose punctate on a granulate background, ventrally longitudinally striate. Epomia long and strong reaching anterior margin of pronotum. Mesoscutum densely and coarsely punctate, punctures mostly coalescent. Notaulus relatively wide and deep, with strong transverse striae, reaching 0.75 of mesoscutum. Scutellum densely punctate, rugulose punctate laterally. Mesopleuron and metapleuron moderately setose. Mesopleuron mostly densely rugulose with sparse punctures and striae. Epicnemial carina weak, reaching 0.5 of distance to subtegular ridge. Sternaulus deep and sinuous, with strong transverse keels, reaching posterior rim of mesopleuron. Metapleuron coarsely rugulose – reticulate on a granulate background. Propodeum short, dorsal profile in lateral view broken into a short anterodorsal face and a longer sloped posterodorsal face. Anterior area of propodeum finely rugulose on a granulate background, with median longitudinal carina distinct. Propodeal spiracle elliptic, SLW 2.0–2.15. Posterior area of propodeum coarsely rugulose. Posterior transverse carina of propodeum distinct but sometimes medially interrupted, confluent with traces of median longitudinal carina, distance to anterior transverse carina 1.0 times the distance from anterior carina to anterior margin of propodeum. Areolet small, closed distally by an unpigmented vein 3 rs-m, APH 0.4–0.45. Vein 2 m-cu interstital or postfurcal to vein 3 rs-m. Hind wing vein Cua distinctly longer than crossvein cu-a, HW 1 C 2.2–2.5. — Metasoma (Figs 7 A, F, 8): Posterior end of S 1 placed anteriorly or approximately opposite to spiracle of T 1. T 1 LW 2.15–2.3; T 1 WW 2.25–2.5; T 2 LW 0.95–1.1; T 2 WW 1.75–1.95. Thyridium about 1.25 times as long as wide. T 2 punctate – reticulate on a finely granulate background, anteriorly only granulate. Dorsal valve of ovipositor with 5 teeth. Ventral valve with 9 teeth. OST 4.6–5.65. — Color (Figs 1 D, 7, 8): Variable in different subspecies as follows. • S. domator domator (Figs 1 D, 7, 8 A): Head mostly black: clypeus, mandibles partially, ocellus, usually central mark at face, facial and frontal orbits narrowly and median spot on genal orbit, orange. f 7 – f 9 dorsally white; f 6 and f 10 partially white. Mesosoma black. All coxae, trochanters, and trochantelli partially, black; femora and tibiae orange; mid and hind tibiae distally and tarsi dark brown; hind t 2 – t 4 white. Wing hyaline, with a darkened hue at pterostigma level. Metasoma black. • S. domator corsicator (Fig. 8 B): As in domator domator except all legs black. • S. domator cruentator (Fig. 8 C): As in domator domator but face and gena much more extensively orange, pronotum mostly, mesoscutum except a longitudinal short black stripe on mid lobe, scutellum laterally and dorsal half of mesopleuron, orange. Legs entirely dark brown to black, hind t 2 – t 4 white. • S. domator ensator (Fig. 8 D): Head orange; mandible teeth and vertex black. Mesosoma orange; propleuron, axillae, mesepisternum, metasternum, dorsal part of metapleuron and anterior part of propodeum, black, usually only the area spiracularis and area basalis black. Metasoma dark brown. Legs mostly dark brown, femora and tibiae tending to be dark orange. — MALE (Fig. 22 A). Fore wing 6.2–8.0 mm long. — Head: MLW 1.9–2.1. Malar space moderately long, MSM 0.45–0.55. CWL 3.75–4.0. Antenna with 31–33 flagellomeres, tyloids on f 12 – f 15. — Mesosoma: SLW 4.0–4.1. APH about 0.3.; HW 1 C 2.75–2.8. — Metasoma: T 1 LW 3.0–4.15; T 1 WW 1.55–2.0; T 2 LW 1.15–1.55; T 2 WW 1.9–2.1. — Color: Similar to female without white band in flagellum. Other characters as in female.</p><p>Comments.</p><p>This species is widely distributed across the Western Palearctic region, seeming to occur across all Europe as well as North Africa and in Central Asia as far as Iran and east Kazakhstan. At least in Western and Central Europe, it appears to be a common species, including in many anthropic areas such as wooden buildings where it likely searches for hosts that nest inside holes in the wood. The species counts thousands of records in public platforms such as GBIF, iNaturalist and Flickr (http://flickr.com), in stark contrast with the Afrotropical species of the genus for which the distribution is still poorly known. Wahl and Green (2020) showed that S. domator was also introduced in North America, and indeed, both iNaturalist and GBIF show reliable occurrences of the species in several localities (see “ Distribution ” below).</p><p>According to Horstmann (1989), there are four valid subspecies of S. domator, which mostly correspond to color morphs (see “ Color ” above) found at different latitudes. S. domator cruentator is found at the Iberian Peninsula (with the Pyrenees seeming to be the barrier between the populations of the subspecies and those of S. domator domator), and also in Iran (see photos in Heydari et al. 2021) and Armenia (https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/86050747), but not in the rest of Southern Europe (Italy, Greece), where S. domator domator is the resident subspecies. This leaves an open question of whether S. domator cruentator represents a distinct lineage or merely environmentally induced color variation. S. domator ensator is restricted to the Western part of North Africa, with records in Algeria and Morocco – Stenarella is apparently absent from the Eastern part of North Africa and the Eastern coast of the Mediterranean. Finally, S. domator corsicator is recorded only from Corsica, but its color differences relative to S. domator domator are so slight that it is dubious whether it can be considered a distinct population in any meaningful level.</p><p>As noted above, S. domator shows relevant color variation across its very broad geographical range, but we have only examined a small fraction of the very large number of specimens available in collections and analyzed molecular only from a few specimens. Hence, a more detailed investigation of genetic and phenotypic variation within S. domator, and its potential status as multiple specific entities, is beyond the scope of this work.</p><p>Hosts.</p><p>The electronic catalog Taxapad (Yu et al. 2016) records ten host species for S. domator; of these, four are aculeate Hymenoptera: Eumenes pomiformis (Fabricius) [ Vespidae: Eumeninae], Sceliphron spirifex (Linnaeus) [ Sphecidae], Diodontus tristris (Vander Linden) [ Crabronidae: Pemphredoninae], and Andrena bisulcata (Morawitz) [ Andrenidae]. Other wood – associated hosts are recorded as well, but Wahl and Green (2020) make the case that records of sawflies and beetles as hosts are probably due to observers overlooking aculeate nests that used pre-existing holes.</p><p>Distribution.</p><p>Palearctic, and indroduced in the Nearctic. Known records from Algeria, Austria, Belarus, Belgium, Bulgaria, Croatia, Cyprus, Czech Republic, Denmark NR-G, Estonia NR-G, Finland, France, Georgia NR-I, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Iran, Italy, Kazakhstan NR-G-I, Latvia, Lithuania, Luxembourg NR-G, Morocco, Netherlands, Norway, Poland, Portugal, Romania, Russia, Slovakia, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, Tunisia, Turkey, Ukraine and former Yugoslavia. Introduced in the United States (Minnesota NR-I, New York NR-I, Ohio). The species has also been listed from the United Kingdom in Yu et al. (2016) based on a primary record for Staffordshire by Carr (1924), but his collection had specimens from southern Europe mixed with British material and hence these records are unreliable (Schwarz and Shaw 1998) (Fig. 26).</p><p>Material examined.</p><p>129 ♀♀; 10 ♂♂.</p><p>Stenarella domator corsicator (4 ♀♀): FRANCE • 1 ♀; Corsica; C. Villemant (MNHN) • 1 ♀; same locality; July 1994; Cl. Girard (MNHN) • 1 ♀; Corsica; Bonifacio; April 1999; Coll. Fcitoi (MNHN) • 1 ♀; Corsica; Porto Vecchio; May 1972; S. Kelner – Pillault (MNHN) .</p><p>Stenarella domator cruentator (8 ♀♀): SPAIN • 1 ♀; Andalusien; Wal., S.; “ Lectotypus Cryptus cruentator Klug, Horstmann, 1984 ” (MFNB) • 1 ♀; Banyeres de Mariola ( Alicante); 8.VI.2014; leg. Bordera (CEUA) • 1 ♀; El Ventorrillo, Cercedilla (Madrid); 3.VIII.1962; Docavo and Llopis leg. (CEUA) • 1 ♀; Lusitania, Spanien; 10829; “ Lectoparatypus; Cryptus cruentator Klug, Hortmann, 1984 ” (MFNB) • 1 ♀; Mallorca; Keifel, S.; 10829 (MFNB) • 1 ♀; P. N. de Cabañeros (Ciudad Real); Abierto – Raña del Pocico; 25. IV / 8.V.2004; TM 1 (CEUA) • 1 ♀; same locality; Fresneda – Gargantilla; 15. IV / 7.V.2004; TM 1 (CEUA) • 1 ♀; Villafranca del Cid ( Castellón); 5.VIII.1989 (CEUA) .</p><p>Stenarella domator domator (102 ♀♀, 9 ♂♂): FRANCE • 2 ♀♀; Allier, Brout – Vernet; August 1928; H. du Buysson (MNHN) • 2 ♀♀; Argentat – sur – Dordogne; June 1987; Coll. J. Vachal (MNHN) • 1 ♂; Argentat – sur – Dordogne; May 1989; Coll. J. Vachal (MNHN) • 1 ♀: Aube; July 1992; P. Viette Coll. (MNHN) • 1 ♀; Bethonvilliers; August 1984; C. Thirion (MNHN) • 1 ♀; Bézu – saint – Eloi; 1888; Ch. Brongniart (MNHN) • 1 ♀; Bormes – les – Mimosas; Coll. Lichtenstein (MNHN) • 1 ♂; Boulogne – sur – Mer; 1877; Coll. Giraud (MNHN) • 1 ♀; Brissac; 1902; R. du Buysson (MNHN) • 1 ♂; Brout – Vernet; June 1990; H. du Buysson (MNHN) • 1 ♀; Brout – Vernet; July 1989; H. du Buysson (MNHN) • 2 ♀♀; Champfleury; May 1966 / 67; Coll. O. Sichel (MNHN) • 1 ♀; Champfleury; May 1960; Coll. O. Sichel (MNHN) • 1 ♀; same locality; July 1966; Coll. O. Sichel (MNHN) • 1 ♀; same locality; 1867; Coll. O. Sichel (MNHN) • 1 ♀; Digne – les – Bains; 1923; A. Seyrig (MNHN) • 1 ♀; Dun – sur – Grandy; September 1970; Coll. Giraud (MNHN) • 2 ♀♀; Fontainebleau; 1897; A. Finot; (MNHN) • 1 ♂; same locality; July 1979; Finot (MNHN) • 1 ♀; Fouesnant; 1927; Alain Hémon (MNHN) • 1 ♀; Galié; 1887; Coll. O. Sichel (MNHN) • 1 ♀; Gavarnie – Gèdre; August 1916; F. Picard Coll. (MNHN) • 1 ♀; Guern; 1908; M. Pic (MNHN) • 3 ♀; Foret de la Hardt; June 1926; A. Seyrig (MNHN) • 1 ♀; La Celle – Dunoise; 1917; Alluaud (MNHN) • 4 ♀♀; La Môle; August 1984; Coll. A. Adamski (MNHN) • 1 ♀; Lardy; May 1995; F. Picard Coll. (MNHN) • 1 ♀; Le Mesnil; August 1989 (MNHN) • 1 ♀; Le Vésinet; 1867; Coll. O. Sichel (MNHN) • 4 ♀♀; Levant Island; August 1974; H. Le Grand (MNHN) • 1 ♀; Lozère; H. Maneval • 1 ♀; Maison – Lafitte; 1919; Coll. J. de Gaulle (MNHN) • 1 ♀; Maraye – en – Othe; 1927; A. Hemon Coll.; (MNHN) • 1 ♀; France méridionale; 1867; O. Sichel (MNHN) • 2 ♀♀; Montpellier; July 1918; Jean Lichtenstein (MNHN) • 1 ♀; same locality; August 1922; J. Lichtenstein (MNHN) • 1 ♀; same locality; 1962; O. Sichel Coll. (MNHN) • 1 ♀; [France] Montp. May – 1911; ex Coll Pfankuch; Mesostenus gladiator Grav. (MFNB) • 1 ♀; Moutiers; 1867; O. Sichel Coll. (MNHN) • 1 ♀; Narbonnes; 1919; J. de Gaulle Coll. (MNHN) • 1 ♀; Orry – la – Ville; June 1938; J. Bourgogne (MNHN) • 1 ♀; Plouharnel; 1919; J. de Gaulle Coll. (MNHN) • 1 ♀; Pont – de – l’Arche; July 1903; J. de Gaule Coll. (MNHN) • 1 ♀; Pontarlier; June 1960; O. Sichel Coll. (MNHN) • 2 ♀♀; Rennes; René Oberthur (MNHN) • 1 ♀; Royan; 1915; J. Pérez Coll. (MNHN) • 1 ♀; Saint Mandé; June 1967; O. Sichel Coll. (MNHN) • 1 ♀; Saint – Sendoux; 1989; H. du Buysson (MNHN) • 2 ♀♀; Sainte Baume; L. Chopard (MNHN) • 1 ♀; Samoens; A. Villiers (MNHN) • 1 ♀; Sèvres; June 1922; A. Seyrig; (MNHN) • 2 ♀♀; Thann; May 1921; A. Seyrig (MNHN) • 1 ♀; Toulouse; H. du Buysson (MNHN) • 1 ♂; Tuchan; 1887; Coll. O. Sichel (MNHN) • 1 ♀; Vachères; July 1976; Casevitz – Weulersse rec. (MNHN) • 1 ♀; Varenne; 1867; O. Sichel Coll. (MNHN) • 1 ♂; Vaux; June 1926; Coll. J. de Gaulle (MNHN) • 1 ♀; Verdun; J. de Gaulle Coll. (MNHN) . GERMANY • 4 ♀♀; Berlin; J. P. E. Fr. Stein S.; 24182 (MFNB) • 1 ♀; Berlin; Brieselang; Gerstaecker; S.; Mesostenus gladiator Grav. Ariesel (MFNB) • 2 ♀♀; Döl. Heide; 18.V.1918; Halle A. S.; Mesostenus gladiator Grav. det. Haupt; 1926 (MFNB) • 1 ♀; Furstenberg (MNHN) • 1 ♀; Jena; Thür.; 19.VI.1900; Mesostenus gladiator Grav. Friese det 1900 (MFNB) • 4 ♀♀, 1 ♂; Schwerin (MFNB) • 1 ♀; Schwerin; 21.VI.1881 (MFNB) • 2 ♀♀; Stobben; Elbing; (Noctzendorf) (MFNB) • 2 ♀♀; Thüringen; O. Smiedecknecht; S.; 25927; Mesostenus gladiator (MFNB) • 1 ♂; Weissburg; Bern Oberl. Mesostenus gladiator Grav. Coll. Schmiedeknecht (MFNB) . GREECE • 1 ♀; Crete; Chania; April 1971; J. F. Aubert (MNHN) • 1 ♀; Salonique; 1916; Dr Rivet (MNHN) • 2 ♀♀; Thalos; May 1924; A. Seyrig (MNHN) . [ITALY] • 1 ♀; Bozen; 13.VII.1908 (MFNB) • 2 ♀♀; Ragusa; Rudolf; Mesostenus domator (Poda) Krieg. det. (MFNB) . [LATVIA] • 1 ♀; Kurland, Wezkukkul; 12.VI.1916; 1741 (MFNB) • 1 ♀; Kurland, Wezkukkul; 17.VII.1916; Bischoff, S. G. (MFNB) . RUSSIA • 1 ♀; [Russia] Rossitten; 23.VI.1912; Mesostenus gladiator Grav. (MFNB) • 1 ♀; Saint Petersburg; 1867; O. Sichel Coll. (MNHN) . SWITZERLAND • 1 ♀; Bern; 1887; O. Sichel Coll. (MNHN) • 1 ♂; Burgdof (MNHN) • 1 ♀; Charmey; 1919; J. de Gaulle Coll. (MNHN) • 1 ♀; Jura; A. August 1924; Seyrig (MNHN) • 1 ♀; Lugano; May 1963; O. Sichel Coll. (MNHN) • 1 ♀; Yverdon – les – Bains; 1867; O. Sichel Coll. (MNHN) .</p><p>Stenarella domator ensator (15 ♀♀, 1 ♂): ALGERIA • 11 ♀♀, 2 ♂; Annaba; 1963; O. Sichel (MNHN) • 1 ♀; Berrouaghia; Coll. F. Picard; 1939 (MNHN) • 1 ♀; Moyen Atlas; Tameghilt, 1600–2100 m; June 1929; F. Le Cerf (MNHN) . MOROCCO • 1 ♀; Tangier; 1914; H. Marmottan (MNHN) . TUNISIA • 1 ♀; Menzel Bourguiba; A. Jung Coll. (MNHN) .</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/0117A4499F45576D9A58543CD3221FDA	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	Santos, Bernardo F.;Bordera, Santiago	Santos, Bernardo F., Bordera, Santiago (2025): Phylogenomics and taxonomic revision of Stenarella Szépligeti (Hymenoptera, Ichneumonidae, Cryptinae). Arthropod Systematics & Phylogeny 83: 463-511, DOI: 10.3897/asp.83.e151385
