identifier	taxonID	type	CVterm	format	language	title	description	additionalInformationURL	UsageTerms	rights	Owner	contributor	creator	bibliographicCitation
2008BB6F016EE8E0D5AEE16FD2F0778E.text	2008BB6F016EE8E0D5AEE16FD2F0778E.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Diachasmimorpha Viereck	<div><p>Diachasmimorpha Viereck</p><p>Diachasmimorpha Viereck, 1913: 641. Type species: Diachasmimorpha comperei Viereck, 1913 [a junior subjective synonym of Diachasmimorpha longicaudata (Ashmead, 1905)]. Monobasic and original designation.</p><p>Biosteres ( Parasteres) Fischer, 1967a: 3. Type species: Biosteres (Parasteres) acidusae Fischer, 1967a [a junior subjective synonym of Diachasmimorpha tryoni (Cameron, 1911)]. Original designation.</p><p>Parasteres: Fischer 1971: 33 (change in rank). Synonymized under Biosteres by Wharton and Marsh (1978:154) and under Diachasmimorpha by Wharton (1987a: 62).</p><p>Diagnosis.</p><p>Mandible without basal lobe ventrally. Labrum concealed. Occipital carina broadly absent dorsally, present or absent laterally. Propleuron ventral-laterally without oblique carina. Notauli deep, unsculptured or nearly so, well developed anteriorly, varying posteriorly from absent to deep and complete to midpit; midpit always present. Fore wing stigma short, broad, discrete posteriorly, r1 arising at or distad its midpoint; second submarginal cell short; m-cu arising from second submarginal cell. Hind wing RS absent basally, sometimes present as a weakly pigmented crease distally; 2M distinctly pigmented nearly to wing margin; m-cu present, well-developed. Dorsope absent.</p><p>The species of Diachasmimorpha are most readily recognized by the pattern of fore and hind wing venation (Figs 9, 16) in combination with the concealed labrum (Fig. 12), unsculptured notauli (Figs 11, 14, 19, 20), and lack of oblique carina on the propleuron (Fig. 23). The species of Doryctobracon Enderlein, endemic to the New World, are similar but have the fore wing m-cu interstitial or arising from the first submarginal cell and the labrum is partially exposed. Fopius Wharton, an Old World genus with species that have been introduced to the New World, is also similar. The species of Fopius differ by the presence of completely sculptured notauli and the presence of an oblique carina on the propleuron (Fig. 24).</p><p>Remarks.</p><p>Both New and Old World species groups of Diachasmimorpha occur in Mexico. Diachasmimorpha longicaudata (Ashmead) and Diachasmimorpha tryoni, both representatives of the Old World longicaudata species group (Wharton 1997), were established in various parts of Mexico during biological control programs directed against tephritid pests primarily in the genus Anastrepha . Females of the Old World species are readily distinguished from New World Diachasmimorpha because of the sinuate ovipositor (Fig. 28). The notauli are also more deeply incised posteriorly in the longicaudata species group (Fig. 19, in contrast to Fig. 20), which facilitates identification of males in biological control and other tephritid pest management programs. The name Parasteres continues to be used by some authors, for example as a subgenus of Diachasmimorpha (Yu et al. 2012), but we continue to treat Diachasmimorpha tryoni and Diachasmimorpha longicaudata in the same species group based in part on ovipositor morphology. We therefore do not treat Parasteres as valid, nor do we recognize subgenera under Diachasmimorpha at this time.</p><p>New World species have previously been referred to as the mexicana species group (Wharton 1997), a use we continue here. Wharton (1997) noted, however, that there were two subgroups distinguished in part on the basis of relative loss of the occipital carina. Further examination and discovery of additional species provides support for the two subgroups. One of these subgroups consists of Diachasmimorpha juglandis (Muesebeck), Diachasmimorpha mellea (Gahan), and Diachasmimorpha sublaevis (Wharton). The occipital carina is generally better developed in this subgroup (usually readily visible laterally as in Fig. 2), the wings are hyaline, and the body is yellowish. As in the longicaudata species group, the anterior margin of the pronotum ventral-laterally is sharply excavated (Fig. 17). The second subgroup contains Diachasmimorpha mexicana (Cameron), Diachasmimorpha sanguinea (Ashmead), Diachasmimorpha hildagensis (Fischer), new combination, and the new species described below. In all of these species, the occipital carina is greatly reduced, present only as a short spur ventrally near the mandible (maximum extent shown in Fig . 4). These species also have infumate wings (Fig. 16) and the body tends to be orange rather than yellow. The anterior margin of the pronotum ventral-laterally is also more sinuate than abruptly excavated (Fig. 18). Detailed diagnoses are provided below for the three previously described species in this second subgroup, to facilitate comparison with the newly described species.</p><p>Key to species of Diachasmimorpha known from U.S. and Mexico</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/2008BB6F016EE8E0D5AEE16FD2F0778E	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	Wharton, Robert;Ward, Lauren;Miko, Istvan	Wharton, Robert, Ward, Lauren, Miko, Istvan (2012): New neotropical species of Opiinae (Hymenoptera, Braconidae) reared from fruit-infesting and leaf-mining Tephritidae (Diptera) with comments on the Diachasmimorpha mexicana species group and the genera Lorenzopius and Tubiformopius. ZooKeys 243: 27-82, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.243.3990, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.243.3990
CD28E218E8BB702E4BC5B486BBB8C9F4.text	CD28E218E8BB702E4BC5B486BBB8C9F4.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Diachasmimorpha hildagensis (Fischer)	<div><p>Diachasmimorpha hildagensis (Fischer) comb. n. Figs 9 –1213– 16</p><p>Opius (Biosteres) hildagensis Fischer, 1964: 12, 20-22. Holotype male in AEIC (examined).</p><p>Biosteres (Parasteres) hildagensis: Fischer 1967a: 5 (generic transfer).</p><p>Parasteres hildagensis: Fischer 1971: 33 (generic transfer); Fischer 1977: 880-883 (key, redescription).</p><p>Type locality:</p><p>Mexico, State of Mexico, Hidalgo National Park.</p><p>Type material.</p><p>Holotype male (AEIC), first label, first line: Hidalgo Natl. Pk. second line: State of Mex., Mex. third line: x.12.62 3000 m. fourth line: H. &amp; M. Townes Second label [purple]: Holotype Third label: Opius hildagensis [male symbol] sp. n. det. Fischer Fourth label: Type No. 336</p><p>Other specimens examined: 2 females, 1 male, Mexico, Mexico, Rt 890, km 9, 6 km W Lago Zempoala, 2.x.1991, A.L. Norrbom, reared from Oedicarina latifrons infesting fruits of Solanum brachycarpum (91M14B) (TAMU, USNM).</p><p>Diagnosis.</p><p>Holotype male. Eye in dorsal view as long as temple, temples neither receding nor expanded beyond eyes; eye in lateral view 1.3 × longer than temple. Frons irregularly rugulose along midline between antenna and median ocellus. Clypeus 2.8 × wider than high. Occipital carina distinct near base of mandible, short, not extending dorsally to ventral margin of eye. Antenna with 46 flagellomeres; first flagellomere 1.25 × longer than wide. Pronope deep, large, interrupting posterior crenulate groove middorsally. Notauli deep anteriorly, reaching anterior-lateral margin of mesoscutum and extending posteriorly about 0.5 × distance to deep, elongate midpit. Precoxal sulcus distinctly crenulate throughout, nearly extending to anterior margin of mesopleuron. Propodeum rugose, areola extending over posterior 0.6 but largely obscured by sculpture. Fore wing 2RS 0.95 × length of 3RSa; m-cu distinctly postfurcal. T1 with dorsal carinae weakly converging, widely separated at posterior margin, gradually weakening posteriorly. Meso- and metasoma orange, tegula black, head dark brown to black except narrow yellow-orange band along epistomal sulcus extending to and through malar sulcus and small orange spot on vertex adjacent eye; legs black except extreme base of hind coxa irregularly orange, joint between femora and trochantelli reddish orange, mid and hind tarsi dark brown. Body length about 4.3 mm, fore wing length 4.5 mm, mesosoma length 1.8 mm.</p><p>Specimens reared from Oedicarena latifrons (Wulp) vary as follows relative to the holotype: clypeus length/height ratio 2.6-2.8; eye/temple ratio, lateral view, 1.3-1.4 (males), 1.55 (female); antenna with 46-48 flagellomeres; 2RS/3RS ratio 0.95-1.0; ovipositor sheath 2.5 times longer than the mesosoma; mesosoma length 1.85-1.9 mm (male), 2.0 mm (female); one male with T1 dorsal carinae absent over posterior 0.5 and mandible, clypeus, face, and hind coxa more extensively orange; female with outer surface of hind coxa completely pale (dark medially), mandible, clypeus and lower part of face more extensively pale than in holotype.</p><p>This species is slightly larger and has a smaller eye than both of the similarly-colored species described below, Diachasmimorpha martinalujai, sp. n. and Diachasmimorpha norrbomi, sp. n. Based on the single female reared from Diachasmimorpha latifrons, Diachasmimorpha hildagensis alsohas a much longer ovipositor than Diachasmimorpha norrbomi . The ovipositors of Diachasmimorpha hildagensis and Diachasmimorpha martinalujai are similar in length. In Diachasmimorpha hildagensis and Diachasmimorpha martinalujai, the notaulus consistently extends anteriorly to the margin of the mesoscutum whereas in Diachasmimorpha norrbomi, the notaulus usually does not. Color variation in the specimens reared from Opius latifrons is similar to that in the paratype series of Diachasmimorpha martinalujai and Diachasmimorpha norrbomi . Both Diachasmimorpha hildagensis and the two newly described speciesare similar in having the head mostly dark in contrast to the orange heads of Diachasmimorpha mexicana and Diachasmimorpha sanguinea, the other two members of this species group. The holotype of Diachasmimorpha hildagensis exhibits subsurface discoloration on the metasoma, but the tergites are all entirely orange.</p><p>Biology.</p><p>There is no biological information associated with the holotype. The non-type material listed above was reared from the tephritid Oedicarina latifrons infesting fruits of Solanum brachycarpum Correll. Collection data and host information can be found in Norrbom et al. (1988).</p><p>Remarks.</p><p>The name hildagensis is based on a misreading of the locality label on the holotype, which is correctly written as Hidalgo Nat. Park, not "Hildago Nat. Park" as given by Fischer (1964) in the original description. In the original description, hilda gensis is included in a key to the subgenus Biosteres, but the subgeneric name was not included in the heading for the species description. This species is here transferred to Diachasmimorpha, as diagnosed above, on the basis of fore and hind wing venation (Fig. 16), the morphology of the labrum, clypeus, and mandible (Fig. 12), and the well-developed notaulus and midpit (Figs 13-15). A detailed description of Diachasmimorpha is provided in Wharton (1997). Inclusion of Diachasmimorpha hildagensis in the mexicana species group is based on the greatly reduced occipital carina, sinuate anterior margin of the pronotum ventral-laterally, and the body and wing coloration.</p><p>Both Diachasmimorpha hildagensis and Diachasmimorpha mexicana were described from single male specimens collected in the state of Mexico and the Distrito Federal, respectively, and unassociated with either hosts or host plants. Both have relatively small eyes, but are readily separated from one another on the basis of head coloration. Associating the name hildagensis with the many dark-headed specimens available for study, however, has been considerably more challenging. Reared material, representing over 50 specimens kindly made available to us by Allen Norrbom, Martin Aluja, and Juan Rull, provides clear evidence of sexual dimorphism in eye size as well as variation in ovipositor length associated with different hosts and host plants. This material has been especially critical for understanding color patterns and associating males with females. Based primarily on eye size and body size, the holotype of Diachasmimorpha hildagensis is closest to the series of three specimens listed above under "other specimens examined," that emerged from puparia of Opius latifrons infesting fruits of Solanum brachycarpum . From the remaining reared material, we describe two closely similar species below.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/CD28E218E8BB702E4BC5B486BBB8C9F4	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	Wharton, Robert;Ward, Lauren;Miko, Istvan	Wharton, Robert, Ward, Lauren, Miko, Istvan (2012): New neotropical species of Opiinae (Hymenoptera, Braconidae) reared from fruit-infesting and leaf-mining Tephritidae (Diptera) with comments on the Diachasmimorpha mexicana species group and the genera Lorenzopius and Tubiformopius. ZooKeys 243: 27-82, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.243.3990, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.243.3990