40053F39C7A15E278E778A9AC26F7FF2.text	40053F39C7A15E278E778A9AC26F7FF2.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Stenarella favilla Santos & Bordera 2025	<div><p>3.1.6. Stenarella favilla sp. nov.</p><p>Figures 2 B, 9, 23E</p><p>Etymology.</p><p>From the Latin favilla, - ae, meaning “ embers ”, in reference to the irregular pattern of black and ferruginous resembling glowing embers. Noun in apposition.</p><p>Diagnosis.</p><p>Stenarella favilla sp. nov. can be distinguished from all other Stenarella species by the combination of the following characters: clypeus and face in lateral view with flat profile; mandible striated at basal half (Fig. 9 B); mesoscutum mostly smooth and shiny (Fig. 9 E); notaulus relatively narrow and deep with minute dense transverse striae (Fig. 9 E); posterior area of propodeum mostly rugulose, medially strigose (Fig. 2 B); propodeal spiracle elongated, SLW about 3.0 (Fig. 9 C); areolet closed (Fig. 9 D); posterior end of S 1 placed approximately opposite to spiracle of T 1 (Figs 9 C); thyridium at most 1.5 times as long as wide (Fig. 9 C); mesosoma black and orange (Fig. 9 C, E)</p><p>Description.</p><p>FEMALE. Fore wing 10.7–11.3 mm long. — Head (Fig. 9 A – C, E): Mandible moderately covered with very long setae. Clypeus and face sparsely setose. Mandible striate on basal 0.6, striation stronger at mid length MLW 2.0–2.2. Malar space short, MSM 0.35–045. Clypeus smooth and shiny, CWL 2.55–2.7. Clypeus and face with flat profile from lateral view. Face centrally slightly rugulose, elsewhere shallowly granulate – punctate. Frons mostly smooth and shiny sparsely punctate with weak but complete longitudinal carina. Vertex smooth and shiny with few punctures on ocellar area. Antenna incomplete. — Mesosoma (Figs 2 B, 9 A, C – E): Pronotum mostly smooth and shiny, with short and very shallow longitudinal striae along anterior depression. Epomia weak, reaching pronotal depression. Mesoscutum almost entirely smooth and shiny, except for distinct set of longitudinal striae between posterior end of notauli. Notaulus narrow and deep with minute dense transverse striae, reaching about 0.7 of mesoscutum. Scutellum densely rugulose punctate. Mesopleuron and metapleuron moderately setose. Mesopleuron mostly densely punctate reticulate, with sparse striae along epicnemial carina, dorsal central part tending to be smooth with more sparse punctures. Epicnemial carina distinct, reaching 0.8 of distance to subtegular ridge. Sternaulus deep and narrow, evenly upcurved, reaching anterior 0.7 of mesopleuron. Metapleuron finely rugulose striate. Propodeum relatively long, dorsal profile in lateral view evenly convex and sloped. Anterior area of propodeum coarsely rugulose punctate. Propodeal spiracle elliptic, SLW 3.0. Posterior area of propodeum mostly rugulose, medially strigose. Posterior transverse carina of propodeum absent. Areolet closed distally by an unpigmented vein 3 rs-m, APH 0.40–0.45. Hind wing vein Cua distinctly longer than crossvein cu-a, HW 1 C 3.0. — Metasoma (Fig. 9 A, C, F): Posterior end of S 1 placed approximately opposite to spiracle of T 1. Thyridium 1.3–1.4 times as long as wide. T 2 minutely punctate reticulate on a granulate background except for small granulate portion on anterior part. Dorsal valve of ovipositor with 5 teeth. Ventral valve with 9 teeth. OST 4.50–4.95. — Color (Figs 2 B, 9): Head mostly black: base of mandible, clypeus, facial, frontal and genal orbits dorsally, yellow cream. Antenna dark brown with whitish dorsal band. Mesosoma mostly orange: propleuron, ventral part of pronotum, epicnemium and mesopleuron, mesosternum, metasternum and ventral part of metapleuron, dark brown to black; dorsal posterior part of propodeum lighter. Fore and mid legs mostly light orange, coxae dark brown, femora and tibiae ventrally and all tarsi somewhat darker, trochanters whitish. Hind leg mostly dark brown, trochanter whitish ventrally. Wing hyaline. Metasoma mostly black: posterior narrow bands on T 1 – T 2, and dorsal posterior part of T 6 – T 7 whitish. — Male. Unknown.</p><p>Hosts.</p><p>Unknown.</p><p>Distribution.</p><p>Afrotropical. Known records from South Africa (Fig. 23 E).</p><p>Material examined.</p><p>2 ♀♀. Holotype. SOUTH AFRICA • ♀; KwalaZulu – Natal, Umhlanga; 22.I.1960; G. C. Clark (NHMUK) . Dry pinned. Distal flagellomeres from f 8 of left antenna, and from f 13 of right antenna, hind left leg and mid right leg from coxae, t 2 – t 5 of mid left leg, all tarsi of hind right leg and distal part of fore wing, missing. — Paratype. SOUTH AFRICA • 1 ♀; KwaZulu – Natal; 1875; W. W Saunders (OXUM) .</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/40053F39C7A15E278E778A9AC26F7FF2	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	Santos, Bernardo F.;Bordera, Santiago	Santos, Bernardo F., Bordera, Santiago (2025): Phylogenomics and taxonomic revision of Stenarella Szépligeti (Hymenoptera, Ichneumonidae, Cryptinae). Arthropod Systematics & Phylogeny 83: 463-511, DOI: 10.3897/asp.83.e151385
2E8F15CB75D25032A34348AA60578EEC.text	2E8F15CB75D25032A34348AA60578EEC.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Stenarella fenestralis Santos & Bordera 2025	<div><p>3.1.7. Stenarella fenestralis sp. nov.</p><p>Figures 2 F, 10, 23 F, 28</p><p>Etymology.</p><p>From the Latinized adjective fenestralis, - e, meaning “ window ”, in reference to the amusing fact that one of the specimens was collected at a window.</p><p>Diagnosis.</p><p>Stenarella fenestralis sp. nov. can be distinguished from all other Stenarella species by the combination of the following characters: mandible punctate at basal half (Fig. 10 C); longitudinal carina of frons complete; pronotum mostly with distinct longitudinal striae (Fig. 10 E); mesoscutum mostly smooth and shiny (Fig. 10 F); sternaulus deep and narrow, evenly upcurved, reaching anterior 0.6 of mesopleuron (Fig. 10 E); posterior area of propodeum rugulose (Fig. 2 F); thyridium 3.45–3.75 times as long as wide; posterior end of S 1 placed approximately opposite to spiracle of T 1 (Fig. 10 A, G); base of mandible whitish (Fig. 10 B, C); mesosoma mostly orange (Fig. 10 E, F); tergites II – III mostly orange (Fig. 10 A, G).</p><p>Description.</p><p>FEMALE. Fore wing 7.2–12 mm long. — Head (Fig. 10 A – C, E, F): Mandible, clypeus and face densely covered with very long setae. Mandible punctate at base, MLW 2.4–2.6. Malar space short, MSM 0.35–0.45. Clypeus smooth, CWL 2.85–3.0. Clypeus and face centrally mostly flat. Face centrally weakly rugulose, elsewhere shallowly granulate. Frons shiny, mostly smooth, granulate laterally, sparsely punctate, with strong and complete longitudinal carina. Vertex shiny, shallowly granulate laterally with fine and dense punctures. Antenna with 31–33 flagellomeres. — Mesosoma (Figs 2 F, 10 A, D – F): Pronotum covered by uniform longitudinal strong and coarse striae, the striae fading dorsally leaving small dorsal smooth area. Epomia strong, reaching pronotal depression. Mesoscutum mostly smooth and shiny, anterior part of mid and lateral lobes with shallow dense punctures, area between posterior end of notauli with longitudinal striae Notaulus relatively wide and deep with transverse striae, reaching about 0.8 of mesoscutum. Scutellum densely and coarsely punctate. Mesopleuron and metapleuron densely setose. Mesopleuron almost entirely minutely rugulose with some striae dorsally. Epicnemial carina distinct, reaching 0.9 of distance to subtegular ridge. Sternaulus deep and narrow, evenly upcurved, reaching anterior 0.6 of mesopleuron. Metapleuron rugulose. Propodeum relatively long, dorsal profile in lateral view evenly convex and sloped. Anterior area of propodeum coarsely rugulose reticulate. Propodeal spiracle elliptic, SLW 2.35–2.50. Posterior area of propodeum rugulose. Posterior transverse carina of propodeum absent. Areolet very small, closed distally by an unpigmented vein 3 rs-m, APH 0.25–0.35. Vein 2 m-cu antefurcal to vein 3 rs-m. Hind wing vein Cua distinctly longer than crossvein cu-a, HW 1 C 2.1–2.2. — Metasoma (Fig. 10 A, G): Posterior end of S 1 placed approximately opposite to spiracle of T 1. T 1 LW 2.70–2.75; T 1 WW 2.0–2.35; T 2 LW 1.1–1.2; T 2 WW 2.3–2.45. Thyridium 3.45–3.75 times as long as wide. T 2 minutely punctate reticulate on a granulate background, anterior dorsal part only granulate. Dorsal valve of ovipositor with 5 teeth. Ventral valve with 6–7 teeth. OST 3.5–4.3. — Color (Figs 2 F, 10): Head mostly black: base of mandibles, mouth parts, clypeus, facial, frontal and genal orbits, whitish. Antenna mostly dark brown, basally lighter ventrally, f 7 – f 10 dorsally and f 6, f 11 partially, white. Mesosoma mostly orange: propleuron, ventral part of pronotum anteriorly, mesosternum, metasternum and metapleural carina, black; dorsal lateral rim of pronotum and subtegular ridge white cram. Fore and mid legs, mostly light orange; coxae and dorsal part of trochanters dark brown, ventral part of trochanters whitish. Hind leg dark brown. Wing hyaline. Metasoma mostly black: T 1 – T 2 anterior part of T 3 and rarely T 4 mostly orange, posterior margin of T 1 – T 2 yellow, posterior part of T 5 – T 7 white. — Male. Unknown.</p><p>Hosts.</p><p>Unknown.</p><p>Distribution.</p><p>Afrotropical. Known records from Angola, Malawi, Zambia and Zimbabwe (Fig. 23 F).</p><p>Material examined.</p><p>21 ♀♀. Holotype. ZIMBABWE (“ Rhodesia ”) • ♀; Harare (“ Salisbury ”), Chishawasha; III.1979; A. Watsham (NHMUK) . Dry pinned. Complete. — Paratypes. ANGOLA • 1 ♀; Huíla province, Tundavala; 8–10 miles NW. Sa da Bandeira; 27–29.III.1972; Southern African Exp. B. M. 1972–1 (NHMUK) . MALAWI (“ Nyasaland ”) • 1 ♀; Mangochi (“ Fort Johnston ”); 12 Km E of Ft. Johnston; 3280 ft; 1.I.1929; rather thick bush; W. A. Lamborn (OXUM) . ZAMBIA • 1 ♀; 15 km. E. Lusaka; III.1980; R. A. Beaver (NHMUK) . ZIMBABWE (“ South Rhodesia ”) • 1 ♀; Harare (“ Salisbury ”), Chishawasha; II–III.1978; A. Watsham (NHMUK) • 1 ♀; same data except X.1978 • 5 ♀♀; same data except XII.1978 • 1 ♀; same data except III.1979 • 1 ♀; same date except III. 1980 • 1 ♀; same data except IX.1980 • 1 ♀; same data except XI.1980 • 2 ♀♀; same data except XII.1980 • 1 ♀; same data except I.1981 • 1 ♀; same data except II.1981 • 1 ♀; same data except III.1981 • 1 ♀; same data except “ At window Ent. Laboratory Salisbury Dist. Dept. Agric. S. Rhodesia ”; 27.IX.1951; M. C. Mossop; “ Pres by Com Inst Ent B M 1953–623 ” / Com. Inst. Ent. Coll. NO. 1318 / Parasilsila sp. G. J. Kerroch det. 1953 / Accession No. 6709 (all of them NHMUK) .</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/2E8F15CB75D25032A34348AA60578EEC	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	Santos, Bernardo F.;Bordera, Santiago	Santos, Bernardo F., Bordera, Santiago (2025): Phylogenomics and taxonomic revision of Stenarella Szépligeti (Hymenoptera, Ichneumonidae, Cryptinae). Arthropod Systematics & Phylogeny 83: 463-511, DOI: 10.3897/asp.83.e151385
770C3509D5A95AB98A90F70639660B34.text	770C3509D5A95AB98A90F70639660B34.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Stenarella hopkinsi Santos & Bordera 2025	<div><p>3.1.8. Stenarella hopkinsi sp. nov.</p><p>Figures 1 J, 11, 24 A, 28</p><p>Etymology.</p><p>Named after hymenopterist Tapani Hopkins (ZMUT), who collected the type specimens of this species during many months of tireless fieldwork in Uganda. Noun in genitive case.</p><p>Diagnosis.</p><p>Stenarella hopkinsi sp. nov. can be distinguished from all other Stenarella species by the combination of the following characters: pronotum and mesoscutum smooth and shiny (Fig. 11 B, D); anterior area of propodeum coarsely rugose punctate; posterior area of propodeum transversely striate, striae regularly separated and reaching pleural sulcus (Fig. 1 J); face and facial orbits black (Fig. 11 C); antenna with white band on f 6 – f 11 (12) (Fig. 11 A); mesoscutum black (Fig. 11 D); mesopleuron, metapleuron and propodeum dark orange to brownish orange (Fig. 11 B); hind coxa black (Fig. 11 A).</p><p>Description.</p><p>FEMALE. Fore wing about 13.7 mm long. — Head (Fig. A – D): Mandible covered with very dense and long setae. Clypeus and face moderately setose. Mandible punctate or slightly striate at basal half, MLW 2.0–2.2. Malar space short, MSM 0.40–0.45. Clypeus smooth, CWL 2.75–3.0. Clypeus and face flat. Face centrally distinctly rugulose, elsewhere smooth or slightly granulated. Frons smooth and shiny, sometimes slightly rugulose behind antennal sockets, with weak interrupted longitudinal carina. Antenna with 36 flagellomeres. — Mesosoma (Figs 1 J, 11 A, B, D, E): Pronotum almost entirely smooth and shiny, punctate at dorsal medial part, weakly longitudinally striate at ventral part of pronotal depression. Epomia strong, reaching pronotal depression. Mesoscutum almost entirely smooth and shiny with coarse convergent rugae between posterior end of notauli. Notaulus reaching 0.85 of mesoscutum with fine transverse striae. Scutellum mostly punctate with central part smooth. Mesopleuron and metapleuron moderately setose. Mesopleuron very densely and finely punctate, dorsally with weak longitudinal rugae. Epicnemial carina distinct, reaching 0.8 of distance to subtegular ridge. Sternaulus moderately deep and sinuous, almost reaching posterior rim of mesopleuron. Metapleuron densely punctate rugulose. Propodeum relatively long, dorsal profile in lateral view evenly convex and sloped. Anterior area of propodeum coarsely rugose punctate. Propodeal spiracle elliptic, SLW 2.65–2.8. Posterior area of propodeum covered by more or less uniformly spaced transverse striae. Posterior transverse carina of propodeum indiscernible from transverse striae. Areolet very small, closed distally by an unpigmented vein 3 rs-m, APH 0.30–0.35. Vein 2 m-cu antefurcal to vein 3 rs-m. Hind wing vein Cua distinctly longer than crossvein cu-a, HW 1 C 2.7–2.85. — Metasoma (Fig. A, F): Posterior end of S 1 placed posteriorly to spiracle of T 1. T 1 LW 2.7–3.1; T 1 WW 2.3–2.45; T 2 LW 1.20–1.4; T 2 WW 2.1–2.15. Thyridium about 1.8–2.2 times as long as wide. T 2 mostly minutely densely punctate reticulate on a finely granulate background, anterior part only finely granulate. Dorsal valve of ovipositor with 5 teeth. Ventral valve with 10 teeth. OST 3.4–3.60. — Color (Fig. 1 J, 11): Head mostly black: labrum, clypeus, mandible except distal part, mouth parts, widely frontal orbits, narrow spot on dorsal part of genal orbit and f 6–11 (12) dorsally, whitish. Mesosoma mostly dark orange to brownish orange: propleuron, pronotum, mesoscutum, anterior part and widely median part of propodeum, dark brown to black; small spot on dorsal posterior part of pronotum, subtegular ridge, lateral parts of scutellum and posterior medial wide spot on propodeum, whitish. Legs mostly orange; fore and mid coxae and trochanters partially dark brown and whitish, tarsi dark brown; hind leg dark brown; t 1 posteriorly, t 2 – t 4, and distal part of t 5, yellowish. Wing hyaline. Metasoma dark brown; T 1 – T 2 narrowly and T 6 – T 7 extensively, posteriorly whitish. — Male. Unknown.</p><p>Hosts.</p><p>Unknown.</p><p>Distribution.</p><p>Afrotropical. Known records from Uganda and Democratic Republic of the Congo (Fig. 24 A).</p><p>Material examined.</p><p>2 ♀♀. Holotype. UGANDA • ♀; Kabarole district, Kibale National Park, Fort Portal; 6–21.XI.2014; T. Hopkins, http://mus.utu.fi/ZMUT.11366/HILLT1 141121 (ZMUT) . Dry pinned. Right hind leg removed for DNA sequencing. — Paratype. DEMOCRATIC REPUBLIC OF THE CONGO • 1 ♀; North Kivu, Irangi, Station Rech. Scient., Fluß Luoho; 800–1000 m; 3–6.III.1984; Burmeister, Fuchs, Kühbandner (ZSMC) .</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/770C3509D5A95AB98A90F70639660B34	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	Santos, Bernardo F.;Bordera, Santiago	Santos, Bernardo F., Bordera, Santiago (2025): Phylogenomics and taxonomic revision of Stenarella Szépligeti (Hymenoptera, Ichneumonidae, Cryptinae). Arthropod Systematics & Phylogeny 83: 463-511, DOI: 10.3897/asp.83.e151385
59D2928D7A01574BBFECC9B089E26977.text	59D2928D7A01574BBFECC9B089E26977.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Stenarella insidiator (Smith 1859)	<div><p>3.1.9. Stenarella insidiator (Smith, 1859)</p><p>Figures 1 C, 12, 22 B, 27, 28</p><p>Mesostenus insidiator Smith 1859: 60. Holotype ♀ (OXUM, examined) .</p><p>Orientostenaraeus chinensis Uchida, 1930: 321. Holotype ♀ (Hokkaido University, not examined) . Synonymized by Townes et al. (1961).</p><p>Stenarella insidiator: Townes et al. (1961).</p><p>Diagnosis.</p><p>Stenarella insidiator can be distinguished from all other Stenarella species by the combination of the following characters: mesoscutum densely and coarsely punctate on a granulate background (Fig. 12 D); areolet usually open, rarely with trace of vein 3 rs-m, vein 2 rs-m obliterated (Fig. 12 C); posterior area of propodeum medially punctate reticulate, laterally reticulate rugose (Fig. 1 C); mesosoma black, with well-defined whitish marks (Figs 12 A, D, E, 22 B), propodeum with two large posterolateral whitish marks (Figs 1 C, 12 E, 22 B).</p><p>Description.</p><p>FEMALE. Fore wing 7.5–16.3 mm long. — Head (Fig. 12 A, B, E): Mandible, clypeus and face moderately setose. Mandible finely punctate granulate, MLW 1.85–2.0. Malar space short, MSM 0.45–0.5. Clypeus sparsely punctate, CWL 3.0–3.25. Clypeus and face centrally mostly flat. Face centrally weakly wrinkled, elsewhere smooth. Frons medially rugulose punctate, laterally granulate, with weak but complete longitudinal carina. Antenna with 33–36 flagellomeres. — Mesosoma (Figs 1 C, 12 A, C – E): Pronotum dorsal margin with shallow dense punctures, ventrally with distinct longitudinal striae, otherwise smooth and shiny. Epomia long but weak, reaching pronotal depression. Mesoscutum densely and coarsely punctate on a granulate background, punctures coalescent. Notaulus reaching 0.90 of mesoscutum, with small transverse striae. Scutellum densely punctate. Mesopleuron and metapleuron moderately setose. Mesopleuron dorsally rugulose striate, ventrally rugulose. Epicnemial carina weak, reaching 0.5 of distance to subtegular ridge. Sternaulus shallow and sinuous, reaching posterior rim of mesopleuron. Metapleuron dorsally coarsely and densely punctate reticulate, ventrally rugulose striate. Propodeum relatively long, dorsal profile in lateral view evenly convex and sloped. Anterior area of propodeum densely punctate. Propodeal spiracle elliptic, SLW 3.0–3.2. Posterior area of propodeum medially punctate reticulate, laterally reticulate rugose. Posterior transverse carina of propodeum absent. Areolet small usually open distally, if close, vein 3 rs-m unpigmented, APH 0.45–0.5. vein usually 2 rs-m obliterated. Vein 2 m-cu interstitial to vein 3 rs-m. Hind wing vein Cua distinctly longer than cross vein cu-a, HW 1 C 1.85–2.3. — Metasoma (Fig. 12 A, F): Posterior end of S 1 placed approximately opposite to spiracle of T 1. T 1 LW 2.9–3.1; T 1 WW 2.05–2.3; T 2 LW 0.95–1.4; T 2 WW 2.1–2.3. Thyridium about 1.2 times as long as wide. T 2 punctate reticulate except for small granulate part on anterior part. Dorsal valve of ovipositor with 9 teeth. Ventral valve with 11 teeth. OST 2.6–5.2. — Color (Figs 1 C, 12): Head mostly black: labrum, clypeus, face, mandibles except distal part and eye orbits, except dorsal part of genal orbit, whitish. Antenna with f 5 (6) – f 15 (17) white. Mesosoma mostly black; dorsal margin and usually a spot ventrally on pronotum, subtegular ridge, large central spot on mesopleuron, dorsal division of metapleuron, central spot on mesoscutum, tegula, scutellum and postscutellum and two large posterior lateral marks on propodeum, yellow cream. Legs mostly orange; fore and mid coxae and trochanters, hind coxa dorsally and ventrally, sometimes also femur and tibia mostly, and hind tarsi, yellow cream; hind coxa mostly, hind trochanter and trochantellus, distal part of femur and base and distal part of tibia, dark brown. Wing hyaline. Metasoma mostly dark brown T 1 – T 8 posteriorly yellow cream banded. — MALE (Fig. 22 B). Fore wing 7.5–9.5 mm long. — Head. MSM 0.35–0.45. Clypeus sparsely punctate, CWL 2.2–2.4. Antenna with 33–35 flagellomeres; tyloids on t 12 – t 17 (18). — Mesosoma. SLW 3.2–4.5. Hind wing vein Cua distinctly longer than crossvein cu-a, HW 1 C 1.75–2.1. — Metasoma. Posterior end of S 1 placed approximately opposite to spiracle of T 1 or slightly posterior. T 1 LW 3.5–3.9; T 1 WW 1.9–2.0; T 2 LW 1.7–2.1; T 2 WW 1.8–1.9. — Color. As in female. Antenna with f 6 – f 18 or f 7 – f 17 white, first one and last one, partially. white. Legs lighter than in female. Other characters as in female.</p><p>Comments.</p><p>There are two well defined groups of specimens: specimens from Borneo have a smaller body size (fore wing 6.1–8.8 mm) and shorter ovipositor (OST 2.6–3.2), while populations elsewhere are larger (fore wing 9.1–13.0 mm) and have longer ovipositors (OST 4.0–5.2). However, no other structural differences were observed that could justify the split of S. insidiator into two species at the present. Further analyses using molecular data for a broader geographic sampling will help to determine whether the population from Borneo represents a distinct species.</p><p>Hosts.</p><p>Sceliphron madraspatanum Klug, 1801 ( Hymenoptera, Sphecidae); Orancistrocerus aterrimus (de Saussure, 1852) ( Hymenoptera; Vespidae; Eumeninae).</p><p>Distribution.</p><p>Oriental. Known records from Brunei NR, Cambodia, China (Liaoninh, Sichuan, Yunnan), India NR, Indonesia, Malaysia NR, Myanmar NR, Philippines, Taiwan, Thailand NR, Vietnam (Fig. 27).</p><p>Material examined.</p><p>18 ♀♀, 2 ♂♂. Holotype. INDONESIA • ♀; Sulawesi, Makasar (OXUM) . — Non-type material. BRUNEI • 1 ♀; <a href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=115.11667&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=4.5666666" title="Search Plazi for locations around (long 115.11667/lat 4.5666666)">Kuala Belalong Field Studies Centre</a>; 115°7′E 4°34′N; 18.V.1991; N. Mawdsley; Malaise; BMNH (E): 1991–173 (NHMUK) • 1 ♀, same data except V.1991 (NHMUK) . CHINA • 2 ♀♀; Szechuen, Mt. Omei; 11,000 ft; 21.VII.1935; D. C. Graham (USNM) . INDIA • 1 ♀; Bikham / Claude Morley coll B. M. 1952–159 / “ B. M. 1967 under Silsila spionata ” / Silsila longicantus karl / Co – type B. M. (NHMUK) • 1 ♀; Meghalaya; Khasia Hills; Assam Athimus K. / Mesostenus longicauda / Munich . INDONESIA • 1 ♀; S. B. Heppner coll., Royal Ent. Soc. London Poject Wallace Exped. 1985 (FSCA) • 1 ♀; East Kalimantan, Balikpapan. Mentawir river; 50 m; X.1950; A. M. R. Wegner (USUC) . MALAYSIA • 1 ♀; Negri Sembilan; Pasoh Forest Reserve, forest; 17.XII.1978; P. &amp; M. Becker (USUC) • 1 ♂, same data except 6.X.1979 (USUC) • 1 ♀, 1 ♂; Sarawak; Gunung Mulu National Park; “ 4 th div. Gn. Mulu ”; VI–VII.1978; H. Vallack (NHMUK) • 1 ♀; same data except 58 m; <a href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=114.824684&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=4.025417" title="Search Plazi for locations around (long 114.824684/lat 4.025417)">Deer Cave trail, nr. jct. with small forest trail</a>; 4.025417, 114.824683; 17.II–19.III.2012; D. C. Darling, Malaise; ROM _ OSU 308613; glydant; limestone / seq (ROM) • 1 ♀; same date except <a href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=114.824684&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=4.025417" title="Search Plazi for locations around (long 114.824684/lat 4.025417)">Kuching</a>; 11.XI.1999; Dyak, coll. Pres. 1900 by R. Shelford (OXUM) . MYANMAR (“ Burma ”) • 1 ♀; Kachin state, Kachin hills, Mali Hka valley; 2000 ft; 3.XII.1930; F. Kingdon Ward, B. M. 1936–91 (NHMUK) . PHILIPPINES • 1 ♀; Island Samar, Baker coll. (USNM) • 1 ♀; Oriental Mindoro; S. Luis Calapan, 150 ft; 15.IV.1954, H. M. &amp; D. Townes / Homotype Orientostenaraeus chinensis Uch. H. K. Townes ’ 54 (USUC) . TAIWAN • 1 ♀; Taipei, Fu – Shan; 10.IX.2001; J. &amp; L. Stange (FSCA) . THAILAND • 1 ♀; Chiang Mai; Huai Nam Dang NP Helipad; 19 ˚ 18.33 ’ N 98 ˚ 36.289 ’ E; 20–27.III.2008; Malaise trap; Anuchart &amp; Thawatchai leg; T 5635 (UKICU) .</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/59D2928D7A01574BBFECC9B089E26977	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	Santos, Bernardo F.;Bordera, Santiago	Santos, Bernardo F., Bordera, Santiago (2025): Phylogenomics and taxonomic revision of Stenarella Szépligeti (Hymenoptera, Ichneumonidae, Cryptinae). Arthropod Systematics & Phylogeny 83: 463-511, DOI: 10.3897/asp.83.e151385