44F66210D3E59008E9DB8E3063CAA9BD.text	44F66210D3E59008E9DB8E3063CAA9BD.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Diachasmimorpha martinalujai Wharton	<div><p>Diachasmimorpha martinalujai Wharton sp. n. Figs 26, 2731, 33</p><p>Type locality.</p><p>Mexico, Distrito Federal.</p><p>Type material.</p><p>Holotype. Female (UNAM), first and only data label, first line: Mexico, D. F. second line: Host = R. pomonella third line: Host plant=Crataegus sp. fourth line: Common name=Tejocote fifth line: 7.xi.2007 J. Rull</p><p>Paratypes: 1 male, same data as holotype (TAMU). 1 male, Mexico, Hidalgo, Atotonilco, 4.xi.2002, J. Rull, key 30, reared from Rhagoletis nr. pomonella infesting fruit of Crataegus spp. (TAMU). 1 male, Mexico, Puebla, San Martin, 24.xi.2003, M. Pale key 69, reared from Rhagoletis nr. pomonella infesting fruit of Crataegus mexicana (TAMU).</p><p>Description.</p><p>Female.Head in dorsal view 1.30 × broader than mesoscutum, 1.65 × broader than face; eye in dorsal view 2.0 × longer than temple, temples not receding, but width at eyes greater than width at temples; eye in lateral view 2.05 × longer than temple. Discrete facial midridge ending dorsally as a distinct elevation at base of antennae, continuing between antennae onto frons as low, sharp, bifurcating ridges. Frons irregularly rugulose along midline between bifurcating arms, otherwise polished, with moderately dense patch of decumbent, laterally-directed, white setae on either side of midline; bare on either side of ocellar field; width of ocellar field 0.95 × distance from ocellar field to eye. Face 2.2 × wider than high; uniformly setose (as in Figs 31, 33), distinctly punctate, punctures separated by about 1 × their diameter or slightly less. Malar sulcus deep, complete; malar space about 1.1 × basal width of mandible, 0.35 × eye height. Clypeus 2.65 × wider than high; very weakly convex, nearly flat. Occipital carina weak, difficult to discern near base of mandible, short, extending dorsally to ventral margin of eye. Hypostomal carina extending as short but distinct flange below mandible. Antenna with 45 flagellomeres; first flagellomere 1.3 × longer than second; 1.8 × longer than wide.</p><p>Mesosoma 1.4 × longer than high; 1.9 × longer than wide; 1.35 × higher than wide. Pronotum not visible dorsally; crenulae extending over dorsal 0.3-0.4 of prono tum laterally within narrow, shallow groove; groove not margined anteriorly by carina; anterior margin of pronotum laterally sinuate, not abruptly excavated. Notauli deep anteriorly, ending abruptly posteriorly, short, not quite extending posteriorly to level of anterior margin of tegula, not reaching long, narrow midpit, anterior end extending to anterior-lateral margin of scutum; mesoscutum without supra-marginal carina adjacent margin of mesoscutum between base of notaulus and tegula. Scuto-scutellar sulcus rectangular or nearly so; 4.75 × wider than midlength; crenulate-foveolate. Propodeum rugose, areola extending over posterior 0.8 but partially obscured by sculpture. Precoxal sulcus crenulate, distinctly separated from anterior margin of mesopleuron.</p><p>Wings. Fore wing stigma short, broad, discrete distally, 3.5 × longer than wide; r1 arising from midlength of stigma; 1RS (excluding parastigma) 0.30 × length of 1M; m-cu postfurcal by 0.25 × length of m-cu; second submarginal cell converging distally; 2RS 0.9 × length of 3RSa; 2CUa about 1.7 × longer than 2cu-a; 1cu-a distad 1M by about 1.0 × its length.</p><p>Metasoma not distinctly petiolate; head 1.8 × wider than apex of T1. T1 1.05 × as long as apical width; strongly diverging apically, with apex 2.1 × wider than base; surface smooth; dorsal carinae parallel-sided, widely separated posteriorly, distinctly elevated over anterior 0.6, weaker and becoming indistinct posteriorly; lateral carina weaker than dorsal carina basally, extending distinctly ventrad spiracle, rounded and barely distinguishable posteriorad spiracle; spiracle at midlength of T1; dorsope absent but lateral and dorsal carinae elevated at junction, giving appearance of a slight depression; laterope deep; S1 very short. T2 unsculptured, with sharp lateral margins. Ovipositor sheath 2.4 × longer than mesosoma, densely setose over apical half, with 4-5 irregular rows of setae, the setae longer than sheath width, more sparsely setose basally.</p><p>Color (Fig. 26). Very similar to Diachasmimorpha hildagensis . Meso- and metasoma orange, except tegula black; head dorsally black except for small orange spot on vertex adjacent eye; lower gena and most of occiput yellow-orange; narrow bands dorsad epistomal sulcus, along ventral margin of clypeus and vertically through middle of mandible orange; legs black to dark reddish brown except basal 0.5 of hind coxa orange, joint between femora and trochantelli reddish orange.</p><p>Male. Largely as in female with variation as follows: head in dorsal view 1.35-1.45 × broader than mesoscutum, 1.6-1.7 × broader than face; eye in dorsal view 1.6-1.85 × longer than temple, in lateral view 1.7-1.95 × longer than temple; face 1.95-2.1 × wider than high; malar space 0.3-0.45 × eye height; clypeus 2.6-2.8 × wider than high; antenna with 39-47 flagellomeres; first flagellomere 1.1-1.2 × longer than second, 2.0-2.1 × longer than wide; mesosoma 1.25-1.35 × longer than high; 1.85-1.95 × longer than wide; 1.4-1.5 × higher than wide; pronope deep, moderately large but not interrupting posterior crenulate groove middorsally; crenulae extending over dorsal 0.2-0.4 of pronotum laterally; scuto-scutellar sulcus 4.0-5.0 × wider than midlength; areola of propodeum variably obscured, short and triangular rather than pentagonal in topotypic paratype; precoxal sulcus occasionally extending to anterior margin of mesopleuron; fore wing stigma 3.3-3.8 × longer than wide; 1RS 0.2-0.25 × length of 1M; m-cu postfurcal by 0.15-2.0 × length of m-cu; 2RS 0.8-1.05 × length of 3RSa; head 1.85-2.2 × wider than apex of T1; T1 0.95-1.05 × as long as apical width, apex 2.1-2.25 × wider than base; surface of T1 between dorsal carinae weakly rugulose; dorsal carinae weakly sinuate, weakly converging at posterior margin of T1; S1 extending posteriorly only to level of dorsal tendon attachment; head varying from darker as in female to more extensively pale (as in Fig. 31) with ventral 0.5 of face orange, outer surface of mandible entirely dark orange and clypeus reddish brown; hind coxa varying from almost entirely orange to almost entirely black; hind femur and tibia varying from black to reddish brown.</p><p>Body length 4.9 mm (female), 3.1-4.7 mm (male), fore wing length 4.0 mm (female), 2.7-4.1 mm (male), mesosomal length 1.55 mm (female), 1.0-1.7 mm (male).</p><p>Diagnosis.</p><p>This species is nearly identical to Diachasmimorpha hildagensis based on the similarly long ovipositor and the notaulus that consistently extends all the way to the anterior margin of the mesoscutum. The eye is distinctly larger in Diachasmimorpha martinalujai than in Diachasmimorpha hildagensis . Diachasmimorpha norrbomi is also similar, but has a shorter ovipositor and the notaulus only rarely extends anteriorly to the margin of the mesoscutum.</p><p>Biology.</p><p>This is the species that has been referred to as Diachasmimorpha mexicana (vide Wharton) in previous publications on parasitoids of Rhagoletis Loew in Mexico (e.g. Rull et al. 2009). The holotype and paratypes were all reared from Mexican populations of Rhagoletis pomonella infesting fruits of various species of Crataegus, including Crataegus mexicana DC., as characterized by Xie et al. (2007).</p><p>Etymology.</p><p>This species is named after Martin Aluja in recognition of his many contributions to tephritid biology, particularly in Mexico.</p><p>Remarks.</p><p>The male paratypes, though only three in number, are remarkably variable in size, with larger individuals closely approaching the size of Diachasmimorpha hildagensis . Quantitative measures are also highly variable, which is not surprising given the variation in size.</p><p>Detailed assessment of the available reared material suggests the presence of a diverse assemblage of Diachasmimorpha species in Mexico, associated with different hosts and host plants. The relatively small morphological differences between Diachasmimorpha hildagensis and Diachasmimorpha martinalujai are consistent among the available material and the differences in host and host plant associations lend support to the recognition of these as separate species.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/44F66210D3E59008E9DB8E3063CAA9BD	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	Wharton, Robert;Ward, Lauren;Miko, Istvan	Wharton, Robert, Ward, Lauren, Miko, Istvan (2012): New neotropical species of Opiinae (Hymenoptera, Braconidae) reared from fruit-infesting and leaf-mining Tephritidae (Diptera) with comments on the Diachasmimorpha mexicana species group and the genera Lorenzopius and Tubiformopius. ZooKeys 243: 27-82, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.243.3990, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.243.3990