87AD846F664C5EF4871E00B360C0CB6C.text	87AD846F664C5EF4871E00B360C0CB6C.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Stenarella katanga Santos & Bordera 2025	<div><p>3.1.10. Stenarella katanga sp. nov.</p><p>Figures 2 E, 13, 24 B</p><p>Etymology.</p><p>Named after the province of Haut – Katanga, where the holotype was collected. Noun in apposition.</p><p>Diagnosis.</p><p>Stenarella katanga sp. nov. can be distinguished from all other Stenarella species by the combination of the following characters: mandible shallowly punctate at basal half; longitudinal carina of frons incomplete; pronotum mostly with distinct longitudinal striae (Fig. 13 D); mesoscutum mostly smooth and shiny (Fig. 13 C); sternaulus shallow and sinuous, reaching posterior rim of mesopleuron (Fig. 13 D); posterior area of propodeum mostly strigose (Fig. 2 E); thyridium 2.3–2.5 times as long as wide (Fig. 13 A); posterior end of S 1 placed approximately opposite to or slightly posterior to spiracle of T 1 (Fig. 13 A); base of mandible whitish (Fig. 13 B); mesosoma mostly orange (Fig. 13 A, D); T 1 vividly orange, T 2 - T 3 mostly dark brown to black (Fig. 13 A, F).</p><p>Description.</p><p>FEMALE. Fore wing 7.7–10.8 mm long. — Head (Fig. 13 A – D): Mandible, clypeus and face densely covered with very long setae. Mandible punctate at base, MLW 2.25–2.3. Malar space short, MSM 0.45–0.50. Clypeus smooth, CWL 3.0–3.15. Clypeus and face centrally mostly flat. Face centrally weakly rugulose, elsewhere shallowly granulate. Frons shiny, granulate and sparsely punctate, with interrupted longitudinal carina. Vertex shiny, shallowly granulate with very fine and dense punctures. Antenna with 35 flagellomeres. — Mesosoma (Figs 2 E, 13 A, C – E): Pronotum covered by uniform longitudinal strong striae, the striae fading dorsally leaving small dorsal smooth area. Epomia strong, reaching pronotal depression. Mesoscutum mostly smooth and shiny, anterior part of mid and lateral lobes with shallow dense punctures. Area between posterior end of notauli with longitudinal striae. Notaulus moderately wide and deep with dense transverse striae, reaching about 0.7 of mesoscutum. Scutellum densely punctate. Mesopleuron and metapleuron densely setose. Mesopleuron almost entirely minutely rugulose with some longitudinal striae dorsally. Epicnemial carina distinct, reaching 0.9 of distance to subtegular ridge. Sternaulus shallow and wide, sinuous, reaching posterior rim of mesopleuron. Metapleuron rugulose. Propodeum relatively long, dorsal profile in lateral view evenly convex and sloped. Anterior area of propodeum coarsely rugulose reticulate. Propodeal spiracle elliptic, SLW 2.0–2.3. Posterior area of propodeum mostly strigose, laterally tending to be rugulose. Posterior transverse carina of propodeum indiscernible from transverse striae. Areolet small, closed distally by a pigmented vein 3 rs-m, APH 0.40. Vein 2 m-cu antefurcal to vein 3 rs-m. Hind wing vein Cua distinctly longer than crossvein cu-a, HW 1 C 2.0–2.3. — Metasoma (Fig. 13 A, F): Posterior end of S 1 placed slightly posterior to spiracle of T 1. T 1 LW 2.65–3.15; T 1 WW 1.9–2.0; T 2 LW 1.05–1.3; T 2 WW 2.45–2.7. Thyridium 2.3–2.5 times as long as wide. T 2 minutely punctate reticulate on a granulate background, anterior dorsal part only granulate. Dorsal valve of ovipositor with 5 teeth. Ventral valve with 7 teeth. OST 4.55–4.65. — Color (Figs 2 E, 13): Head mostly black; base of mandibles facial, frontal and genal orbits dorsally, whitish. Antenna mostly dark brown, f 6 – f 10 (11) dorsally white. Mesosoma mostly orange: propleuron, ventral part of pronotum anteriorly, mesosternum, metasternum and metapleural carina, black; dorsal lateral rim of pronotum yellow. Fore and mid legs, mostly light orange; coxae and dorsal part of trochanters dark brown, ventral part of trochanters whitish. Hind leg dark brown. Wing hyaline. Metasoma mostly black: T 1 orange, posterior dorsal spot on TI, posterior band on T 2 and T 5 – T 7 widely, white. — Male. Unknown.</p><p>Hosts.</p><p>Unknown.</p><p>Distribution.</p><p>Afrotropical. Known records from Angola and Democratic Republic of the Congo (Fig. 24 B).</p><p>Material examined.</p><p>2 ♀♀. Holotype. DEMOCRATIC REPUBLIC OF THE CONGO • ♀; Haut – Katanga, Kundelungu Mountains; Malaise; “ Stenarella sp. 7 Tow. 1972 ” (AEIC) . Dry pinned. Right antenna missing. — Paratype. ANGOLA • 1 ♀; Benguela, Ganda (ZSMC) .</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/87AD846F664C5EF4871E00B360C0CB6C	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	Santos, Bernardo F.;Bordera, Santiago	Santos, Bernardo F., Bordera, Santiago (2025): Phylogenomics and taxonomic revision of Stenarella Szépligeti (Hymenoptera, Ichneumonidae, Cryptinae). Arthropod Systematics & Phylogeny 83: 463-511, DOI: 10.3897/asp.83.e151385
0447807DA6275DEFB7C8E69913EBC181.text	0447807DA6275DEFB7C8E69913EBC181.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Stenarella lissonota (Cameron 1906)	<div><p>3.1.11. Stenarella lissonota (Cameron, 1906)</p><p>Figures 2 C, 14, 22 C, 24 C, 28</p><p>Mesostenus lightfooti Cameron, 1906: 147. Lectotype ♀ (SAMC; designated by Townes and Townes, 1973; not examined) . Synonymized by Townes and Townes (1973).</p><p>Mesostenus levifrons Cameron, 1906: 148. Holotype ♀ (SAMC; not examined) . Synonymized by Townes and Townes (1973).</p><p>Mesostenus lissonotus Cameron, 1906: 149. Holotype ♀ (SAMC; not examined) . Lectotype ♀ (SAMC; designated by Townes and Townes (1973); not examined) .</p><p>Mesotenus albilabris Cameron, 1911: 177. Holotype ♀ (SAMC; not examined) . Synonymized by Townes and Townes (1973).</p><p>Stenaraeus (Mesostenus) lissonotus var. nigripes Morley, 1916: 377. Holotype ♀ (SAMC; not examined) . Synonymized by Townes and Townes (1973).</p><p>Stenaraeus lightfooti: Morley (1916).</p><p>Stenaraeus laevifrons (!): Morley (1926) . Incorrect subsequent spelling of Mesostenus levifrons Cameron, 1906 .</p><p>Stenarella lissonotus: Townes and Townes, 1973.</p><p>Diagnosis.</p><p>Stenarella lissonota can be distinguished from all other Stenarella species by the combination of the following characters: mandible smooth or shallowly punctate at basal half; pronotum only with short striae at pronotal depression, elsewhere smooth (Fig. 14 E, 22 C); mesoscutum mostly smooth and shiny (Fig. 14 E); notaulus narrow with shallow, dense, and minute transverse keels (Fig. 14 E); posterior area of propodeum transversely strigose, tending to be rugulose laterally (Fig. 2 C); thyridium about 2.0 times as long as wide; mesosoma mostly orange (Figs 14 D, E, 22 C). Additionally, males can be distinguished by head mostly whitish and by front and mid coxae whitish (Fig. 22 C).</p><p>Description.</p><p>FEMALE. Fore wing 7.5–9.2 mm long. — Head (Fig. 14 A, B, D, E): Mandible, clypeus and face moderately setose. Mandible mostly sparsely punctate, MLW 2.1–2.3. Malar space short, MSM 0.35–0.45. Clypeus smooth, CWL 2.9–3.0. Clypeus and face centrally mostly flat. Face centrally weakly wrinkled, elsewhere smooth. Frons shiny, granulate and wrinkled medially, with interrupted longitudinal carina. Antenna with 34 flagellomeres. — Mesosoma (Figs 2 C, 14 A, C – E): Pronotum with distinct striae along anterior depression, elsewhere smooth. Epomia moderately strong, reaching pronotal depression. Mesoscutum mostly smooth and shiny, except anterior part of mid lobe with shallow dense punctures. Notaulus reaching 0.70 of mesoscutum with short transverse striae. Scutellum with sparse, large shallow punctures. Mesopleuron and metapleuron moderately setose. Mesopleuron dorsally rugulose – striate, ventrally finely rugulose. Epicnemial carina distinct, reaching 0.7 of distance to subtegular ridge. Sternaulus shallow and sinuous, reaching posterior rim of mesopleuron. Metapleuron rugulose strigose. Propodeum relatively long, dorsal profile in lateral view evenly convex and sloped. Anterior area of propodeum rugulose punctate. Propodeal spiracle elliptic, SLW 2.0. Posterior area of propodeum transversely strigose, tending to be rugulose laterally. Posterior transverse carina of propodeum present but weakly discernible from other transverse striae, distance to anterior transverse carina 1.5 times the distance from anterior carina to anterior margin of propodeum Areolet small, closed distally by an unpigmented vein 3 rs-m, APH 0.45–0.5. Vein 2 m-cu antefurcal to vein 3 rs-m. Hind wing vein Cua distinctly longer than crossvein cu-a, HW 1 C 2.0–2.4. — Metasoma (Fig. 14 A, F): Posterior end of S 1 placed posteriorly to spiracle of T 1. T 1 LW 3.1–3.25; T 1 WW 1.7–2.0; T 2 LW 1.3–1.45; T 2 WW 2.25–2.4. Thyridium about 2 times as long as wide. T 2 punctate reticulate on a granulate background, anterior part granulate. Dorsal valve of ovipositor with 5 teeth. Ventral valve with 10 teeth. OST 4.1–5.1. — Color (Figs 2 C, 14): Head mostly black: clypeus, mandibles except teeth, and facial orbits as a hue, orange; f 6 – f 12 dorsally white f 5, f 13 partially. Mesosoma mostly orange; propleuron and anterior part of pronotum dark brown. Wing hyaline. Metasoma mostly black: T 1 dark brown, T 1 – T 2 and T 5 – T 8 posteriorly whitish. — MALE (Fig. 22 C). Fore wing about 6.9 mm long. — Head. Mandible moderately punctate, MLW 2.4. Malar space moderately long, MSM 0.5. CWL 2.6. Antenna with 31 flagellomeres; tyloids on f 13 – f 16. — Mesosoma. Pronotum with very weak and short striae along anterior depression, elsewhere smooth. Anterior area of propodeum rugulose punctate laterally, shallowly punctate medially. SLW about 2.3. Posterior area of propodeum finely and shallowly transversely strigose granulate medially, tending to be rugulose laterally. Areolet very small, APH 0.35. Hind wing vein Cua distinctly longer than crossvein cu-a, HW 1 C about 1.8. — Metasoma. Posterior end of S 1 placed far posteriorly to spiracle of T 1. T 1 LW 4.3; T 1 WW 1.4; T 2 LW 2.8; T 2 WW 1.8. Thyridium about 2.7 times as long as wide. — Color. Head mostly whitish; mandible teeth, frons and vertex except eye orbits, posterior dorsal part of gena and occiput dark brown to black; f 10 – f 15 dorsally white, f 16 partially. Mesosoma mostly orange; dorsal part of pronotum, subtegular ridge, speculum and sternum, yellowish; metapleuron ventrally dark brown. Front and mid coxae and trochanters, hind trochanter and hind t 2 – t 4, whitish. Hind leg mostly dark brown. Wing slightly infuscate. Metasoma mostly dark brown to black; T 1 – T 3 and T 6 – T 8 posteriorly whitish. Other characters as in female.</p><p>Hosts.</p><p>Unknown.</p><p>Distribution.</p><p>Afrotropical. Known records from South Africa (Fig. 24 C).</p><p>Material examined.</p><p>4 ♀♀, 1 ♂. SOUTH AFRICA • 1 ♀; Eastern Cape, Grahamstown; III.1972; Fred Gess (USUC) • 1 ♂; same data except KwaZulu – Natal; Hluhluwe Game Reserve; 13.XI.1970; H. &amp; M. Townes (USUC) • 1 ♀; same data except Karkloof; 15.III.1942; Nat. Museum S. R. Millar; “ South African museum ex national museum Bulawayo 1981 ” / SAM–HYM–P 005 147 (SAMC) • 1 ♀, same data except Mfongosi; W. E. Jones; SAM–HYM–P 000733 (SAMC) • 1 ♀; same data except Mpumalanga (“ Transvaal ”); Pilgrims Rest, L. Schunke / SAM–HYM–P 000732 (SAMC) .</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/0447807DA6275DEFB7C8E69913EBC181	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	Santos, Bernardo F.;Bordera, Santiago	Santos, Bernardo F., Bordera, Santiago (2025): Phylogenomics and taxonomic revision of Stenarella Szépligeti (Hymenoptera, Ichneumonidae, Cryptinae). Arthropod Systematics & Phylogeny 83: 463-511, DOI: 10.3897/asp.83.e151385
D2F7E795AF395528876CC216A43C776A.text	D2F7E795AF395528876CC216A43C776A.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Stenarella natalina Santos & Bordera 2025	<div><p>3.1.12. Stenarella natalina sp. nov.</p><p>Figures 2 A, 15, 24 D, 28</p><p>Etymology.</p><p>Named after the KwaZulu-Natal province, where one of the paratypes was collected. From the Latinized adjective natalinus, - a, - um.</p><p>Diagnosis.</p><p>Stenarella natalina sp. nov. can be distinguished from all other Stenarella species by the combination of the following characters: clypeus and face in lateral view with flat profile; mandible striated at basal half; mesoscutum smooth and shiny (Fig. 15 F); notaulus narrow with very fine dense transverse keels (Fig. 15 F); posterior area of propodeum finely rugulose strigose medially, strongly rugulose laterally (Fig. 2 A); propodeal spiracle elongated, SLW 2.6–2.75 (Fig. 15 C); areolet closed (Fig. 15 E); posterior end of S 1 placed posteriorly to spiracle of T 1 (Fig. 15 D); thyridium 2.25–2.4 times as long as wide (Fig. 15 D); mesosoma mostly dark orange (Fig. 15 C); wing hyaline or evenly infuscate (Fig. 15 A).</p><p>Description.</p><p>FEMALE. Fore wing 8.0– 11.3 mm long. — Head (Fig. 15 A – C, F): Mandible, clypeus and face moderately setose. Mandible striated, MLW 2.3–2.5. Malar space short, MSM 0.35–0.40. Clypeus smooth, CWL 2.6–2.9. Clypeus and face centrally mostly flat. Face centrally distinctly rugulose, elsewhere smooth and shiny. Frons sparsely punctate with interrupted longitudinal carina. Vertex smooth and shiny. Antenna with 32 flagellomeres (Missing). — Mesosoma (Figs 2 A, 15 A, C, E, F): Pronotum mostly smooth, with short longitudinal striae along pronotal depression. Epomia strong, reaching pronotal depression. Mesoscutum almost entirely smooth and shiny. Notaulus reaching 0.70 of mesoscutum, with minute transverse striae. Scutellum with sparse, large shallow lateral punctures. Mesopleuron and metapleuron moderately setose. Mesopleuron mostly rugulose punctate, with short irregular striae on anterodorsal corner and bordering posterior part of epicnemium. Epicnemial carina weak (better seen in ventrolateral view), reaching 0.6 of distance to subtegular ridge. Sternaulus shallow and sinuous, reaching posterior rim of mesopleuron. Metapleuron rugulose punctate. Propodeum relatively long, dorsal profile in lateral view evenly convex and sloped. Anterior area of propodeum coarsely rugose punctate. Propodeal spiracle elliptic, SLW 2.6–2.75. Posterior area of propodeum finely rugulose strigose medially, strongly rugulose laterally. Posterior transverse carina of propodeum absent. Areolet small, closed distally by an unpigmented vein 3 rs-m, APH 0.4–0.45. Vein 2 m-cu antefurcal to vein 3 rs-m. Hind wing vein Cua distinctly longer than crossvein cu-a, HW 1 C 2.15–2.25. — Metasoma (Fig. 15 A, D, G): Posterior end of S 1 placed posteriorly to spiracle of T 1. T 1 LW 2.55–2.75; T 1 WW 2.15–2.3; T 2 LW 1.25–1.45; T 2 WW 2.05–2.2. Thyridium 2.25–2.4 times as long as wide. T 2 mostly punctate reticulate on a finely granulate background, anterior part finely granulate. Dorsal valve of ovipositor with 5 teeth. Ventral valve with 9 teeth. OST 4.50–4.9. — Color (Fig. 2 A, 15): Head black; labrum clypeus, mandibles except apex, mouthparts, spot on malar space, facial and frontal orbits and genal orbit dorsally, whitish; f 6 – f 12 dorsally white. Mesosoma dark orange; propleuron ventrally, pronotum anteroventrally mesosternum and metasternum, black. Fore and mid legs mostly brown; coxae dark brown; trochanters and partially trochantelli, whitish. Hind leg mostly dark brown; t 2 – t 3 whitish. Wing hyaline. Metasoma black. T 1 – T 2 with whitish mark on about 0.2 of their length, slightly visible on T 3; T 6 – T 7 dorsally whitish. — MALE. Unknown.</p><p>Hosts.</p><p>Unknown.</p><p>Distribution.</p><p>Afrotropical. Known records from South Africa and Tanzania (Fig. 24 D).</p><p>Material examined.</p><p>3 ♀♀. Holotype. SOUTH AFRICA • ♀ Bethel; W. Capland Beste; 26368; Mesostenus tripartitus var. det. Brulle (MFNB) . Dry pinned. Both antennae broken at first third; right hind tibia and tarsus missing. — Paratypes. SOUTH AFRICA • 1 ♀; Natal (= KwaZulu – Natal); Purchased 1875; W. W. Saunders Coll. (OXUM) . TANZANIA • 1 ♀; Lindi Region, Matumbi Highlands, Mwengei; 1050 ft; – 8.3463889, 38.96; 25.XI.1989; R. B. Hynd collection / BMNH (E) 1998–129 (NHMUK) .</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/D2F7E795AF395528876CC216A43C776A	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	Santos, Bernardo F.;Bordera, Santiago	Santos, Bernardo F., Bordera, Santiago (2025): Phylogenomics and taxonomic revision of Stenarella Szépligeti (Hymenoptera, Ichneumonidae, Cryptinae). Arthropod Systematics & Phylogeny 83: 463-511, DOI: 10.3897/asp.83.e151385
FCF4EF743A735B00B36E25527E4653BA.text	FCF4EF743A735B00B36E25527E4653BA.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Stenarella nigriscuta Santos & Bordera 2025	<div><p>3.1.13. Stenarella nigriscuta sp. nov.</p><p>Figures 1 K, 16, 24E, 28</p><p>Etymology.</p><p>From the Latin adjective niger, - gra, - grum, meaning “ black ”, and the noun scutum, - i, in reference to the entirely black mesoscutum in this species.</p><p>Diagnosis.</p><p>Stenarella nigriscuta sp. nov. can be distinguished from all other Stenarella species by the combination of the following characters: pronotum and mesoscutum mostly smooth (Fig. 16 D, E); posterior area of propodeum transversely striate, striae regularly separated and reaching pleural sulcus (Fig. 1 K); face black (Fig. 16 B); antenna with white band on f 6 – f 13 (Fig. 16 A); mesoscutum dark brown to black (Fig. 16 E); mesopleuron, metapleuron and propodeum light orange to orange (Figs 1 K, 16 A, D); hind coxa orange (Fig. 16 A); wing hyaline or evenly infuscate (Fig. 16 A).</p><p>Description.</p><p>FEMALE. Fore wing 11.3–12.3 mm long. — Head (Fig. 16 A, B, D, E): Mandible covered with very dense and long setae, clypeus and face moderately setose. Mandible punctate, MLW 2.1–2.55. Malar space short, MSM 0.35–0.45. Clypeus smooth, CWL 2.5–2.65. Clypeus and face mostly flat. Face centrally distinctly rugulose, or rugulose granulate, elsewhere smooth. Frons smooth and shiny, with weak interrupted longitudinal carina. Antenna with 34 flagellomeres. — Mesosoma (Figs 1 K, 16 A, C – E): Pronotum almost entirely smooth and shiny. Epomia strong, reaching pronotal depression. Mesoscutum almost entirely smooth and shiny. Notaulus reaching 0.55–0.75 of mesoscutum with fine transverse striae. Scutellum mostly smooth, with shallow lateral punctures. Mesopleuron and metapleuron moderately setose. Mesopleuron mostly moderately punctate, dorsally weakly longitudinally striate, slightly rugulose punctate along epicnemial carina. Epicnemial carina distinct, reaching 0.7 of distance to subtegular ridge. Sternaulus shallow and sinuous, reaching posterior rim of mesopleuron. Metapleuron densely punctate reticulate. Propodeum relatively long, dorsal profile in lateral view evenly convex and sloped. Anterior area of propodeum rugose punctate sometimes medially weakly transversely strigose. Propodeal spiracle elliptic, SLW 2.35–2.6. Posterior area of propodeum covered by fine, more or less uniformly spaced transverse striae. Posterior transverse carina of propodeum indiscernible from transverse striae. Areolet small, closed distally by an unpigmented vein 3 rs-m, APH 0.35–0.45. Vein 2 m-cu antefurcal to vein 3 rs-m. Hind wing vein Cua distinctly longer than crossvein cu-a, HW 1 C 2.0–3.0. — Metasoma (Fig. 16 A, F): Posterior end of S 1 placed posteriorly to spiracle of T 1. T 1 LW 3.0–3.55; T 1 WW 1.85–2.0; T 2 LW 1.25–1.45; T 2 WW 2.25–2.4. Thyridium 2.0–2.5 times as long as wide. T 2 mostly minutely punctate reticulate on a finely granulate background, anterior part finely granulate. Dorsal valve of ovipositor with 6 teeth. Ventral valve with 9–11 teeth. OST 3.75–4.45. — Color (Figs 1 K, 16): Head mostly black: labrum, clypeus, mandible except distal part, mouth parts, usually spot on malar space, facial and frontal orbits, dorsal part of genal orbit and f 6–13 dorsally, whitish. Mesosoma mostly light orange to orange: mesoscutum black; propleuron, pronotum mostly, spot on medial anterior part of propodeum, dark brown; dorsal lateral part of pronotum, subtegular ridge, lateral parts of scutellum and usually posterior medial spot on propodeum, whitish. Fore and mid leg orange, sometimes fore coxa and trochanter whitish. Hind leg mostly dark brown; coxa, and sometimes ventral part of femur orange; t 1 posteriorly, t 2 – t 4, and distal part of t 5, whitish. Wing hyaline. Metasoma dark brown; T 1 – T 2 narrowly and T 6 – T 7 extensively posteriorly whitish. — MALE. Unknown.</p><p>Hosts.</p><p>Unknown.</p><p>Distribution.</p><p>Afrotropical. Known records from Cameroon, Nigeria and Republic of the Congo (Fig. 24 E).</p><p>Material examined.</p><p>6 ♀♀. Holotype. CAMEROON • ♀; Nkoemvom; 13.VII–24.VIII.1980; Ms. D. Jackson (NHMUK) . Dry pinned. Distal flagellomeres from f 29 of right antenna missing. — Paratypes. CAMEROON • 2 ♀♀; same data as holotype (NHMUK) • 1 ♀; same data except 25.IX–19.XI.1979 (NHMUK) . NIGERIA • 1 ♀; Oni River; 70 miles. E of Lagos; 15.V.1910; W. A. Lamborn / 1911–422 (NHMUK) . REUBLIC OF THE CONGO • 1 ♀; Brazzaville, Djoumouna; 22.X.1968; M. Grjebin Coll. (MNHN) .</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/FCF4EF743A735B00B36E25527E4653BA	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	Santos, Bernardo F.;Bordera, Santiago	Santos, Bernardo F., Bordera, Santiago (2025): Phylogenomics and taxonomic revision of Stenarella Szépligeti (Hymenoptera, Ichneumonidae, Cryptinae). Arthropod Systematics & Phylogeny 83: 463-511, DOI: 10.3897/asp.83.e151385
D680043A0DE155DDB1A485A1D34EDA1F.text	D680043A0DE155DDB1A485A1D34EDA1F.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Stenarella nigromaculata Santos & Bordera 2025	<div><p>3.1.14. Stenarella nigromaculata sp. nov.</p><p>Figures 1 G, 17, 24 F, 28</p><p>Etymology.</p><p>From the Latin adjective niger, - gra, - grum, meaning “ black ”, and the noun macula, - ae, meaning “ spot, stain ”, in reference to the dark spots at the fore wing, which are unique of this species within the genus.</p><p>Diagnosis.</p><p>Stenarella nigromaculata sp. nov. can be distinguished from all other Stenarella species by the combination of the following characters: mesoscutum mostly smooth and shiny (Fig. 17 E); mesosoma entirely black (Fig. 17 A, D, E); wing hyaline with distal half dark brown (Fig. 17 A, C).</p><p>Description.</p><p>FEMALE. Fore wing 11.1 mm long. — Head (Fig. 17 A, B, D, E): Mandible, clypeus and face densely covered with very long setae. Mandible punctate, MLW 1.95. Malar space short, MSM 0.45. Clypeus with sparse but distinct punctures, CWL 2.9. Clypeus and face centrally mostly flat. Face coarsely rugose punctate. Frons sparsely punctate, with complete longitudinal carina. Vertex rugose punctate between posterior ocelli. Antenna with 36 flagellomeres. — Mesosoma (Figs 1 G, 17 A, C – E): Pronotum mostly with distinct longitudinal striae, dorsal posterior part smooth and shiny. Epomia strong, reaching pronotal depression. Mesoscutum almost entirely smooth and shiny. Notaulus reaching 0.65 of mesoscutum with distinct transverse striae. Scutellum rugose reticulate. Mesopleuron and metapleuron moderately setose. Mesopleuron dorsally with sinuous striae, ventrally mostly rugulose. Epicnemial carina weak (better seen in ventrolateral view), reaching 0.6 of distance to subtegular ridge. Sternaulus shallow evenly upcurved, reaching anterior 0.6 of mesopleuron. Metapleuron rugulose striate. Propodeum relatively long, dorsal profile in lateral view evenly convex and sloped. Anterior area of propodeum coarsely rugulose reticulate. Propodeal spiracle elliptic, SLW 2.5. Posterior area of propodeum covered by moderately coarse, unevenly spaced transverse striae. Posterior transverse carina of propodeum absent. Areolet small, closed distally by an unpigmented vein 3 rs-m, APH 0.50. Vein 2 m-cu antefurcal to vein 3 rs-m. Hind wing vein Cua longer than crossvein cu-a, HW 1 C 3.0. — Metasoma (Fig. 17 A, F): Posterior end of S 1 placed approximately opposite to spiracle of T 1. T 1 LW 3.1; T 1 WW 1.85; T 2 LW 1.3; T 2 WW 2.25. Thyridium about 1.25 times as long as wide. T 2 with shallow and moderately sparse punctures over finely granulate background. Dorsal valve of ovipositor with 5 teeth. Ventral valve with 7 teeth. OST 3.55. — Color (Figs 1 G, 17): Head mostly black; labrum, base of mandible, facial and frontal orbits, genal orbit dorsally, f 6 – f 10 and proximally f 11, white. Mesosoma black; a spot on posterior medial part of propodeum yellowish. Fore leg mostly pale orange; coxa, trochanter femur ventrally and distal tarsi, brown to dark brown. Mid leg mostly dark brown, femur dorsally orange. Hind leg mostly dark brown to black; base of femur narrowly orange; t 2 – t 3 whitish. Wing hyaline with distal half dark brown. Metasoma black; T 1 – T 3 narrowly banded posteriorly and T 6 – T 8 posterolaterally, whitish. — MALE. Unknown.