271125A8DB952036DDC190416B8BF291.text	271125A8DB952036DDC190416B8BF291.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Diachasmimorpha norrbomi Wharton	<div><p>Diachasmimorpha norrbomi Wharton sp. n. Figs 25, 2930, 32</p><p>Type locality.</p><p>Mexico, State of Mexico, Parque Lago de Zempoala.</p><p>Type material.</p><p>Holotype. Female (UNAM), first label, first line: Mexico, Parque second line: Lag. de Zempoala, path third line: along L. Zempoala, 10-11. fourth line: VIII.1989, A.L.Norrbom Second label, first line: reared ex. Euphranta second line: mexicana ( Tephritidae) third line: ex. fruit of Ribes fourth line: pringlei Rose (89M13)</p><p>Paratypes: 27 females, 20 males, same data as holotype, one of these with an additional ALN 31 label and a Biosteres sp. 1 det P. Marsh label (TAMU, UNAM, USNM).</p><p>Other specimens examined (not paratypes): 1 female, 1 male, Mexico, D.F., Delegacion Tlapan, Fracc. Tlapuente, 19.ix.2003, M. Aluja #50, reared from fruit of Granadilla (TAMU).</p><p>Description.</p><p>Female.Head in dorsal view 1.25-1.30 × broader than mesoscutum, 1.80-1.85 × broader than face; eye in dorsal view 1.7-2.0 × longer than temple, temples not receding, but width at eyes greater than width at temples; eye in lateral view 2.1-2.9 × longer than temple. Facial midridge ending dorsally in short, very weak bifurcation between antennae. Frons irregularly rugulose along midline near bifurcation, otherwise polished, with moderately dense patch of decumbent, laterally-directed, white setae on either side of midline; bare on either side of ocellar field; width of ocellar field 1.0-1.2 × distance from ocellar field to eye. Face 1.80-1.95 × wider than high; uniformly setose (as in Figs 30, 32), distinctly punctate, punctures separated by at least 1 × their diameter. Malar sulcus deep, complete; malar space about 0.9-1.0 × basal width of mandible, 0.30-0.35 × eye height. Clypeus 2.8-3.2 × wider than high; very weakly convex, nearly flat. Occipital carina weak but distinct near base of mandible, short, extending dorsally to ventral margin of eye and often slightly beyond, not reaching mid eye height. Hypostomal carina extending as short but distinct flange below mandible. Antenna with 41-47 flagellomeres; first flagellomere 1.05-1.2 × longer than second; 1.8-2.0 × longer than wide.</p><p>Mesosoma 1.35-1.45 × longer than high; 1.85-1.95 × longer than wide; 1.35-1.40 × higher than wide. Pronope deep, large, interrupting posterior crenulate groove middorsally; crenulae extending along dorsal 0.2 of pronotum laterally within narrow, shallow groove; groove not margined anteriorly by carina; anterior margin of pronotum laterally sinuate, not abruptly excavated. Notauli deep anteriorly, gradually weakening posteriorly, extending posteriorly to level of tegula, not reaching long, narrow midpit, anterior end usually just short of and only rarely reaching anterior-lateral margin of scutum; mesoscutum usually without supra-marginal carina between base of notaulus and tegula, rarely with short, weak trace of a carina. Scuto-scutellar sulcus nearly rectangular, a little narrower medially; 4.2-4.8 × wider than midlength; crenulate-foveolate. Propodeum rugose, areola extending over posterior 0.8 but largely obscured by sculpture. Precoxal sulcus crenulate, widely separated from anterior margin of mesopleuron.</p><p>Wings. Fore wing stigma short, broad, discrete distally, 3.15-3.30 × longer than wide; r1 arising from midlength of stigma; 1RS (excluding parastigma) 0.30-0.35 × length of 1M; m-cu postfurcal by 0.2-0.3 × length of m-cu; second submarginal cell distinctly converging distally; 2RS 1.0-1.2 × longer than 3RSa; 2CUa 1.6-1.8 × longer than 2cu-a; 1cu-a distad 1M by about 1.0 × its length.</p><p>Metasoma not distinctly petiolate; head 1.6-1.9 × wider than apex of T1. T1 0.95-1.05 × as long as apical width; strongly diverging apically, with apex 2.0-2.5 × wider than base; surface smooth to weakly strigose posterior-medially, almost completed smooth laterally; dorsal carinae weakly converging, widely separated at posterior margin, strongly elevated over anterior 0.5, gradually weakening posteriorly; lateral carina weaker, extending distinctly ventrad spiracle, rounded and barely distinguishable posteriorad spiracle; spiracle at midlength of T1; dorsope absent but lateral and dorsal carinae elevated at junction, giving appearance of a slight depression; laterope deep; S1 very short, extending posteriorad to level of dorsal tendon attachment. T2 unsculptured, with sharp lateral margins. Ovipositor sheath 1.7-1.8 × longer than mesosoma, setal pattern about as in Diachasmimorpha martinalujai, with slightly greater density basally.</p><p>Color (Fig. 25). Very similar to Diachasmimorpha hildagensis . Meso- and metasoma orange, except tegula black; head dorsally dark brown to black except for small orange spot on vertex adjacent eye, lower occiput mostly yellow-orange, similar in color to broad band extending through epistomal sulcus, clypeus, lower gena (often), and mandibles; clypeus usually with narrow, transverse brown band, mandible with apical teeth dark, rarely with entire mandible brownish; legs black except extreme base and most or all of dorsal side of hind coxa orange, joint between femora and trochantelli reddish orange.</p><p>Male as in female except head in dorsal view 1.3-1.4 × broader than mesoscutum, 1.70-1.75 × broader than face; eye slightly smaller, in dorsal view eye 1.45-1.60 × longer than temple, in lateral view 1.9-2.4 × longer than temple; antenna with 41-43 flagellomeres, first flagellomere 0.95-1.2 × longer than second. Mesosoma slightly narrower, 1.95-2.05 × longer than wide; 1.4-1.5 × higher than wide; scuto-scutellar sulcus somewhat more variable in size, 4.0-5.5 × wider than midlength. Fore wing stigma 3.1-3.4 × longer than wide. T1 slightly smaller, head 1.9-2.2 × wider than apex of T1, T1 1.75-1.90 × wider at apex than at base.</p><p>Body length 3.3-4.3 mm, fore wing length 3.5-4.1 mm, mesosoma length 1.15-1.65 mm.</p><p>Diagnosis.</p><p>This species is similar in coloration to Diachasmimorpha hildagensis and Diachasmimorpha martinalujai but the ovipositor (with sheath 1.7-1.8 × longer than mesosoma) is slightly but distinctly shorter and the notaulus only rarely extends all the way to the anterior margin. The notaulus always reaches the anterior margin in the other two species. Diachasmimorpha norrbomi is smaller and has a larger eye than Diachasmimorpha hildagensis, and 2RS tends to be longer (relative to 3Ra) in Diachasmimorpha norrbomi than in Diachasmimorpha hildagensis and Diachasmimorpha martinalujai .</p><p>Biology.</p><p>The type series of Diachasmimorpha norrbomi was reared from Euphranta mexicana Norrbom infesting fruits of Ribes pringlei Rose (Norrbom 1993). Two additional specimens that fit within the morphological limits of this species were reared from an unknown tephritid infesting Passiflora ligularis Juss.</p><p>Etymology.</p><p>This species is named for Allen Norrbom, who reared many Opiinae from various fruit, stem, and flower-infesting tephritids in Mexico and Central America.</p><p>Remarks.</p><p>Size variation in this species is similar to that exhibited by Diachasmimorpha martinalujai, with males dominating the small end of the range.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/271125A8DB952036DDC190416B8BF291	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	Wharton, Robert;Ward, Lauren;Miko, Istvan	Wharton, Robert, Ward, Lauren, Miko, Istvan (2012): New neotropical species of Opiinae (Hymenoptera, Braconidae) reared from fruit-infesting and leaf-mining Tephritidae (Diptera) with comments on the Diachasmimorpha mexicana species group and the genera Lorenzopius and Tubiformopius. ZooKeys 243: 27-82, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.243.3990, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.243.3990
63DA601C3FB569B691B302D196E39DAE.text	63DA601C3FB569B691B302D196E39DAE.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Diachasmimorpha mexicana (Cameron)	<div><p>Diachasmimorpha mexicana (Cameron) Figs 3438</p><p>Opius mexicanus Cameron, 1887: 409-410. Holotype male in BMNH (examined).</p><p>Desmiostoma mexicana: Fischer 1967b: 63-64 (redescription, generic transfer); Fischer 1977: 849, 872-873 (key, redescription).</p><p>Diachasmimorpha mexicana: Wharton 1997: 14 (generic transfer).</p><p>Type locality.</p><p>Mexico, D. F., Chapultepec.</p><p>Type material.</p><p>Holotype male (BMNH), first label [round, white with red margin], first line: Type second line: H. T. Second label, first line: B. M. TYPE second line: HYM third line: 3.c.705 Third label, first line: B.C.A. Hymen. I. second line: Opius third line: mexicanus fourth line: Cam. Fourth label, first line: Opius second line: mexicanus third line: Cam. Type fourth line: BCA ii 409 Fifth label, first line: Bilimek second line: Mexico third line: 1871. fourth line: Chapul fifth line: tepek.</p><p>Diagnosis .</p><p>Holotype male. Eye in dorsal view shorter than temple, temples weakly expanded beyond eyes; eye in lateral view 0.95 × length of temple. Frons unsculptured along midline between antenna and median ocellus. Clypeus 3.4 × wider than high. Occipital carina distinct near base of mandible, short, not extending dorsally to ventral margin of eye. Antenna broken. Pronope deep, large, interrupting posterior crenulate groove middorsally. Notauli deep anteriorly, reaching margin of mesoscutum anteriorly, apparently extending about half distance from anterior-lateral margin to elongate midpit but pin obliterates midpit and surrounding area of mesonotum. Precoxal sulcus very weakly crenulate, nearly smooth, short, not extending close to anterior margin of mesopleuron. Propodeum largely smooth, with rugulose sculpture largely confined to midline, especially around apex, and along border of metapleuron. Fore wing 2RS 0.8 × 3RSa; m-cu distinctly postfurcal. T1 with dorsal carinae widely separated, short, barely extending to level of spiracle, T1 otherwise unsculptured. Head, meso- and metasoma orange, tegula black; legs black as in holotype of Diachasmimorpha hildagensis . Body length about 4.0 mm. This species has a much smaller eye (Figs 35, 37) than the similarly-colored Diachasmimorpha sanguinea (Fig. 41) and is also less heavily sculptured. Females are unknown.</p><p>Biology.</p><p>Unknown.</p><p>Remarks.</p><p>The body of the Diachasmimorpha mexicana holotype is remarkably smooth relative to that of other species in the mexicana species group. The precoxal sulcus, for example, is very weakly crenulate, the propodeum is very weakly sculptured in general but completely smooth and polished anterior-laterally, and T1 is unsculptured except for the very short dorsal carinae. Sculpture is variable to some extent in other species of this species group, and thus it would be useful to obtain additional specimens of the true Diachasmimorpha mexicana to determine the extent of sculptural variation in this species and ascertain whether reduction in sculpture is a useful diagnostic feature.</p><p>Fischer (1967b) noted that the specimen labeled as the type in BMNH is a male, but Cameron (1887) indicated in his original description that he was describing a female. The excellent figure in Cameron (1887) matches the type specimen, providing additional evidence of Cameron’s error (either misinterpretation of the male genitalia as an ovipositor or, more likely given the general quality of Cameron’s early work, a typographical error). The holotype was collected by D. Bilimek in Chapultepec and I have interpreted this as the large park that is now within Mexico City. Fischer (1967b) recorded the type label as type no. 3.c.505, but this is an inadvertent error. The type number for this specimens is 3.c.705.</p><p>See additional remarks under Diachasmimorpha hildagensis above.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/63DA601C3FB569B691B302D196E39DAE	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	Wharton, Robert;Ward, Lauren;Miko, Istvan	Wharton, Robert, Ward, Lauren, Miko, Istvan (2012): New neotropical species of Opiinae (Hymenoptera, Braconidae) reared from fruit-infesting and leaf-mining Tephritidae (Diptera) with comments on the Diachasmimorpha mexicana species group and the genera Lorenzopius and Tubiformopius. ZooKeys 243: 27-82, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.243.3990, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.243.3990