</p><p>Hosts.</p><p>Unknown.</p><p>Distribution.</p><p>Afrotropical. Known records from Central African Republic (Fig. 24 F).</p><p>Material examined.</p><p>1 ♀. Holotype. CENTRAL AFRICAN REPUBLIC • ♀; Prefecture Sangha – Mbaéré; Dzanga – Ndoki National Park; 38.6 km 173º S. <a href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=16.153334&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=2.3600001" title="Search Plazi for locations around (long 16.153334/lat 2.3600001)">Lidjombo</a>, 2º21.60’N, 16º09.20’E; 350 m; 26–27.V.2001; S. van Noort Leg; Malaise trap, lowland rainforest, CAR 01 – M 231 (SAMC) . Dry pinned. Distal flagellomeres from f 29 of right antenna missing; mid and hind right legs removed for DNA sequencing.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/D680043A0DE155DDB1A485A1D34EDA1F	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	Santos, Bernardo F.;Bordera, Santiago	Santos, Bernardo F., Bordera, Santiago (2025): Phylogenomics and taxonomic revision of Stenarella Szépligeti (Hymenoptera, Ichneumonidae, Cryptinae). Arthropod Systematics & Phylogeny 83: 463-511, DOI: 10.3897/asp.83.e151385
F82340C850095D4DA368B4AAC429F74B.text	F82340C850095D4DA368B4AAC429F74B.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Stenarella saaksjarvi Santos & Bordera 2025	<div><p>3.1.15. Stenarella saaksjarvi sp. nov.</p><p>Figures 1 I, 18, 25 A, 28</p><p>Etymology.</p><p>Named after hymenopterist Ilari Sääksjärvi (ZMUT), as homage to his distinguished entomological career with significant contributions to the systematics and ecology of Ichneumonidae . Noun in genitive case.</p><p>Diagnosis.</p><p>Stenarella saaksjarvi sp. nov. can be distinguished from all other Stenarella species by the combination of the following characters: pronotum longitudinally and coarsely striated (Fig. 18 B – D); mesoscutum mostly smooth and shiny (Fig. 18 E); posterior area of propodeum transversely striate, striae regularly separated and reaching pleural sulcus (Fig. 1 I); face (except orbits) and ventral part of genal orbit black (Fig. 18 B – D, G); mesosoma mostly black or black and orange (Fig. 18 A – E); fore coxae dark brown or black with white dorsal and distal longitudinal whitish stripe (Fig. 18 B – D).</p><p>Description.</p><p>FEMALE. Fore wing 5.8–11.3 mm long. — Head (Fig. 18 A – E, G): Mandible moderately covered with very long setae. Clypeus and face sparsely setose. Mandible punctate at base, MLW 2.10–2.35. Malar space short, MSM 0.30–035. Clypeus sparsely punctate, CWL 2.75–2.80. Clypeus and face centrally mostly flat. Face centrally slightly rugulose, elsewhere smooth. Frons sparsely punctate, with interrupted longitudinal carina. Vertex mostly smooth and shiny with sparse punctures. Antenna with 30–36 flagellomeres. — Mesosoma (Figs 1 I, 18 A – F): Pronotum covered by uniform longitudinal striae, the striae fading dorsally leaving small dorsal smooth area. Epomia weak, reaching pronotal depression. Mesoscutum almost entirely smooth and shiny, except for distinct set of longitudinal striae between posterior end of notauli. Notaulus narrow and deep with minute dense transverse striae, reaching 0.75 of mesoscutum. Scutellum weakly rugulose punctate dorsally. Mesopleuron and metapleuron densely setose. Mesopleuron dorsally rugulose – striate, ventrally finely rugulose. Epicnemial carina distinct, reaching 0.9 of distance to subtegular ridge. Sternaulus shallow and wide, sinuous, reaching posterior rim of mesopleuron. Metapleuron finely strigose. Propodeum relatively long, dorsal profile in lateral view evenly convex and sloped. Anterior area of propodeum finely transversely strigose. Propodeal spiracle elliptic, SLW 2.5–2.75. Posterior area of propodeum covered by more or less uniformly spaced transverse striae. Posterior transverse carina of propodeum absent. Areolet small, closed distally by an unpigmented vein 3 rs-m, APH 0.40–0.45. Vein 2 m-cu antefurcal to vein 3 rs-m. Hind wing vein Cua distinctly longer than crossvein cu-a, HW 1 C 2.20–2.35. — Metasoma (Fig. 18 A, H): Posterior end of S 1 placed distinctly posterior to spiracle of T 1. T 1 LW 2.9–3.35; T 1 WW 2.25–2.3; T 2 LW 1.10–1.45; T 2 WW 2.2–3.1. Thyridium about 3 times as long as wide. T 2 minutely punctate reticulate on a finely granulate background, except for small granulate portion on anterior part. Dorsal valve of ovipositor with 4 teeth. Ventral valve with 10 teeth. OST 4.75–5.15. — Color (Figs 1 I, 18): Head mostly black: labrum, mandible except apex, clypeus dorsally, facial, frontal and genal orbits dorsally, whitish. Antenna mostly dark brown, f 6 – f 11 (12) dorsally white, Mesosoma mostly orange: propleuron, pronotum mostly, ventral part of epicnemium and mesopleuron, mesosternum, metasternum, metapleuron ventrally, marks on anterior part of median lobe and center of lateral lobes of mesoscutum and dorsal part of propodeum dark brown to black; dorsal rim of pronotum, subtegular ridge and lateral parts of scutellum and posterior dorsal mark on propodeum, whitish. Legs mostly dark brown; mid femur dorsally and most part of hind femur orange; dorsal posterior longitudinal strip on fore tibia and ventral part of fore and mid trochanters, whitish. Wing hyaline. Metasoma mostly black: posterior narrow bands on T 1 – T 2, posterior rim of T 3 slightly and dorsal part of T 6 – T 8 extensively, whitish. — MALE. Unknown.</p><p>Hosts.</p><p>Unknown.</p><p>Distribution.</p><p>Afrotropical. Known records from Uganda (Fig. 25 A).</p><p>Material examined.</p><p>6 ♀♀. Holotype. UGANDA • ♀; Kabarole district, Kibale National Park, Fort Portal; 4–18.VI.2015; T. Hopkins leg. Malaise; ZMUT. 7076 / http://mus.utu.fi/ZMUT.11402 (ZMUT) . Dry pinned. Distal flagellomeres from f 31 of right antenna, and hind left leg, missing. — Paratypes. UGANDA • 1 ♀; same data as holotype except 16–30.I.2015; K 31 T 3 – 150130 / http://mus.utu.fi/ZMUT.11367 (ZMUT) • 1 ♀; same data except 23.V–04.VI.2015; K 31 T 4 / http://mus.utu.fi/ZMUT.11392 ZMUT.7534 (ZMUT) • 1 ♀; same data except 30.I.2015 – 13.II.2015; K 31 T 4, http://mus.utu.fi/ZMUT.11397, ZMUT. 7535 (ZMUT) • 1 ♀; same data except 28.I.2015; sweeping, http://mus.utu.fi/ZMUT.11395 (ZMUT) • 1 ♀; same data except Kanywara, <a href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=30.360767&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=0.57341665" title="Search Plazi for locations around (long 30.360767/lat 0.57341665)">Makerere University Biological Field station</a>; 1484 m; primary mid – alt rainforest near stream; 0°34.405′N 30°21.646′E; 12–26.VIII.2008, S. van Noort leg.; Malaise; UG 08 – KF 10 – M 20 / SAM–HYM–P 051187 (SAMC) .</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/F82340C850095D4DA368B4AAC429F74B	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	Santos, Bernardo F.;Bordera, Santiago	Santos, Bernardo F., Bordera, Santiago (2025): Phylogenomics and taxonomic revision of Stenarella Szépligeti (Hymenoptera, Ichneumonidae, Cryptinae). Arthropod Systematics & Phylogeny 83: 463-511, DOI: 10.3897/asp.83.e151385
999F99718AF85CFEBDCC19EED2F947BF.text	999F99718AF85CFEBDCC19EED2F947BF.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Stenarella Szepligeti 1916	<div><p>Stenarella Szépligeti, 1916</p><p>Stenarella Szépligeti, 1916: 307. Description. Type species: Ichneumon gladiator Scopoli, 1763 (= Ichneumon domator Poda 1761), by subsequent designation by Roman (1943).</p><p>Orientostenaraeus Uchida, 1930: 321. Type species: Orientostenaraeus chinensis Uchida, 1930 (= Mesostenus insidiator Smith 1859), by original designation.</p><p>Parasilsila Cheesman, 1936: 368 . Type species: Parasilsila trilineata Cheesman, 1936 (= Mesostenus victoriae Cameron), by original designation.</p><p>Diagnosis.</p><p>Ovipositor very long, OST&gt; 2.7 (Fig. 1), its apex distinctly sinuate, dorsal valve with distinct teeth or hooks; mandible long, MLW 1.85–2.6, dorsal tooth much longer than ventral one; areolet very small; T 1 0.85–1.25 as long as T 2, slender and not widened posteriorly, its spiracle placed on posterior 0.42.</p><p>Description.</p><p>FEMALE. Fore wing 5–16.5 mm long. — Head: Mandible long to very long, MLW 1.85–2.6, distinctly tapered towards apex; dorsal tooth distinctly longer than ventral one. Malar space moderately long, MSM 0.3–0.7. Clypeus wide, CWL 2.45–3.3 trapezoidal in front view, almost flat in lateral view; apical margin sharp, distinctly raised, inflexed, medially concave, without median teeth. Flagellum of uniform width, not distinctly enlarged towards apex; apical flagellomere uniformly tapered. Supra-antennal area ventrally slightly to distinctly concave, with distinct longitudinal carina. Occipital carina complete, meeting hypostomal carina far from mandible base. — Thorax. Dorsal margin of pronotum regular, not swollen; epomia indistinct to strong and long. Mesoscutum moderately convex; notaulus long, reaching 0.55–0.9 of mesoscutum length, moderately impressed, inside with weak to distinct striae. Epicnemial carina weak, sometimes almost indistinct from mesopleuron sculpturing, reaching 0.4–1.0 of distance to subtegular ridge. Sternaulus sinuous or evenly up curved, deep or shallow, reaching or not the posterior rim of mesopleuron, anteriorly placed somewhat ventrally on mesothorax, facing downwards, inside with very short to distinct vertical striae. Median portion of postpectal carina short, straight. Posterior margin of metanotum without lateral teeth – like projections. Propodeal furrow moderately deep, medially smooth. Juxtacoxal carina as short ridge or absent. Pleural carina absent. Fore tibia not distinctly swollen. Fourth tarsomeres not distinctly bilobed. — Propodeum. Propodeum moderately long, dorsal profile in lateral view evenly convex and sloped, in S. domator propodeum short with dorsal profile broken into a short anterodorsal face and a longer sloped posterodorsal face. Anterior margin medially slightly concave. Spiracle elongate, SLW 1.4–5.25. Longitudinal carinae absent, except sometimes anterior section of median longitudinal carina (area basalis defined). Anterior transverse carina complete, sharp, medially distinctly arched. Posterior transverse carina absent to complete, never forming distinct sublateral crests. Longitudinal carinae absent. — Wings: Nearly hyaline to strongly infuscate, dark brown. Forewing vein 1 - Rs + M with bulla placed centrally to apically; ramellus absent; crossvein 1 cu-a arising far from 1 M + Rs, basad by 0.2–0.4 of its own length; vein 2 Cua 1.05–1.80 × as long as crossvein 2 cu-a; crossvein 2 m-cu uniformly arched, bulla moderately short, placed medially to anteriorly; cell 1 + 2 Rs large, APH 0.25–0.55, about as long as wide or slightly longer, AWH 0.80–1.20, pentagonal; crossveins 2 r-m and 3 r-m subparallel, to distinctly convergent, both veins usually about the same length. Hind wing vein 1 - M + Cu apically almost straight to slightly convex; vein Cua slightly to much longer than crossvein cu-a, HW 1 C 1.74–3.0; vein Cub distinct, its apical 0.5 almost straight to distinctly convex; vein 2-1 A reaching at least 0.9 of distance to wing margin. — Metasoma: T 1 moderately long, about 0.51–0.58 × as long as mesosoma (from base of T 1 to apex of mesoscutum, measured laterally), slender, T 1 LW 2.15–3.55, apex distinctly wider than base, T 1 WW 1.70–2.85, approximately cylindrical, without sharp anterolateral tooth, but sometimes with weak anterolateral flange; spiracle of T 1 placed distinctly posteriorly to midlength, not distinctly prominent; median dorsal and dorsolateral carina absent or vestigial; ventrolateral carina usually distinct. Setae on T 2–8 always associated with small punctures. T 2 slender, T 2 LW 0.95–1.6, T 2 WW 1.75–2.7; thyridium subcircular or longer than wide. T 7–8 about as long as T 5–6. Ovipositor very long, OST 2.8–5.4, slender, distinctly upcurved (often contorted), scarcely punctate, basally cylindric, apically distinctly depressed; apex of ovipositor blunt, without nodus or notch; dorsal valve with 4–9 small teeth; ventral valve apically dilated and overlapping dorsal valve as a sheath, with 7–11 distinct teeth. — MALE. Known only for S. domator, S. lissonota, S. insidiator, S. tripartita, S. victoriae and S vannoorti sp. nov. Generally similar to the respective females, but not as readily recognizable as members of the genus due to the lack of the most conspicuous diagnostic trait, the long ovipositor. Morphological secondary sexual differences are usually more or less uniform within Cryptini, as noted by Santos and Aguiar (2013), and apply to the males of Stenarella as follows. General body size usually smaller than respective females. Head with extensive whitish marks on mandible, clypeus, supra – clypeal area and scape, even when the female is almost entirely black. Flagellomeres usually shorter and wider than in females; white band on flagellum starting more apically than in females of the same species. Propodeal furrow usually slightly longer than in female. Propodeum smaller, less strongly convex. Spiracle of propodeum from short and elliptic to distinctly elongate, SLW 1.45–6.0. First metasomal segment slenderer, with T 1 LW 2.9–5.3, and less widened apically, with T 1 WW 1.4–2.35. T 2–7 much slenderer than in females.