B1CF898F8A30051044C0AE592BF52332.text	B1CF898F8A30051044C0AE592BF52332.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Diachasmimorpha sanguinea (Ashmead)	<div><p>Diachasmimorpha sanguinea (Ashmead) Figs 41839-41</p><p>Phaedrotoma (?) sanguinea Ashmead, 1889: 655. Holotype female in USNM (examined). Marshall 1891: 47 (relationship to a European species of Opius).</p><p>Opius sanguineus: Gahan 1915: 69, 74 (key, synonymy, expanded distribution and host); Muesebeck and Walkley 1951: 157 (synonymy, new distribution and host); Muesebeck 1967: 54 (catalog).</p><p>Opius (Biosteres) sanguineus: Fischer 1965: 116, 138-139 (key, redescription).</p><p>Biosteres sanguineus: Fischer 1971: 30 (catalog, change in rank); Wharton and Marsh 1978: 152, 156 (key, diagnosis, distribution, biology); Marsh 1979: 201 (catalog).</p><p>Biosteres (Chilotrichia) sanguineus: Fischer 1977: 804, 819-821 (key, redescription).</p><p>Diachasmimorpha sanguinea: Wharton 1997: 14 (generic transfer).</p><p>Type locality.</p><p>USA, Washington, D. C.</p><p>Type material.</p><p>Syntype female (USNM), first label, first line: 3737x second line: Oct. 3. 85 Second label (red with black print), first line: Type second line: No2989 third line: U.S.N.M. Third label, first line: Phaedrotoma second line: sanguinea third line: Ashm ms. Syntype male, with same label data as syntype female except Third label = first line: Opius second line: sanguineus third line: Gahan Ashm Syntype male with first label, first line: 3737x second line: Aug. 5. 86 Second label: same as other two syntypes, no third label.</p><p>Other specimens examined. USA, Texas, 1 female, 1 male, Brazos Co., Yancey, xi.2010, emerged 9.iv &amp; 3.v.2011, L. Ward, reared from Zonosemata vittigera infesting fruits of Solanum eleagnifolium (TAMU); 1 female, Hidalgo Co., Bentsen Rio Grande Valley State Park, 10.?.1978, C. Porter (TAMU); 5 females, 1 male, Hidalgo Co., Donna, J. W. Monk, reared from Zonosemata vittigera; 5 females, 1 male, Jeff Davis Co., 14 mi. S. Ft. Davis, 16-19.viii.1985, L. E. Carroll, reared from Zonosemata infesting fruits of Solanum; 5 males, Jeff Davis Co., Davis Mts. State Park, 12.vii.1995, R. Wharton; 1 female, Swisher Co., Happy, 17.viii.1977, W. F. Chamberlin.</p><p>Diagnosis.</p><p>Male. Eye in dorsal view 1.1-1.3 × longer than temple, temples not expanded beyond eyes; eye in lateral view 1.3-1.5 × longer than temple. Frons between short, low, bifurcating ridges varying from unsculptured to irregularly strigose, frons otherwise smooth, polished. Clypeus 2.5-2.8 × wider than high. Occipital carina distinct near base of mandible, short, not extending dorsally to ventral margin of eye. Antenna with 38-48 flagellomeres. Pronope deep, large, interrupting posterior crenulate groove middorsally. Notauli deep anteriorly, reaching margin of mesoscutum anteriorly, extending about half distance from anterior-lateral margin to elongate midpit. Precoxal sulcus heavily sculptured, crenulate to foveolate, usually extending to or nearly to anterior margin of mesopleuron. Propodeum rugose, areola, when partially visible, extending over posterior 0.6-0.7 but frequently completely obscured by sculpture. Fore wing 2RS 0.9-1.05 × length of 3RSa; m-cu distinctly postfurcal. T1 with dorsal carinae weakly converging, widely separated at posterior margin, gradually weakening posteriorly, T1 smooth to strigose between carinae. Head, meso- and metasoma orange; tegula orange to brown, legs varying from black except hind coxa mottled black and orange to more extensively orange. Female about as in male except eye in lateral view 1.2-1.6 × longer than temple. Ovipositor sheath 1.6-1.75 × longer than mesosoma. Body length 3.6-5.3 mm, fore wing length 3.3-4.6 mm, mesosoma length 1.2-1.9 mm. This species has a larger eye than the similarly-colored Diachasmimorpha mexicana and is generally more heavily sculptured.</p><p>Biology.</p><p>This species was originally described from several specimens reared from a tephritid infesting fruits of Solanum carolinense L. (Ashmead 1889). The tephritid host was later identified as Zonosemata electa (Say) (Gahan 1915). Muesebeck and Walkley (1951) added Zonosemata vittigera (Coquillett) as a host and Cazier (1962) published on the biology of Zonosemata vittigera with notes on parasitization by Diachasmimorpha sanguinea . The only known host of Zonosemata vittigera is Solanum eleagnifolium Cav. (Foote et al. 1993) and this is the host plant from which we have reared Diachasmimorpha sanguinea in central and western Texas. Adult Diachasmimorpha sanguinea are active in summer and fall in Texas, overwinter in the host puparium, and emerge the following year, over a period of several months.</p><p>Remarks.</p><p>The diagnosis is based on the material from Texas listed in the other material examined section. Ashmead (1889) described this species from a single series of reared material, without designation of a type. The specimen in the type collection of the USNM is therefore a syntype, as are the remaining two specimens from this series in the general collection. There is no compelling reason to designate a lectotype, and we have therefore not done so. The original series is currently represented by 2 males and 1 female in the USNM collection. The syntypes agree in all essential details with the material from Texas, though the eye/temple ratio is at the smaller end of the range given above.</p><p>The sculpture is somewhat variable in this species, with smaller individuals having a tendency towards rugulose rather than rugose sculpture on the propodeum. The precoxal sulcus is always heavily sculptured, however, never approaching the reduction in sculpture seen in the holotype of Diachasmimorpha mexicana (Fig. 39 vs. Fig. 38). The syntypes from Washington, D. C. are as variable in sculpture of the propodeum and T1 as are the specimens from Texas. Specimens from Texas, even within the same reared series, are exceptionally variable in leg coloration. The syntypes from Washington, D. C. have black legs with mostly orange hind coxa. Some specimens from Jeff Davis Co., Texas also have this pattern while in others only the tarsi are dark with the remaining parts orange. Similarly, the tegula is usually orange, but varies from orange to brown even within the same reared series.</p><p>Diachasmimorpha sanguinea is nearly identical to Diachasmimorpha mexicana and additional material from the type locality of the latter is needed for a better understanding of the relationship between these two nominal species.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/B1CF898F8A30051044C0AE592BF52332	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	Wharton, Robert;Ward, Lauren;Miko, Istvan	Wharton, Robert, Ward, Lauren, Miko, Istvan (2012): New neotropical species of Opiinae (Hymenoptera, Braconidae) reared from fruit-infesting and leaf-mining Tephritidae (Diptera) with comments on the Diachasmimorpha mexicana species group and the genera Lorenzopius and Tubiformopius. ZooKeys 243: 27-82, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.243.3990, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.243.3990
A7DEF18AC75EC02842D147B81E94E179.text	A7DEF18AC75EC02842D147B81E94E179.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Eurytenes Wesmael	<div><p>Eurytenes Wesmael http://species-id.net/wiki/Eurytenes</p><p>Eurytenes ( Stigmatopoea Fischer)</p><p>Opius ( Stigmatopoea Fischer, 1986: 609-611). Type species: Opius macrocerus Thomson, 1895. Original designation.</p><p>Eurytenes ( Stigmatopoea): Wharton 1988: 357 (revised status); Fischer 1998: 21-25 (subgeneric keys, diagnoses); Walker and Wharton 2011: 24 (review of classification).</p><p>Xynobius ( Stigmatopoea): van Achterberg 2004: 314-315 (revised status, subgeneric keys).</p><p>Eurytenes ( Xynobius): Wharton 2006: 330-333 (revised status, relationships).</p><p>Diagnosis.</p><p>Mandible without basal lobe ventrally. Labrum broadly exposed. Occipital carina broadly absent dorsally, present laterally. Propleuron ventral-laterally without oblique carina. Notauli deep, well developed anteriorly, varying posteriorly from largely absent to deep and extending to scuto-scutellar sulcus or nearly so; midpit present. Fore wing stigma long, narrow, parallel-sided, discrete posteriorly, r1 arising distinctly basad its midpoint; second submarginal cell with 2RS shorter than 3RSb; 2CUb arising above middle of hind margin of first subdiscal cell. Dorsope present; S1 0.2-0.3 × length of T1, never fused to T1.</p><p>Remarks.</p><p>The new species described below have been placed in Eurytenes ( Stigmatopoea) based on the relative length of S1 (Figs. 5, 7) and the specific characteristics of T1 (Figs 5, 7, 54, 56, 57), wing venation (Fig. 64), mesoscutal sculpture (Figs 44, 48, 49), clypeus (Figs 50-53), and mandibles (Figs 50, 51) listed in the diagnosis. The wing venation is similar to that in Lorenzopius but in Lorenzopius, the dorsope is absent and S1 is longer and apparently fused to T1 (Fig. 6). We follow Wharton (1988, 2006) and Fischer (1998) in treating Stigmatopoea as a subgenus of Eurytenes . Wharton (2006) provides a detailed explanation of the morphological basis for this treatment as well as a discussion of alternative classifications.</p><p>Aulonotus Ashmead has usually been characterized on the basis of well-developed notauli (Fischer 1972, 1998), similar to the condition found in the species described below. Aulonotus shares other similarities with Stigmatopoea, including the presence of a dorsope, but the petiole is broader, S1 is very poorly developed, the stigma is not parallel-sided, and the precoxal sulcus is distinctly sculptured. Both the type species of Stigmatopoea and the two species described here will key to Opius ( Nosopoea Foerster) in Fischer’s classification of Opiinae (Fischer 1972, 1977) because the precoxal sulcus is unsculptured in nearly all individuals (as in Figs 43, 44). Difficulties in interpreting the variable nature of sculpture in the precoxal sulcus, and the emphasis placed on this character in existing keys to Opiinae, make it possible for relatively closely related species to become widely separated in current classifications.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/A7DEF18AC75EC02842D147B81E94E179	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	Wharton, Robert;Ward, Lauren;Miko, Istvan	Wharton, Robert, Ward, Lauren, Miko, Istvan (2012): New neotropical species of Opiinae (Hymenoptera, Braconidae) reared from fruit-infesting and leaf-mining Tephritidae (Diptera) with comments on the Diachasmimorpha mexicana species group and the genera Lorenzopius and Tubiformopius. ZooKeys 243: 27-82, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.243.3990, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.243.3990
C615C95D28167C72B822E78C4A88F890.text	C615C95D28167C72B822E78C4A88F890.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Eurytenes (Stigmatopoea) maya Wharton	<div><p>Eurytenes (Stigmatopoea) maya Wharton sp. n. Figs 742, 4446, 4850, 52565964</p><p>Type locality.</p><p>Mexico, Chiapas, San Cristobal de las Casas.</p><p>Type material.</p><p>Holotype. Female (TAMU), first label, first line: MEXICO: Chiapas second line: San Cristobal de las third line: Casas, xi.2001, #37A fourth line: J. Marquez, M. Aluja Second label, first line: host: Rhagoletis second line: pomonella third line: ex fruit of: fourth line: Crataegus mexicana</p><p>Paratypes: 2 females, same data as holotype but collected 26.xi.2001, #35A (TAMU); 1 female, same locality, 14.xi.2001, M. Aluja, Key 30A, host: Rhagoletis sp. on tejocote, manzanita (TAMU); 1 female, same locality, 14.xi.2001, J. Marquez, ex: Rhagoletis pomonella on Crataegus sp., #27 (TAMU); 1 female, Chiapas, Rancho Nuevo, 5 km to San Cristobal de las Casas-freeway 190, 15.xi.2002, J. L. Marquez, M. Aluja, # 42, host: Rhagoletis pomonella ex fruit of Crataegus mexicana (TAMU); 2 males, Chiapas, 3 km E. San Cristobal, 15.xi.1994, R. Jones, ex pupa of Rhagoletis pomonella (TAMU); 3 females, Chiapas, Huixtan, 15.ix.2002, J. Marquez, Key 34, host: Rhagoletis pomonella ex fruit of Crataegus spp. (TAMU); 1 male, 1 female, Chiapas, Cruz Quemada, 15.xi.2002, host: Rhagoletis pomonella ex fruit of Malus sp., J. Marquez, Key 35, and J. L. Marquez, M. Aluja, #45 (TAMU); 1 male, 1? (abdomen missing), Chiapas, Teopisca, 26.xi.2001, J. L. Marquez, ex: Rhagoletis pomonella on Crataegus sp. #26 (TAMU).</p><p>Other specimens examined</p><p>(not paratype): 1 male, Mexico: San Luis Potosi, Rio Verde, 7.x.2003, M. Pale, Key 71, Rhagoletis nr. pomonella on Crataegus parrayana (TAMU) [sequenced].</p><p>Description.