</p><p>Comments.</p><p>Females of Stenarella are readily distinguishable from all other cryptine taxa by the very long ovipositor, at least 2.8 × as long as the hind tibia, and the characteristic shape of the ovipositor tip, distinctly twisted and with the dorsal valve showing distinct teeth or hooks. Other Old World taxa with very long ovipositors are the Malagasy genus Rambites and some species of Tolonus, but these can be differentiated from Stenarella by the shape of the ovipositor tip and the other characters in the diagnosis.</p><p>Males of Stenarella, however, are harder to recognize due to the absence of the ovipositor. By following the remaining characters in the diagnosis, males would be most similar to males of Picardiella, which also have a long mandible with the dorsal tooth much longer than ventral one, and a rather small areolet. Males of Stenarella can be separated from those of Picardiella by having the spiracle placed approximately at posterior 0.42 of its length (versus 0.47) and the areolet smaller (APH 0.25–0.55, versus 0.8–1.25 in Picardiella). In addition, many species of Stenarella have the posterior transverse carina of propodeum absent or almost indistinct from propodeal striation, while in Picardiella this carina is always complete and distinct.</p><p>Distribution.</p><p>Widely distributed in the Old World, Australia, and introduced into North America. The known distribution records are expanded from 47 countries (Yu et al. 2016 and additions by Wahl &amp; Green 2020 and Pham et al. 2024) to 75 after this study, in all continents except South America and Antarctica.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/999F99718AF85CFEBDCC19EED2F947BF	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	Santos, Bernardo F.;Bordera, Santiago	Santos, Bernardo F., Bordera, Santiago (2025): Phylogenomics and taxonomic revision of Stenarella Szépligeti (Hymenoptera, Ichneumonidae, Cryptinae). Arthropod Systematics & Phylogeny 83: 463-511, DOI: 10.3897/asp.83.e151385
7BFEA240E35A5984BC639B442155851A.text	7BFEA240E35A5984BC639B442155851A.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Stenarella tripartita (Brulle 1846)	<div><p>3.1.16. Stenarella tripartita (Brullé, 1846)</p><p>Figures 1 E, 19, 22 D, 25 B</p><p>Mesostenus tripartitus Brullé, 1846: 222. Lectotype ♀ (MNHN, designated by Townes and Townes (1973); examined) .</p><p>Stenarella tripartita: Townes and Townes (1973).</p><p>Diagnosis.</p><p>Stenarella tripartita can be distinguished from all other Stenarella species by the combination of the following characters: vertex densely punctate (Fig. 19 D); mesoscutum densely and coarsely punctate on a granulate background (Fig. 19 D); propodeum relatively long, dorsal profile in lateral view evenly convex and sloped (Fig. 19 B, 22 D); areolet closed, vein 2 m-cu antefurcal to vein 3 rs-m (Fig. 19 E); genal orbit completely yellow (Fig. 19 A, B, 22 D) mesosoma mostly orange, subtegular ridge yellow (Fig. 19 A, B, 22 D).</p><p>Description.</p><p>FEMALE. Fore wing 6.5–10.5 mm long. — Head (Fig. 19 A – D): Mandible, clypeus and face moderately setose. Mandible weakly striate, MLW 1.85–2.2. Malar space short, MSM 0.4–0.45. Clypeus sparsely punctate CWL 2.7–2.9. Clypeus and face centrally mostly flat. Face centrally distinctly wrinkled, elsewhere granulate – punctate. Frons densely punctate, with complete longitudinal carina Vertex densely punctate on a smooth or finely granulate background. Antenna with 32–33 flagellomeres. — Mesosoma (Figs 1 E, 19 A, B, D, E): Pronotum covered by uniform longitudinal striae, dorsal lateral part densely punctate. Epomia strong, reaching pronotal depression. Mesoscutum coarsely and densely punctate on a granulate background, with strong rugae between posterior part of notauli. Notaulus reaching 0.75 of mesoscutum, with strong transverse striae. Scutellum densely punctate. Mesopleuron and metapleuron moderately setose. Mesopleuron dorsally rugulose – striate, ventrally finely rugulose. Epicnemial carina weak (better seen in ventrolateral view), reaching 0.6 of distance to subtegular ridge. Sternaulus shallow and sinuous, reaching anterior 0.7–0.8 of mesopleuron. Metapleuron rugulose punctate. Propodeum relatively long, dorsal profile in lateral view evenly convex and sloped. Anterior area of propodeum rugulose punctate. Propodeal spiracle elliptic, SLW 2.5–3.0. Area between anterior and posterior transverse carina rugulose. Posterior area of propodeum strongly rugulose dorsally, reticulate rugose laterally. Posterior transverse carina of propodeum distinct and complete, distance to anterior transverse carina 2.0 times the distance from anterior carina to anterior margin of propodeum. Areolet closed distally by an unpigmented vein 3 rs-m, APH 0.45–0.55. Vein 2 m-cu antefurcal to vein 3 rs-m. Hing wing vein Cua distinctly longer than crossvein cu-a, HW 1 C 2.75–2.8. — Metasoma (Fig. 19 A, F): Posterior end of S 1 placed anteriorly or approximately opposite to spiracle of T 1. T 1 LW 2.3–2.35; T 1 WW 2.7–2.85; T 2 LW 0.95–1.1; T 2 WW 2.1–2.15. Thyridium about 2 times as long as wide. T 2 minutely punctate reticulate on a granulate background, anterior part granulate. Dorsal valve of ovipositor with 5 teeth. Ventral valve with 9 teeth. OST 2.3–3.4. — Color (Figs 1 E, 19): Head mostly black, often orange posteriorly to ocelli; clypeus, labrum, mandibles except apex, facial frontal and genal orbits and scape ventrally, whitish; f 7 – f 10 dorsally and f 6 and f 11 partially, white. Mesosoma mostly orange; dorsal margin of pronotum, subtegular ridge, whitish; propleuron, mesosternum and metasternum dark brown. Legs mostly dark orange to dark brown; fore coxa posteriorly and all trochanters ventrally, whitish; hind coxa, with dorsal orange stripe; hind t 2–4 dorsally white. Wing hyaline. Metasoma mostly black: T 1 brown; T 1 – T 2 and T 5 – T 8 posteriorly whitish. — MALE (Fig. 22 D). Fore wing 5.3–8.3 mm long. — Head: MSM 0.45–0.5. CWL 3.2. Antenna with 30–32 flagellomeres; tyloids on f 12 (13) – f 15 (16). — Mesosoma: SLW 3.5–3.65. APH 0.35–0.45. Vein 2 m-cu antefurcal or interstitial to vein 3 rs-m. HW 1 C 1.85–2.0. — Metasoma: Posterior end of S 1 placed anteriorly or approximately opposite to spiracle of T 1. T 1 LW 4.45–5.3; T 1 WW 1.45–1.75; T 2 LW 2.4–3.3; T 2 WW 1.8–1.9. — Color: As in female. Flagellum without white band. Fore and mid coxa extensively and all trochanters ventrally white; all tarsi dark brown. Other characters as in female.</p><p>Hosts.</p><p>Eumenes maxillosus (De Geer, 1773) ( Hymenoptera; Vespidae; Eumeninae); Tricarinodynerus anceps anceps (Gribodo 1892) ( Hymenoptera; Vespidae; Eumeninae); Rhynchium tropicalis ( Hymenoptera; Vespidae; Eumeninae); Sceliphron spirifex L. 1758 ( Hymenoptera; Sphecidae).</p><p>Distribution.</p><p>Afrotropical. Known records from Benin NR, Cameroon NR, Chad NR, Ethiopia, Ghana, Guinea, Ivory Coast NR, Liberia NR, Mozambique NR, Nigeria NR, Republic of the Congo NR, Senegal, Sierra Leone NR, Tanzania NR, Togo and Zimbabwe NR (Fig. 25 B).</p><p>Material examined.</p><p>78 ♀♀, 10 ♂♂. BENIN • 2 ♀♀; Djougou, Lieut Brot; 1908 (MNHN) • 6 ♀♀, Porto – Novo; 1912; Waterlot (MNHN) . CAMEROON • 1 ♂; Dschang; June–September 1924; Dr. Grommier . • 1 ♀; Prov. Kribi, Campo; 28–29.III.1974; leg. W. Schacht (ZSMC) . CENTRAL AFRICAN REPUBLIC • 1 ♀; Kaga – Bandoro [“ Congo Français, Fort Crampel ”] (MNHN) . CHAD • 1 ♀; Kanem region; 1904; Captain Dupertus (MNHN) . GHANA • 1 ♀; Ashanti Region, Kumasi – Kwadaso; IV.1970; leg F. Bachmaier . GUINEA • 1 ♀; Conakry; January 1923; Millet – Horsin (MNHN) • 1 ♀; June–July 1924; Mlle Homburger et Morrell (MNHN) • 2 ♀♀; N’Zébéla; 1920; P. Chabanaud (MNHN) • 5 ♀♀; Seredou; January 1958; R. Pujol (MNHN) • 2 ♀♀; Tamara; J. 1913; Serand (MNHN) • 1 ♀; Westerm; 10832 (MFNB) . IVORY COAST • 1 ♀; Adioppo Doume; September 1965; Gillon (MNHN) • 1 ♀; 1906; A. du Guiney (MNHN) • 1 ♀; Bouaké; Delattre (MNHN) • 1 ♀; Danané; December 1958; B. Faye and R. Roy (MNHN) • 1 ♀; Lamto Scientific Reserve; 21.7.1964 (MNHN) • 5 ♀♀; Odienne; 1973–1975; V. Villard (MNHN) • 1 ♀; Oumé; 1912 (MNHN) • 10 ♀♀; Toumodi; June–July 1962; Mme. Gillon. (MNHN) . LIBERIA • 2 ♂♂, 1 ♀; Nimba County; May 1942; M. Lamotte (MNHN) • 1 ♀; Clay – Ashland, 1895, Mrs. Sharp coll (USNM) . MOZAMBIQUE • 1 ♂; Gorongosa National Park; October 1907; G. Vasse (MNHN) . NIGERIA • 3 ♀♀; Olokemeji, Ibadan (USNM) • 1 ♀; Moor Plantation, c. 580 ft, 4 mi. W. of Ibadan; 30.IX.1913; W. A. Lamborn (OXUM) • 1 ♀; same date except 31.XII.1913 (OXUM) • 1 ♀; same date except 12.I.1914 (OXUM) • 1 ♂; same date except 19.I.1914 (OXUM) • 1 ♀; same date except 30.I.1914 (OXUM) • 1 ♀; Oni, 70 mi. E Lagos, In house, In verandah, Weat Seas c. mid; 20.IX.1911; W. A. Lamborn (OXUM) • 1 ♀; N. Nigeria, Zungeru, 1911–423; Dr. W. Morrison; Mesostenus lissonotus (NHMUK) . REPUBLIC OF THE CONGO • 1 ♀; Brazzaville; January 1978; Bilsimodo P. (MNHN) • 2 ♀♀; Brazaville; 1908; E. Roubaud &amp; A. Weiss (MNHN) . SENEGAL • 1 ♀; Dakar; June 1960 (MNHN) • 1 ♀; same locality; August 1981; B. Sigwalt (MNHN) • 2 ♀♀, same locality, April 1981; M’bour; V. Viltard (MNHN) • 1 ♀; Nioro du Rip (MNHN) • 1 ♀; Senegal; 10834 (MFNB) • 2 ♀♀; Sudano – Sahel Region; August–October 1809; F. de Zeltner (MNHN) . • 1 ♀; Basse Casamance (= Ziguinchor Region) Pointe Saint – Georges; 3.I.1977 (ZSMC) . SIERRA LEONE • 1 ♂; Njala, 27.VII.1930; E. Hargreaves (NHMUK) • 1 ♀ 1 ♂; same data except 1.IX.1930 (NHMUK) • 1 ♂; same data except “ at light ”; 30.VII.1925; “ Pres. By Imp. Insti. Ent.; B. M. 1936–224 (NHMUK) • 1 ♀; same locality except 16.XI–4.XII.1935; Van Zwaluwenburg &amp; McGough (USNM) • 1 ♂; Freetown; X.1966 – II.1967; D. F. Owen (USUC) . TANZANIA • 1 ♀; Kasanga; March 1958; L. Conradt (MNHN) . TOGO • 1 ♀; Bismarckburg; Togoland; R. Büttner S.; 26367 (MFNB) . ZIMBABWE • 1 ♀; Bindura, 1913; SAMC –HYM–P 000735 • 1 ♂, same data except “ Goryphus bisulcatus Morl, Antrotype IV.1919, Named by Claude Morley ”; SAMC –HYM–P 000734; “ Stenarella sp. 1 det. Townes 1970 ” . UNKNOWN COUNTRY • 1 ♀; “ W. Afr ”; purchase 1875; W. M. Saunders Coll. (OXUM) .</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/7BFEA240E35A5984BC639B442155851A	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	Santos, Bernardo F.;Bordera, Santiago	Santos, Bernardo F., Bordera, Santiago (2025): Phylogenomics and taxonomic revision of Stenarella Szépligeti (Hymenoptera, Ichneumonidae, Cryptinae). Arthropod Systematics & Phylogeny 83: 463-511, DOI: 10.3897/asp.83.e151385