</p><p>Female. Head in dorsal view 1.25-1.30 × broader than mesoscutum, 1.80-1.95 × broader than face; eye in dorsal view 2.5-3.2 × longer than temple, temples distinctly receding behind eyes. Frons and vertex highly polished, unsculptured except for shallow, median depression between toruli; frons bare, vertex and occiput with a few, short, scattered setae; width of ocellar field 1.05-1.3 × distance from ocellar field to eye. Face 1.55-1.70 × wider than high; slightly less polished than frons; uniformly setose (as in Figs 50, 52), with very fine punctures, these separated by at least 2 × their diameter. Frons and face delimited by slight change in sculpture resulting in weak, shallow sulcus between torulus and eye; distance between antennal toruli equal to distance from torulus to eye, eye not distinctly emarginate in region of antenna. Malar sulcus deep, complete; malar space about 0.5 × basal width of mandible, 0.2 × eye height. Face weakly convex, bulging slightly medially along the low midridge. Epistomal sulcus weak mid-dorsally, more distinct laterally. Clypeus 2.2-2.5 × wider than high; weakly convex, slightly protruding in profile; ventral margin sharp, truncate to very weakly concave in frontal view. Labrum broadly exposed, gap between ventral margin of clypeus and dorsal margin of mandible varying from 0.5-1.0 × height of clypeus, depending on how tightly closed the mandibles are. Occipital carina distinctly curved medially at dorsal end, broadly absent mid-dorsally, the space where the carina is absent distinctly wider than width of ocellar field; occipital and hypostomal carinae widely separated at base of mandible, the latter extending as a flange beneath about basal 0.2 of mandible. Mandible without basal lobe ventrally; bidentate apically, lower tooth much smaller than dorsal tooth and slightly twisted beneath dorsal tooth; ventral margin carinate throughout. Antenna 1.35-1.45 ×longer than fore wing, with 39-43 flagellomeres; first flagellomere 1.1-1.3 × longer than second, 1.2-1.3 × longer than third; flagellomeres 2.3-2.7 × longer than wide basally, twice longer than wide apically. Maxillary palps a little longer than head height; fifth and sixth segments equal in length or nearly so, fourth segment 1.1-1.15 × longer than both fifth and sixth.</p><p>Mesosoma 1.4 × longer than high; 1.9 × longer than wide; 1.35-1.40 × higher than wide. Pronotum dorsally a narrow, polished, smooth band with crenulate groove along posterior margin; rarely with discernible, slightly enlarged pit in middle of crenulate groove; crenulae extending in narrow, shallow groove onto pronotum laterally, but only covering dorsal 0.2-0.4; groove margined anteriorly by sharp carina that continues ventrally along full length of pronotum. Anterior declivity of mesoscutum completely vertical, bare or nearly so; anterior-lateral corners of mesoscutum at upper edge of declivity elevated, rounded, sparsely setose; notauli extending 0.4 × distance from anterior declivity to scuto-scutellar sulcus, extending posteriorly from lateral side of elevated anterior-lateral corners, not extending to mesoscutal margin anteriorly, very weakly converging posteriorly; narrow, crenulate throughout; mesoscutum with distinct supra-marginal carina extending from elevated anterior-lateral corner to tegula. Lateral and median mesoscutal lobes bare except scattered setae along notauli; midpit deep, round to somewhat elongate, never extending to notauli. Scuto-scutellar sulcus nearly rectangular, a little narrower medially; 3.75-4.25 × wider than midlength; crenulate-foveolate, with 7 ridges; all sides vertical, clearly delineated. Scutellum very weakly convex, nearly flat, not strongly elevated; bare except for scattered setae posteriorly; unsculptured, even along posterior margin. Propodeum with median carina over anterior 0.3, bifurcating at this point to form an inverted v-shaped transverse carina extending to pleural carina just posteriad spiracle; pleural carina complete from base to apex though sometimes partly obscured by sculpture posteriad spiracle; lateral longitudinal carina parallel to and narrowly separated from pleural carina anteriad spiracle, more medially displaced when visible posteriad transverse carinae, forming part of broad areola; area between pleural and lateral longitudinal carinae rugose and sparsely setose anteriorly; lateral propodeal areas anteriorly on either side of median carina smooth, bare, unsculptured; areola broad, varying from distinct (with surface irregularly, weakly rugulose) to indistinct (surface rugose, disrupting carinate margin of areola); lateral propodeal areas posteriorly varying from nearly unsculptured and distinct to rugose and indistinct; propodeum largely bare medially, with a few scattered setae. Mesopleuron largely bare, with sparse setae in unsculptured subalar region and a small patch of setae dorsad mid coxa; posterior margin unsculptured. Precoxal sulcus weakly impressed but distinct; unsculptured. Metapleuron bare on dorsal half except for small patch below wing, with a few long setae medially, and patches of setae among rugulose sculpture along ventral margin and in groove on ventral half of anterior margin; otherwise unsculptured.</p><p>Wings. Fore wing stigma parallel-sided, discrete posteriorly, 7.50-7.75 × longer than wide; r1 arising from basal 0.35; 1RS (excluding parastigma) 0.20-0.25 × length of 1M; RS+M straight or nearly so; m-cu postfurcal, extending into basal corner of second submarginal cell; second submarginal cell weakly converging distally; 3RSa 1.10-1.25 × longer than 2RS; 2RS 2.5-3.4 × longer than r, the two not forming a continuous line; 2RS with distinct median bend; 3RSb very weakly bowed, nearly straight; 3M variable, but often pigmented and sclerotized for most of its length; 2CUa 0.5-0.7 × length of 2cu-a, 2CUb arising well above middle of first subdiscal cell; 1cu-a distad 1M by about 1.0 × its length; 1-1A bowed toward wing margin, and separated therefrom by its width. Hind wing RS a weak but distinct, unpigmented crease, extending nearly to wing margin in most specimens; 2M extending to wing margin as a more deeply impressed line, very weakly pigmented for much of its length; m-cu usually a deeply impressed, curved line extending about half distance to wing margin.</p><p>Metasoma distinctly petiolate; head 3.5-3.8 × wider than apex of T1. T1 2.15-2.35 × longer than apical width; nearly parallel-sided, with apex 1.20-1.35 × wider than base; surface striate throughout, above and below lateral carina; one or two very shallow, subapical depressions usually present dorsally; dorsope distinct, deep; laterope completely absent; dorsal carina present only at base, lateral carina usually distinct throughout; spiracle positioned 0.6 × length of T1 from the base; S1 extending about 0.25-0.30 × length of T1; dorsal surface of petiole in profile evenly convex from base to apex. T2 and following without sharp lateral margins; spiracle of second metasomal tergum laterally displaced, not visible in dorsal view. Ovipositor as long as mesosoma; ovipositor sheath 0.6-0.7 × length of mesosoma, with 2-3 irregular rows of long setae along its length.</p><p>Color: head, including antenna, mesosoma, petiole and ovipositor sheath dark brown except scape yellow; mandible, lower gena, ventral portion of clypeus, pedicel (oc casionally), face adjacent antennal base, propleuron, anterior margin of pronotum, spot on mesopleuron below wing and a smaller spot above mid coxa, two streaks on either side of midpit on mesoscutum, posterior margins of scutellum and metapleuron, and petiole laterally (occasionally) dark yellow to orange; palps pale yellow, nearly white. Legs and metasoma beyond T1 yellow except hind tibia, hind tarsi, lateral margin of metasomal terga 2 + 3 and often anterior half of terga 4-6 brown, the hind tibia often paler medially.</p><p>Male. As in female except antenna with 41-45 flagellomeres, head 4.0-4.6 × wider than apex of T1 and T1 2.5-2.9 × longer than apical width. Body somewhat darker in color, with metasomal terga 6, 7, and most or all of 5 dark brown.</p><p>Body length 3.2-4.3 mm; wing length 3.5-4.2 mm.</p><p>Diagnosis.</p><p>This species runs to Opius ( Nosopoea) in Fischer (1972, 1977) on the basis of the exposed labrum, distinct midpit on the mesoscutum, and absence of sculpture within the precoxal sulcus. It differs from described species placed in the subgenus Nosopoea by the combination of larger size, more numerous flagellomeres, relatively well-developed notauli (Fig. 44), parallel-sided T1 (Fig. 56), and parallel-sided stigma (Fig. 64), all characters which it shares with the type species of Stigmatopoea, Eurytenes (Stigmatopoea) macrocerus . In Eurytenes maya the anterior declivity of the mesoscutum is more vertical and the anterior-lateral corners of the mesoscutal disc are distinctly elevated (Fig. 44) in comparison to Eurytenes macrocerus . Eurytenes maya differs from the other species described below, Eurytenes norrbomi, sp. n., by the possession of a relatively longer ovipositor (Fig. 42 vs. Fig. 45) and a less densely setose mesoscutum (Fig. 44 vs. 43).</p><p>Biology.</p><p>All specimens were reared from Mexican populations of Rhagoletis pomonella (Walsh) infesting either hawthorns (species of Crataegus L.) or apples ( Malus domestica Borkh.).</p><p>Etymology.</p><p>The species name is in reference the Mayan Indians of this region.</p><p>Remarks.</p><p>This species is similar in general appearance to members of the genus Lorenzopius, but T1 is not distinctly tubular as it is in the latter genus (see discussion below under Lorenzopius). The overall resemblance to Lorenzopius is enhanced by the presence of weak depressions on T1 that are similar in position in Eurytenes maya and Lorenzopius calycomyzae van Achterberg and Salvo (Figs 55, 56). The depressions are variable within members of the same reared series of Eurytenes maya: being absent, for example, in the holotype, but well developed in some of the paratypes.</p><p>The limited information on hosts suggests that species with a more tubular petiole, such as those in Lorenzopius, are parasitoids of leaf-mining Agromyzidae while the species of Stigmatopoea attack both leaf-mining and fruit-infesting tephritids.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/C615C95D28167C72B822E78C4A88F890	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	Wharton, Robert;Ward, Lauren;Miko, Istvan	Wharton, Robert, Ward, Lauren, Miko, Istvan (2012): New neotropical species of Opiinae (Hymenoptera, Braconidae) reared from fruit-infesting and leaf-mining Tephritidae (Diptera) with comments on the Diachasmimorpha mexicana species group and the genera Lorenzopius and Tubiformopius. ZooKeys 243: 27-82, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.243.3990, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.243.3990