516B8BC537B955179CC983A9F62B56A7.text	516B8BC537B955179CC983A9F62B56A7.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Stenarella vannoorti Santos & Bordera 2025	<div><p>3.1.17. Stenarella vannoorti sp. nov.</p><p>Figures 1 L, 20, 22E, 25 C, 28</p><p>Etymology.</p><p>Named after hymenopterist Simon van Noort (SAMC), who collected the holotype of this species and as a homage to his extraordinary 33 - year effort to document and understand the Afrotropical entomofauna, including many invaluable contributions to the systematics of Ichneumonidae . Noun in genitive case.</p><p>Diagnosis.</p><p>Stenarella vannoorti sp. nov. can be distinguished from all other Stenarella species by the combination of the following characters: mandible striated at basal half (Fig. 20 C); mesoscutum mostly smooth and shiny (Fig. 20 F); notaulus conspicuously wide with coarse spaced transverse keels (Fig. 20 F); posterior area of propodeum rugulose strigose (Fig. 1 L); propodeal spiracle short, SLW 1.4–1.45 (Fig. 20 E). Additionally, female has clypeus and face concave in lateral profile; areolet open (Fig. 20 D), and mesosoma mostly orange (Fig. 20 E). Male has clypeus and face in lateral profile almost flat; propodeum and metapleuron black and all coxae dark brown to black (Fig. 22 E).</p><p>Description.</p><p>FEMALE. Fore wing 8.1 mm long. — Head (Fig. 20 A – C, E, F): Mandible, clypeus and face moderately setose. Mandible distinctly striate, MLW 2.2. Malar space moderately long, MSM 0.7. Clypeus sparsely punctate, CWL 2.45. Clypeus and face centrally slightly but distinctly concave. Face centrally weakly rugulose, elsewhere granulate. Frons shiny, granulate and wrinkled posteriorly to antennal sockets, with only traces of longitudinal carina. Vertex granulate with sparse punctures. Antenna with 32 flagellomeres. — Mesosoma (Fig. 1 L, 20 A, D – F): Pronotum mostly smooth, with distinct punctures along dorsal margin, dorsally and ventrally with longitudinal striae on pronotal depression; anterior rim rugulose punctate. Epomia long and strong, reaching pronotal depression. Mesoscutum mostly smooth and shiny, with dense and shallow punctures on anterior part of median lobe. Notaulus conspicuously wide, reaching 0.65 of mesoscutum with strong transverse striae. Scutellum rugulose punctate. Mesopleuron and metapleuron moderately setose. Mesopleuron mostly rugulose, with short longitudinal striae along epicnemial carina. Epicnemial carina weak but complete through subtegular ridge. Sternaulus deep and sinuous, reaching posterior rim of mesopleuron. Metapleuron rugulose. Propodeum relatively long, dorsal profile in lateral view evenly convex and sloped. Anterior area of propodeum weakly rugulose. Propodeal spiracle elliptic, SLW 1.4–1.45. Posterior area of propodeum rugulose strigose. Posterior transverse carina of propodeum medially indistinct, sublaterally present but weakly discernible from other propodeal striae, distance to anterior transverse carina 1.5 times the distance from anterior carina to anterior margin of propodeum. Areolet very small, open distally, APH 0.35. Hind wing vein Cua distinctly longer crossvein cu-a, HW 1 C 2.0. — Metasoma (Fig. 20 A, G): Posterior end of S 1 placed approximately opposite to spiracle of T 1; T 1 LW 2.9; T 1 WW 1.9; T 2 LW 1.3; T 2 WW 2.55. Thyridium about 2 times as long as wide. T 2 mostly punctate reticulate on a granulate background, except for small granulate portion on anterior part. Dorsal valve of ovipositor with 4 teeth. Ventral valve with 10 teeth. OST 5.4. — Color (Figs 1 L, 20): Head black; clypeus, face, frons and vertex, partially bright orange. Antenna dark brown, f 6 – f 10 dorsally white. Mesosoma mostly orange; propleuron, pronotum anteriorly, sternal groove and posterior part of mesosternum, metasternum and ventral part of metapleuron black. Legs mostly dark brown; fore femur tibia and tarsus clearer. Wing hyaline slightly obscured distally. Metasoma mostly black, T 5 – T 8 posteriorly white. — MALE (Fig. 22 E). Fore wing about 8 mm long. — Head: Face and clypeus flat in lateral profile; malar space short, MSM 0.35; CWL 2.5. Frons smooth and shiny, with fine sparse punctures and weak longitudinal carina. Vertex smooth with sparse punctures. Antenna with 32 flagellomeres, tyloids on f 14 – f 16. — Mesosoma: Pronotum mostly smooth, with strong longitudinal striae along pronotal depression, weaker on posterior rim. Scutellum punctate. Anterior area of propodeum rugulose punctate. SLW 1.45. Areolet short, closed distally, APH 0.45. Hind wing vein Cua distinctly longer than crossvein cu-a, HW 1 C about 1.3. — Metasoma: Posterior end of S 1 placed posterior to spiracle of T 1; T 1 LW 3.3; T 1 WW 2.35; T 2 LW 2.35; T 2 WW 1.55. Thyridium about 2.25 times as long as wide. — Color: Antenna dark brown, f 8 – f 16 dorsally white, f 17 partially. Mesosoma mostly orange; propleuron, pronotum anteriorly, mesosternum, posterior part of mesopleuron, posterior axillae, metapleuron and propodeum, black. Legs mostly dark brown; fore and mid femurs and tibiae orange; hind t 2 – t 4 white. Wing hyaline. Metasoma mostly black, T 1 – T 5 posteriorly white. T 6 – T 8 widely white. Other characters as in female.</p><p>Hosts.</p><p>Unknown.</p><p>Distribution.</p><p>Afrotropical. Known records from South Africa (Fig. 25 C).</p><p>Material examined.</p><p>1 ♀, 1 ♂. Holotype. SOUTH AFRICA ♀ • Eastern Cape, Asante Sana Game Reserve; 32°163762′S 24°57.309′E; 1186 m; Southern Karoo riviere, riverine woodland; 23.II–7.IV.2010; S. van Noort leg.; Malaise; ASA 09 – WOO 1 – M 06 / SAM–HYM–P 049958 (SAMC) . Dry pinned. Distal flagellomeres from f 6 of left antenna, mid and hind left legs, missing; flagellomeres from f 2 of right antenna and left ovipositor sheath glued on cardboard label. — Paratype. SOUTH AFRICA • 1 ♂; KwalaZulu – Natal, Pietermaritzburg; 27.X.1970; H. &amp; M. Townes (USUC) .</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/516B8BC537B955179CC983A9F62B56A7	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	Santos, Bernardo F.;Bordera, Santiago	Santos, Bernardo F., Bordera, Santiago (2025): Phylogenomics and taxonomic revision of Stenarella Szépligeti (Hymenoptera, Ichneumonidae, Cryptinae). Arthropod Systematics & Phylogeny 83: 463-511, DOI: 10.3897/asp.83.e151385
F341CC9C712851478B95395D4EEE1B17.text	F341CC9C712851478B95395D4EEE1B17.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Stenarella victoriae (Cameron 1912)	<div><p>3.1.18. Stenarella victoriae (Cameron, 1912)</p><p>Figures 1 B, 21, 22 F, 25 D, 28</p><p>Mesostenus victoriae Cameron, 1912: 179. Holotype ♀ (NHMUK, examined).</p><p>Parasilsila trilineata Cheesman, 1936: 368. Holotype ♀ (NHMUK, examined). Synonymized by Townes et al. (1961).</p><p>Diagnosis.</p><p>Stenarella victoriae can be distinguished from all other Stenarella species by the combination of the following characters: mesoscutum densely punctate (Fig. 21 E); areolet usually open, vein 2 rs-m obliterated (Fig. 21 C); propodeum medially and posteriorly to anterior transverse carina coarsely transversely striate (Fig. 1 B); mesosoma black, with well defined whitish marks (Fig. 21 A, D, E, 22 F); propodeum with one medial posterior large whitish mark (Figs 1 B, 22 F).</p><p>Description.</p><p>FEMALE. Fore wing 10.0– 12.5 mm long. — Head (Fig. 21 A, B, D, E): Mandible, clypeus and face moderately setose. Mandible mostly sparsely punctate, MLW 2.1–2.25. Malar space short, MSM 0.40–0.45. Clypeus sparsely punctate, CWL 3.15–3.20. Clypeus slightly convex, face centrally distinctly convex. Face granulate – punctate, dorsomedially rougher, with median minute tubercle between antennal sockets. Frons and vertex mostly densely punctate, frons medially rugulose – punctate, with interrupted longitudinal carina. Antenna with 35–37 flagellomeres. — Mesosoma (Fig. 1 B, 21 A, C – E): Pronotum mostly smooth, with distinct longitudinal striae along anterior depression and posterior margin, dorsal lateral part strongly and densely punctate. Epomia long and strong, ending distinctly on pronotal collar. Mesoscutum densely punctate. Notaulus reaching 0.80 of mesoscutum, with minute transverse striae. Scutellum mostly punctate with central part smooth. Mesopleuron and metapleuron moderately setose. Mesopleuron dorsally densely punctate, centrally strigose punctate, ventrally rugulose punctate. Epicnemial carina weak (better seen in ventrolateral view), reaching 0.4–0.5 of distance to subtegular ridge. Sternaulus deep and sinuous, reaching posterior rim of mesopleuron. Metapleuron posterodorsally rugose punctate, anteriorly rugulose punctate and posteroventrally strigose punctate. Propodeum relatively long, dorsal profile in lateral view evenly convex and sloped. Anterior area of propodeum densely punctate, with median longitudinal carina distinct. Propodeal spiracle elliptic, SLW 5.0–5.25. Posterior area of propodeum anteriorly rugulose reticulate, posteriorly and medially, coarsely striate transversally, laterally rugulose striate. Posterior transverse carina of propodeum absent. Areolet small, open distally, APH 0.4–0.45. Vein 2 rs-m obliterated. Hind wing vein Cua distinctly longer than crossvein cu-a, HW 1 C 2.75–2.85. — Metasoma (Fig. 21 A, F): Posterior end of S 1 placed anterior to or approximately opposite to spiracle of T 1; T 1 LW 2.8–3.2; T 1 WW 2.4–2.5; T 2 LW 1.1–1.15; T 2 WW 2.1–2.15. T 2 minutely punctate reticulate on a granulate background. Dorsal valve of ovipositor with 8 teeth. Ventral valve with 11 teeth. OST 3.4–3.5. — Color (Figs 1 B, 21): Head mostly black: labrum, clypeus, face centrally, mandibles except distal part and eye orbits, whitish and f 7–13 (14) dorsally white. Mesosoma mostly black; propleuron widely, dorsal lateral margin, spot on medial dorsal part and a ventral anterior spot on pronotum, subtegular ridge, spot between median anterior part of mesopleuron and median posterior part of epicnemium, posterior ventral corner of mesopleuron, mesepisternum, dorsal division of metapleuron, wide dorsal mark on posterior part of metapleuron, central spot on mesoscutum, tegula, scutellum laterally and dorsally, and a large medial posterior spot on propodeum, yellow cream. Legs mostly orange; distal part of hind femur and tibia, base of t 1, and t 5 dark brown; distal part of t 1 and t 2–4 whitish. Wing hyaline. Metasoma mostly dark brown to black, T 1 – T 8 posteriorly yellow cream banded. — MALE (Fig. 22 F). Fore wing 8.7–10.2 mm long. — Head: MLW 1.9–2.0; MSM about 0.36. CWL 2.6–2.7. Antenna with 32–37 flagellomeres. Tyloids on f 14 – f 18, sometimes on f 15–18 or f 13–19. — Mesosoma: SLW 5.5–6.0., HW 1 C 2.2–2.7. — Metasoma: Posterior end of S 1 placed posterior to spiracle of T 1; T 1 LW 4.9–5.1; T 1 WW 1.5–2.0; T 2 LW 1.4–1.8; T 2 WW 2.2–2.4. — Color: As female, but antenna with f 7 – f 19 dorsally white, first one and last one partially, some specimens without white band; face and mesosternum entirely whitish. Other characters as in female.</p><p>Comments</p><p>According to Gauld (1984), this species is “ fairly common in Queensland and New South Wales ”, and it is well-represented in Australian collections.</p><p>Hosts.</p><p>Auplopus sp. ( Hymenoptera; Pompilidae), Sceliphron sp. ( Hymenoptera; Sphecidae).</p><p>Distribution.</p><p>Australasian. Known records from Australia (Queensland, Tasmania, Victoria) (Fig. 25 D).</p><p>Material examined.</p><p>10 ♀♀, 2 ♂♂. AUSTRALIA • 1 ♀; Queensland, Acadia Ridge; 20. Dec. 1979, G. Gordhi (USNM) • 1 ♀ 1 ♂; same data except 29. Dec. 1979 • 1 ♀; same date except 30. Dec. 1979 • 1 ♀; Queensland, Rockhampton; 1870; Thozet, (MNHN) • 1 ♀, Tasmania, Verreaux; March 1947 (MNHN) • 1 ♀ 1 ♂; Queensland, N. of Mt. Molloy, Kingfisher Park, Julatten, 14.XI.1996, G. R. Else • 1 ♀; Queensland, Brisvane, Gap, Ashgrove, August, F. G. Smith (USUC) • 1 ♀; Queensland, Rockhampton; Coll. Bingham (MFNB) • 1 ♀; Victoria; Musk, 25.II–4.III.2016; A. Campoy Leg.; Rza. 1; Malaise trap (CEUA) • 1 ♀, 1 ♂; Victoria; same locality but 6–19.I.2017; A. Campoy Leg.; Rza. 24; Malaise trap (CEUA) .</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/F341CC9C712851478B95395D4EEE1B17	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	Santos, Bernardo F.;Bordera, Santiago	Santos, Bernardo F., Bordera, Santiago (2025): Phylogenomics and taxonomic revision of Stenarella Szépligeti (Hymenoptera, Ichneumonidae, Cryptinae). Arthropod Systematics & Phylogeny 83: 463-511, DOI: 10.3897/asp.83.e151385