5EB0C5BEFE3C8419163DBA19E77C9DC0.text	5EB0C5BEFE3C8419163DBA19E77C9DC0.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Eurytenes (Stigmatopoea) norrbomi Wharton	<div><p>Eurytenes (Stigmatopoea) norrbomi Wharton sp. n. Figs 43, 4547, 4951, 5357</p><p>Type locality.</p><p>Mexico, Morelos, Km. 9-10 between Huitzilac and Lago Zempoala.</p><p>Type material.</p><p>Holotype. Female (UNAM), first label, first line: MEXICO: Morelos second line: Km 9-10, btw. Huitzilac third line: &amp; Lago Zempoala fourth line: roadside, 22-24.ix.1991 fifth line: A. L. Norrbom #42</p><p>Paratypes: Mexico, 4 females, same data as holotype (TAMU, USNM); 1 female, Mexico, Rt. 890, Km 9 area, 6 km W Lago Zempoala 2.x.1991, Norrbom, #43, reared ex. Trypeta concolor ex. leafmines on Barkleyanthus salicifolius (91M1D) (TAMU). 3 males, Distrito Federal, Rt. 95 (libre), Km 42-43, 1 km N. La Cima, 20-26.ix.1991 A. L. Norrbom, #41, reared ex. Trypeta concolor ex. leafmines on Barkleyanthus salicifolius (91M1) (TAMU, USNM).</p><p>Description.</p><p>Female. Head in dorsal view 1.2-1.3 × broader than mesoscutum, 1.75-1.85 × broader than face; eye in dorsal view 1.2-1.5 × longer than temple, temples weakly receding behind eyes. Frons and vertex as in Eurytenes maya except vertex and outer part of occiput densely covered with long, decumbent setae; width of ocellar field 1.20-1.35 × distance from ocellar field to eye. Face 1.75-1.85 × wider than high; slightly less polished than frons; uniformly setose (as in Figs 51, 53), distinctly punctate, the punctures separated by about 1 × their diameter. Frons and face delimited by a slightly more distinct change in sculpture in area between torulus and eye. Malar space about 0.6 × basal width of mandible, 0.25 × eye height. Clypeus 3.0-3.4 × wider than high; protruding in profile. Occipital carina distinctly curved medially at dorsal end, absent mid-dorsally, the space where the carina is absent approximating width of ocellar field. Antenna 1.15-1.30 ×longer than fore wing, with 31-33 flagellomeres; first flagellomere 1.05-1.10 × longer than second, 1.05-1.20 × longer than third; flagellomeres 3.1-4.1 × longer than wide basally, 2.3-2.7 longer than wide apically. Head otherwise as described for Eurytenes maya .</p><p>Mesosoma 1.35-1.45 × longer than high; 1.8-1.9 × longer than wide; 1.3-1.4 × higher than wide. Pronotum dorsally as in Eurytenes maya but with slightly enlarged pit in middle of crenulate groove consistently present; crenulae extending in shallow groove onto pronotum laterally, covering dorsal 0.2-0.6; groove margined anteriorly as in Eurytenes maya . Anterior declivity of mesoscutum completely vertical, densely covered with white, decumbent setae except for bare median band extending posteriorly to midpit; anterior-lateral corners of mesoscutum at upper edge of declivity elevated, rounded, densely setose, the setal pattern extending in broad bands all along notauli and laterally from anterior declivity to tegula; notauli complete, extending from anterior margin to scuto-scutellar sulcus, weakly converging posteriorly alongside but not into tear-drop shaped midpit; crenulate throughout, with sculpture extending laterally around margin to tegula, sculpture largely obscured by dense setae; lateral lobes of mesoscutum bare posterior-medially. Scuto-scutellar sulcus 4-5 × wider than midlength, lateral margins difficult to discern due to setal density; with low midridge and indistinct crenulae on either side; otherwise as in Eurytenes maya . Scutellum as in Eurytenes maya except with long marginal setae extending medially to cover most of posterior 0.5. Propodeum extensively rugulose, obscuring nearly all traces of carinae; pleural carina weak, often indistinct, very short median carina often present basally; transverse carina rarely weakly indicated across middle; propodeum uniformly setose anteriorly, with a few scattered setae posteriorly. Mesopleuron as in Eurytenes maya except subalar region densely setose and groove below subalar ridge varying from nearly smooth to weakly rugulose. Precoxal sulcus distinctly impressed, unsculptured. Metapleuron a little more extensively setose but otherwise as in Eurytenes maya .</p><p>Wings. Fore wing stigma parallel-sided, discrete posteriorly, 6.3-6.6 × longer than wide; r1 arising from basal 0.35; 1RS (excluding parastigma) 0.25-0.35 × length of 1M; RS+M weakly sinuate; 3RSa 1.05-1.30 × longer than 2RS; 2RS 2.6-3.1 × longer than r; 2RS and 3RSb straight; 3M variable, but often pigmented and sclerotized for most of its length; 2CUa 0.8-0.9 × length of 2cu-a, 2CUb arising slightly above middle of first subdiscal cell; position of m-cu, 1cu-a, and 1-1A, shape of second submarginal cell, and angle between r1 and 2RS as in Eurytenes maya . Hind wing as in Eurytenes maya .</p><p>Metasoma distinctly petiolate; head 3.75-4.10 × wider than apex of T1. T1 2.2-2.5 × longer than apical width; nearly parallel-sided, with apex 1.20-1.35 × wider than base; surface granular coriaceous throughout; completely without subapical depre ssions dorsally; dorsope, laterope, dorsal carinae, dorsal surface of T1 in profile, as in Eurytenes maya; lateral carina at least partially present but difficult to distinguish from surrounding sculpture. S1 extending about 0.25-0.30 × length of T1; T2 and following without sharp lateral margins; spiracle of second metasomal terga laterally displaced, only partially visible in dorsal view. Ovipositor shorter than mesosoma, base not visible in type series, but total length approximately 0.6-0.7 × length of mesosoma; ovipositor sheath 0.30-0.35 × length of mesosoma, with setal pattern as in Eurytenes maya .</p><p>Color: Mesosoma, T1, S1, ovipositor sheath, and most of head dark brown to black; antenna yellow basally, apical 0.3 brown; mandibles yellow; palps white; lower gena adjacent malar sulcus brown to brownish red; ventral 0.3-0.4 of clypeus yellow to brownish red. Tegula reddish brown with yellow margin. Legs yellow to pale yellow except most of hind coxa, apical 0.6-0.7 of hind femur, and fifth tarsomere of all legs brown; hind tibia varying from weakly infumate to light brown, basal 0.2 nearly always pale yellow. T2 mostly brownish red with median yellow blotch posteriorly; T3 yellow with anterior and lateral margins brownish red; T4-T6 yellow with anterior and lateral margins dark brown; visible parts of remaining terga yellow.</p><p>Male. As in female except antenna with 37 flagellomeres; eye in dorsal view 1.55-1.75 × longer than temple; width of ocellar field 1.05-1.10 × distance from ocellar field to eye. Color same except visible parts of apical terga dark brown.</p><p>Body length 2.8-3.5 mm; wing length 3.2-3.6 mm.</p><p>Diagnosis.</p><p>This species shares with Eurytenes maya and Eurytenes macrocerus the diagnostic features noted above for Stigmatopoea . Eurytenes norrbomi is most readily differentiated from Eurytenes maya on the basis of the more densely setose head and body (Figs 43, 47, 49), particularly the vertex, occiput, and mesoscutum, and the more extensively rugose propodeum. It also has a shorter ovipositor than Eurytenes maya (Fig. 45 vs. Fig. 42). The setal pattern on the mesoscutum also differentiates Eurytenes norrbomi from Eurytenes macrocerus . The latter has shorter setae that are more sparsely distributed laterally (Fig. 54).</p><p>Biology.</p><p>Four of the specimens from the type series were reared from puparia of Trypeta concolor (Wulp) ( Tephritidae) mining leaves of Barkleyanthus salicifolius (H.B.K.) H. Robins &amp; Brett ( Asteraceae). The remaining specimens were collected from flowers of this same plant together with Trypeta concolor and Trypeta reducta Han and Norrbom. See Han and Norrbom (2005) for details on the hosts and the collecting localities.</p><p>Etymology.</p><p>This species is named after the collector, Allen Norrbom, who has provided many valuable host records for tephritid parasitoids.</p><p>Remarks.</p><p>This species attacks leaf-mining tephritids, as does Eurytenes macrocerus, while Eurytenes maya attacks fruit-infesting tephritids. Despite the difference in host habitat, all three species share many morphological features, and readily fit the characterization of Eurytenes ( Stigmatopoea) as given above.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/5EB0C5BEFE3C8419163DBA19E77C9DC0	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	Wharton, Robert;Ward, Lauren;Miko, Istvan	Wharton, Robert, Ward, Lauren, Miko, Istvan (2012): New neotropical species of Opiinae (Hymenoptera, Braconidae) reared from fruit-infesting and leaf-mining Tephritidae (Diptera) with comments on the Diachasmimorpha mexicana species group and the genera Lorenzopius and Tubiformopius. ZooKeys 243: 27-82, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.243.3990, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.243.3990
2E19B0BD9B6892E44627B2E114B32425.text	2E19B0BD9B6892E44627B2E114B32425.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Lorenzopius van Achterberg & Salvo	<div><p>Lorenzopius van Achterberg &amp; Salvo</p><p>Lorenzopius van Achterberg &amp; Salvo, 1997: 190-192. Type species: Lorenzopius calycomyzae van Achterberg &amp; Salvo, 1997. Original designation.</p><p>Diagnosis.</p><p>Mandible distinctly narrowed from base to apex, without basal lobe ventrally. Labrum exposed. Clypeus relatively flat, not distinctly protruding in profile; ventral margin sharp, truncate to weakly concave. Malar sulcus a sharp, weakly curved groove. Occipital carina broadly absent dorsally, present laterally; widely separated from hypostomal carina ventrally. First flagellomere longer than second. Propleuron ventral-laterally without oblique carina; pronotum dorsally without pronope or otherwise enlarged pit, posterior margin transversely rugulose. Notauli deep, narrow, well developed anteriorly, usually extending onto disc posteriorly; midpit present. Precoxal sulcus distinctly impressed. Propodeum with large areola, posterior portion often obscured by rugose sculpture. Fore wing stigma long, narrow, parallel-sided, discrete posteriorly, r1 arising distinctly basad its midpoint but not from extreme base; m-cu entering base of second submarginal cell; second submarginal cell with 2RS shorter than 3RSb; 2CUb arising above middle of hind margin of first subdiscal cell. Dorsope and laterope of T1 absent; S1 at least 0.7 × length of T1 in females, slightly shorter in males, apparently fused to T1; T1 long and narrow throughout; T2 and following terga unsculptured. Ovipositor tapering evenly to a fine point, without dorsal nodes or ridges.</p><p>Remarks.</p><p>Lorenzopius and Tubiformopius are both characterized by having a tubular petiole with a long S1 which appears fused to T1 (Figs 6, 8). In the material available, S1 is longer in Lorenzopius than in Tubiformopius but there are more significant differences in the shape of the mandible, wing venation, and mesoscutal sculpture, as noted above in the section discussing genus group characters. Lorenzopius also shares many features with Eurytenes ( Stigmatopoea), but the petiole is less tubular in the latter, with a distinctly shorter S1 that is clearly separated by membrane from T1 (Fig. 5).</p><p>The shape of the stigma has been proposed as a useful feature for assessing relationships among opiines (Wharton 1988), and both Lorenzopius and Stigmatopoea have the stigma more or less parallel-sided or slightly expanded distally. Unfortunately, the stigma often curls as specimens dry after death, and this feature then not only becomes difficult to assess properly, but is often illustrated in the curled position giving a misleading impression of the true form. For example, the shape of the stigma is difficult to discern on the holotype of Lorenzopius calycomyzae (Fig. 62). However, the shape is more readily discernible in the holotype of Lorenzopius tubulatus (Fig. 68) and in several other specimens of Lorenzopius available for examination (from CNC and TAMU), and these clearly show a parallel-sided stigma.</p><p>We recognize two distinct species groups within Lorenzopius: the calycomyzae species group containing the orginially included species Lorenzopius calycomyzae, Lorenzopius tubulatus, and Lorenzopius sanlorenzensis and a second group typified by Lorenzopius euryteniformis (Fischer), new combination. All have same basic wing venation and petiole. The precoxal sulcus is distinctly sculptured in the calycomyzae species group (Fig. 69) but the distinctly impressed sulcus is unsculptured or nearly so in the euryteniformis species group (Fig. 66). The smallest specimens of the calycomyzae species group examined during this study are slightly larger than the largest available specimens of the euryteniformis species group and perhaps as a consequence they tend to have slightly longer notauli and more sculpture bordering the supra-marginal carina extending from the base of the notaulus to the tegula. Most of the species we have examined from the euryteniformis species group have reduced propodeal sculpture with the areola clearly visible (Figs 72, 73). In addition to holotypes of Lorenzopius tubulatus and Lorenzopius sanlorenzensis and the holotype and paratypes of Lorenzopius calycomyzae, we have seen two additional specimens from Argentina (TAMU), and one specimen each from Peru and Costa Rica (both CNC) representing the calycomyzae species group. RAW has examined 17 specimens representing the euryteniformis species group in addition to the holotype of Lorenzopius euryteniformis . The material examined includes specimens housed in TAMU and CNC collected in Bolivia, Colombia, Costa Rica, Dominican Republic, Guatemala, and Mexico (as far north as Monterrey in Nuevo Leon).</p><p>Lengthy descriptions (Fischer 1963, 1964, 1979, van Achterberg and Salvo 1997) and some redescriptions (Fischer 1977) are available for the described species of Lorenzopius and van Achterberg and Salvo (1997) provide a useful key to the species of the calycomyzae species group. Species pages for Lorenzopius calycomyzae (Figs 6, 55, 58, 60-62), Lorenzopius tubulatus (Figs 3, 68, 69) and Lorenzopius euryteniformis (Figs 66, 67, 70-73) can be found at http://peet.tamu.edu/projects/8/public/site/wharton_lab/home. The described species are readily differentiated. T1 is exceptionally long and narrow in Lorenzopius tubulatus (at least 4 × longer than apical width) and this species has darker legs than the others, with most of the hind femur dark brown. T1 is about 3 × longer than apical width in the other two species of the calycomyzae species group and the hind femora are yellow. The presence of a pair of pits on T1 is thus far a unique feature of Lorenzopius calycomyzae within Lorenzopius and this species is also characterized by orange markings dorsally in the middle of the mesosoma. The metasoma is darker in Lorenzopius sanlorenzensis, with T2+3 dark brown in this species and largely yellow in the other two members of the calycomyzae species group. Lorenzopius euryteniformis lacks sculpture within the depression of the precoxal sulcus.</p><p>The type species of Lorenzopius was described from specimens reared from Calycomyza mikaniae Spencer, a leafminer in the family Agromyzidae . RAW has also seen specimens from Colombia of a species nearly identical to Lorenzopius euryteniformis that was also reared from an agromyzid leafminer. No other host records are known for this genus but given the general similarity of the habitus and the length and shape of the ovipositor, we predict that other species will also prove to be agromyzid leafminer parasitoids.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/2E19B0BD9B6892E44627B2E114B32425	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	Wharton, Robert;Ward, Lauren;Miko, Istvan	Wharton, Robert, Ward, Lauren, Miko, Istvan (2012): New neotropical species of Opiinae (Hymenoptera, Braconidae) reared from fruit-infesting and leaf-mining Tephritidae (Diptera) with comments on the Diachasmimorpha mexicana species group and the genera Lorenzopius and Tubiformopius. ZooKeys 243: 27-82, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.243.3990, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.243.3990
AC7C2B3CE2D3DC6C38CDC4B7AB95F073.text	AC7C2B3CE2D3DC6C38CDC4B7AB95F073.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Lorenzopius euryteniformis Fischer 1963	<div><p>Lorenzopius euryteniformis Fischer, 1963 comb. n. Figs 66, 6770-73</p><p>Opius euryteniformis Fischer, 1963: 288-290. Holotype male NHMW (examined).</p><p>Opius (Nosopoea) euryteniformis: Fischer 1977: 195, 206-208.</p><p>Type locality.</p><p>Costa Rica, Mount Irazu, 2200-2300 m.</p><p>Type material.</p><p>Holotype. Male (NHMW), first label, first line: Costa Rica, Irazu, second line: 2200-2300 m, 21-28. third line: V.'30. Reimoser Second label, first line: Opius second line: euryteniformis third line: sp. n. fourth line: det. Fischer Third label: Holotype [purple], Fourth label: NHMW</p><p>Diagnosis .</p><p>Holotype male. Head in dorsal view with temples neither receding nor expanded beyond eyes; in lateral view, eye about 1.6 × longer than temple. Labrum partly exposed between clypeus and mandibles (Fig. 70); clypeus about twice as wide as tall, flat or nearly so, not distinctly protruding in profile, ventral margin truncate to very weakly concave. Mandible without basal lobe. Malar space well developed, longer than basal width of mandible; malar sulcus deeply impressed. Antenna with 27 flagellomeres. Pronotum dorsally not visible in holotype. Disc of mesoscutum nearly bare, with scattered setae along margin of anterior declivity and a single pair of setae arising about midlength of notauli; notaulus extending posteriorly along anterior 0.3 of disc, less than half distance to small, deep, round midpit; supra-marginal carina distinct anteriorly, not extending to level of tegula. Scuto-scutellar sulcus relatively narrow (Fig. 71), densely crenulate throughout. Precoxal sulcus distinctly impressed, long, narrow, completely unsculptured. Propodeum largely smooth with broad, pentagonal areola on posterior 0.65, anterior 0.35 with median carina. Fore wing stigma long, narrow, with some postmortem curling, but at least 4.5 × longer than width at r1; r1 arising from basal 0.3; second submarginal cell long, weakly converging distally, 3RSa 1.7 × longer than 2RS; 1RS 0.2 × length of 1M; m-cu postfurcal; 2CUb arising a little above middle of hind margin of first subdiscal cell, 2cu-a present, tubular. T1 long, narrow, apparently fused ventrally with S1 for most of its length, 4x longer than apical width, apex as wide as base; surface completely striate. T2 and following smooth, polished.</p><p>Biology .</p><p>Unknown.</p><p>Remarks.</p><p>Placement of this species in Lorenzopius is based on the wing venation and long S1, which is 0.65 × length of T1 in the male holotype; S1 appears fused to T1. See additional comments on species groups under the remarks section for the genus.</p><p>The holotype bears a single data label containing the information given above. However, the label data listed in the original description are as follows: "Costa Rica, La Caja bei San José, H. Schmidt". As this species was described from a single male specimen, and the specimen from Irazu labeled as the holotype matches the original description, it is likely that the locality data in the original publication is an inadvertent error. The new species described immediately before euryteniformis in the same publication is from the La Caja locality. The type locality should therefore be Irazu (a mountain in Costa Rica), somewhere in the 2200-2300 m range in elevation.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/AC7C2B3CE2D3DC6C38CDC4B7AB95F073	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	Wharton, Robert;Ward, Lauren;Miko, Istvan	Wharton, Robert, Ward, Lauren, Miko, Istvan (2012): New neotropical species of Opiinae (Hymenoptera, Braconidae) reared from fruit-infesting and leaf-mining Tephritidae (Diptera) with comments on the Diachasmimorpha mexicana species group and the genera Lorenzopius and Tubiformopius. ZooKeys 243: 27-82, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.243.3990, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.243.3990
9A2124DE2F8FF75990D4FA8C7F2F34D3.text	9A2124DE2F8FF75990D4FA8C7F2F34D3.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Opius Wesmael	<div><p>Opius Wesmael</p><p>Opius Wesmael, 1835: 115. Type species: Opius pallipes Wesmael, 1835. Subsequent designation (Wharton 1987b, ICZN 1988).</p><p>Remarks.</p><p>Van Achterberg and Salvo (1997) restricted the name Opius to species with a basal lobe on the mandible, referring to a classification in press that has yet to be published. A major concern in this regard is that the type species of Biosteres Foerster, another large genus within the Opiinae, also has a basal mandibular lobe. Until a more complete classification is offered, we prefer to treat Opius in a much broader sense as a repository for the bulk of the Opiinae whose relationships remain uncertain, largely following the approach of Fischer (1972) and Wharton (1997).</p><p>Diagnoses are presented below for two species that represent a fairly diverse group of neotropical Opiinae that differ from both Lorenzopius and Tubiformopius in several features. These species all have a narrow, parallel-sided T1 and distinctly visible S1, though S1 is never as long as in Lorenzopius, and seldom as long as in Tubiformopius . Ultimately, the relationships of genus group taxa such as Eurytenes s.l., Lorenzopius, and Tubiformopius will have to be carefully considered in order to place the many neotropical species with a distinct S1.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/9A2124DE2F8FF75990D4FA8C7F2F34D3	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	Wharton, Robert;Ward, Lauren;Miko, Istvan	Wharton, Robert, Ward, Lauren, Miko, Istvan (2012): New neotropical species of Opiinae (Hymenoptera, Braconidae) reared from fruit-infesting and leaf-mining Tephritidae (Diptera) with comments on the Diachasmimorpha mexicana species group and the genera Lorenzopius and Tubiformopius. ZooKeys 243: 27-82, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.243.3990, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.243.3990
E328B6D8408E537811B66741ECE9FB53.text	E328B6D8408E537811B66741ECE9FB53.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Opius incoligma Fischer	<div><p>Opius incoligma Fischer Figs 74-7781</p><p>Opius (Nosopaeopius) incoligma Fischer, 1979: 274-276. Holotype female AEIC (examined).</p><p>Opius (Nosopaeopius) incoligma: Yu et al. 2005, 2012 (electronic catalogs).</p><p>Type locality.</p><p>Colombia, Magdalena, 41 km south of Sta. Marta, 7000 ft.</p><p>Type material.</p><p>Holotype. Female (AEIC), first label, first line: 41Km S.St. Marta second line: Magd., Colombia third line: V.6.1973 7000 ft. fourth line: Howden&amp;Campbell second label [red]: Holotype third label, first line: [female symbol] Opius second line: incoligma third line: Holotype fourth line: det Fischer sp. n.</p><p>Diagnosis.</p><p>Holotype female. Labrum completely concealed by mandibles; clypeus nearly as tall as wide, flat, not protruding, ventral margin convex. Mandible without basal lobe, distinctly narrowing apically to narrow, bifid tooth. Malar space distinct, malar sulcus deep, distinct. Antenna with 33 flagellomeres. Pronotum dorsally without pronope or distinct pit, mostly unsculptured, crenulate posterior margin broadly interrupted medially. Disc of mesoscutum nearly bare, with a few setae along traces of notauli; midpit small, distinct, narrowly elongate; notauli weak, present as very short, weakly sculptured grooves directed posterior-medially from and along edge of anterior declivity, not extending posteriorly onto disc of mesoscutum; distinct supra-marginal carina extending laterally from base of notaulus to tegula. Scuto-scutellar sulcus narrow (about 6-7 × wider than long but difficult to measure), crenulate throughout. Precoxal sulcus distinct, moderately deep, long, completely unsculptured, somewhat vertically oriented as in Lorenzopius . Propodeum granular rugose, with very short median carina anteriorly, densely setose throughout. Fore wing stigma parallel-sided to weakly expanded apically; r1 longer than stigma width; second submarginal cell long, weakly narrowing distally; m-cu weakly postfurcal; 2CUb arising distinctly above middle of first subdiscal cell, 2CUa nearly absent. Hind coxa smooth; hind femur slender, weakly bilobed. T1 weakly strigose, irregularly sculptured with smooth patches; dorsal carina short but distinct; lateral carina very well developed, extending from junction with dorsal carina to apex, passing ventrad spiracle; dorsope shallow, indistinct, laterope shallow, weakly indicated by a long, narrow groove; T1 spiracle situated slightly posteriad midlength of T1; T1 narrow, parallel-sided, 2.6 × longer than apical width; no visible membrane between S1 and T1, though lateral margin between the two clearly visible; S1 0.35 × length of T1.</p><p>Remarks.</p><p>The venation (Fig. 75) and features of the first metasomal segment (Figs 77, 81) suggest a relationship to Eurytenes ( Stigmatopoea), but this species di ffers most remarkably by the completely concealed labrum (Fig. 74). Also, unlike the other species of Eurytenes, Lorenzopius, and Tubiformopius treated here, the individual flagellomeres are long throughout in Opius incoligma but notably decreasing in length in the other species.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/E328B6D8408E537811B66741ECE9FB53	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	Wharton, Robert;Ward, Lauren;Miko, Istvan	Wharton, Robert, Ward, Lauren, Miko, Istvan (2012): New neotropical species of Opiinae (Hymenoptera, Braconidae) reared from fruit-infesting and leaf-mining Tephritidae (Diptera) with comments on the Diachasmimorpha mexicana species group and the genera Lorenzopius and Tubiformopius. ZooKeys 243: 27-82, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.243.3990, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.243.3990
84BF0FBF57619779FD1E1A4DDDCF1D97.text	84BF0FBF57619779FD1E1A4DDDCF1D97.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Opius rugicoxis Fischer	<div><p>Opius rugicoxis Fischer Figs 78-8082, 83</p><p>Opius rugicoxis Fischer, 1969: 251-254. Holotype female in AEIC (examined).</p><p>Opius (Stomosema) rugicoxis: Fischer 1977: 223, 248-249 (key, redescription); Yu et al. 2005, 2012 (electronic catalogs).</p><p>Type locality.</p><p>Ecuador, Troya, 2900 m.</p><p>Type material.</p><p>Holotype. Female (AEIC), first label, first line: Troya, Ecuador second line: VI. 10-13. 65 2900m. third line: Luis Pena second label [purple]: Holotype third label, first line: Opius [female symbol] second line: rugicoxis third line: det Fischer sp. n. fourth label, first line: Type no. second line: 659</p><p>Diagnosis.</p><p>Holotype female. Labrum completely concealed by mandibles (Fig. 78); clypeus tall, flat, not protruding, ventral margin truncate. Mandible with broad, discrete basal lobe, apical half narrow, nearly parallel-sided. Malar space distinct; malar sulcus weak but present. Antenna with 25 flagellomeres. Pronotum not visible dorsally. Disc of mesoscutum (Figs 79, 80) bare, midpit small, round; notauli weak, present as very short, weakly sculptured grooves directed posterior-medially from and along edge of anterior declivity, not extending posteriorly onto disc of mesoscutum; weak supra-marginal carina extending laterally from base of notaulus nearly to tegula. Scuto-scutellar sulcus narrow (5-6 × wider than long), crenulate throughout. Precoxal sulcus absent, thus unsculptured (Fig. 83). Propodeum (Fig. 80) completely granular rugose, without carinae, very sparsely setose. Fore wing (Fig. 82) with stigma folded, shape not readily discernible; r1 shorter than stigma width; second submarginal cell long, distinctly narrowing distally; m-cu distinctly postfurcal; 2CUb arising below middle of first subdiscal cell. Hind coxa granular-rugose, hence the species name; hind femur slender, distinctly bilobed. T1 (Figs 79, 80) completely striate, the striae curving medially from basal-lateral area adjacent dorsal tendon attachment, obscuring dorsal and lateral carinae; dorsope absent, laterope not apparent; T1 spiracle indistinct, situated posteriad midlength of T1; T1 nearly parallel-sided, 2.25 × longer than apical width; S1 appears fused to T1; S1 0.3 × length of T1.</p><p>Remarks.</p><p>Fischer (1977) placed this species in his subgenus Opius ( Stomosema), which he earlier (Fischer 1972) characterized on the basis of three features: a concealed labrum, absence of a mesoscutal midpit, and presence of sculpture in the precoxal sulcus. Unfortunately, the holotype has a small, shallow, but distinct mid pit (Figs 79, 80) and lacks a precoxal sulcus (Fig. 83). This species would therefore key to Opius ( Nosopaeopius) in Fischer (1972) and Fischer (1999). Regardless of subgeneric assignment, this species falls within Opius in the classifications of Fischer (1977, 1999), van Achterberg and Salvo (1997), and Wharton (1997). The shape and sculpture of the first metasomal segment and the relatively long S1 suggest a relationship to Tubiformopius, but I exlude this species from Tubiformopius for the present time primarily on the basis of wing venation and from Lorenzopius on the basis of the form of the mandible.</p><p>The hind coxa is smooth to weakly punctate in other species treated here.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/84BF0FBF57619779FD1E1A4DDDCF1D97	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	Wharton, Robert;Ward, Lauren;Miko, Istvan	Wharton, Robert, Ward, Lauren, Miko, Istvan (2012): New neotropical species of Opiinae (Hymenoptera, Braconidae) reared from fruit-infesting and leaf-mining Tephritidae (Diptera) with comments on the Diachasmimorpha mexicana species group and the genera Lorenzopius and Tubiformopius. ZooKeys 243: 27-82, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.243.3990, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.243.3990
80D18B1E485F11CC2B1D7B1A08C27B18.text	80D18B1E485F11CC2B1D7B1A08C27B18.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Tubiformopius Fischer	<div><p>Tubiformopius Fischer stat. rev.</p><p>Tubiformopius Fischer, 1998: 26. Type species: Opius tubigaster Fischer, 1968. Original designation.</p><p>Diagnosis.</p><p>Mandible very weakly narrowing, nearly parallel-sided over distal 0.5, more abruptly widening basally, with weak to distinct basal lobe. Labrum narrowly exposed to concealed. Clypeus relatively weakly but distinctly protruding in profile; ventral margin truncate. Malar sulcus absent or represented only by a short, weak indentation adjacent eye; malar space distinct, at least as long as basal width of mandible. Occipital carina broadly absent dorsally, present laterally, distinctly separate from hypostomal carina ventrally. First flagellomere much longer than second. Propleuron ventral-laterally without oblique carina. Notauli short, shallow, narrow, confined to anterior declivity, not extending onto disc posteriorly; distinct midpit absent. Precoxal sulcus broad, very weakly impressed, unsculptured. Propodeum granular rugose, without areola. Fore wing stigma long, narrow, curled in holotypes of both species treated below, but not as discrete distally as in Lorenzopius and Stigmatopoea; r1 arising distinctly basad midpoint of stigma but not from extreme base; m-cu entering first submarginal cell, widely separated from second submarginal cell; second submarginal cell with 2RS much shorter than 3RSb; 2CUb arising near middle of hind margin of first subdiscal cell, the posterior-distal corner of the latter broadly open. Dorsope and laterope of T1 absent; S1 about 0.5-0.6 × length of T1, apparently fused to T1; T1 long and narrow throughout; T2 and following terga unsculptured. Ovipositor not tapering evenly to a fine point.</p><p>Remarks. The diagnosis above is based on the holotypes of Tubiformopius tubigaster (Fischer) and Tubiformopius tubibasis (Fischer), new combination.</p><p>Fischer’s (1998) original description of Tubiformopius was very brief since it was only included in a key to the eight genera he treated in the Opius genus group. Although two species are indicated in the relevant couplet, only one, designated as the type species, is specifically named. As noted above under the general discussion of genus-group characters, Fischer (1999), without discussion, treated Tubiformopius as a synonym of Lorenzopius . Aside from the original descriptions and Fischer’s (1999) subsequent synonymy, neither Tubiformopius nor Lorenzopius has been further treated until now. We retain Tubiformopius as a valid genus distinct from Lorenzopius primarily on the basis of strong differences in the shape of the mandible (Fig. 85), fore wing venation (Figs 63, 65), and the notauli (Figs 86, 87). Fischer (1978) originally placed Tubiformopius tubibasis in Opius s.s. Differences in venation and the first metasomal segment (especially the long and apparently fused S1) separate Tubiformopius from Opius s.s. Fischer (1977) placed Opius tubigaster in the subgenus Allophlebus Fischer, 1972 but the type species of Allophlebus has T1 distinctly broadening apically with a very short, clearly separated S1, a distinct laterope, and the fore wing m-cu is postfurcal.</p><p>There is as yet no host data for either of the species currently included in Tubiformopius .</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/80D18B1E485F11CC2B1D7B1A08C27B18	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	Wharton, Robert;Ward, Lauren;Miko, Istvan	Wharton, Robert, Ward, Lauren, Miko, Istvan (2012): New neotropical species of Opiinae (Hymenoptera, Braconidae) reared from fruit-infesting and leaf-mining Tephritidae (Diptera) with comments on the Diachasmimorpha mexicana species group and the genera Lorenzopius and Tubiformopius. ZooKeys 243: 27-82, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.243.3990, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.243.3990
AF1FE3078D25862A401F0B5AEE1FA57C.text	AF1FE3078D25862A401F0B5AEE1FA57C.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Tubiformopius tubigaster Fischer	<div><p>Tubiformopius tubigaster Fischer stat. rev. Figs 863, 6585-87</p><p>Opius tubigaster Fischer, 1968: 463-464, 483-485. Holotype male AEIC.</p><p>Opius (Allophlebus) tubigaster: Fischer 1977: 223, 248-249 (key, redescription).</p><p>Tubiformopius tubigaster: Fischer 1998: 26.</p><p>Lorenzopius tubigaster: Fischer 1999: 282; Yu et al. 2005, 2012 (electronic catalogs).</p><p>Type locality.</p><p>Ecuador, Cerro Tinajillas, 3200 m.</p><p>Type material.</p><p>Holotype. Male (AEIC), first label, first line: Cerro Tinajillas second line: 3200m Ecuador third line: III. 18-21. 65 fourth line: Luis Peña second label [purple]: Holotype third label, first line: Opius [male symbol] second line: tubigaster third line: det Fischer sp. n. fourth label: first line: Type no. second line: 589</p><p>Diagnosis.</p><p>Holotype male. Labrum partly concealed by mandibles (Fig. 85); clypeus nearly twice as wide as tall, protruding in profile, ventral margin truncate to very weakly concave. Mandible with basal lobe, apically nearly parallel-sided. Malar space distinct, malar sulcus not evident except as a small impression adjacent eye. Antenna with 26 flagellomeres. Pronotum dorsally not readily visible in holotype. Disc of mesoscutum nearly bare, with a sparse row of setae between notauli and transscutal articulation; midpit completely absent; notauli weak, present as very short, unsculptured grooves on anterior declivity, not extending posteriorly onto disc of mesoscutum; supra-marginal carina between base of notaulus and tegula absent. Scuto-scutellar sulcus relatively narrow (Figs 86, 87), crenulate throughout. Precoxal sulcus indistinct, short, broad, very shallow, completely unsculptured. Propodeum granular rugose, without median carina anteriorly, moderately setose. Fore wing stigma long, curled in holotype, but appears to be very gradually tapered distally; r1 equal to or slightly longer than stigma width; second submarginal cell long, distinctly narrowing distally; m-cu widely antefurcal (Fig. 63, 65); 2CUb arising about middle of hind margin of first subdiscal cell, 2cu-a absent, first subdiscal cell broadly open at posterior-distal corner. Hind coxa smooth; hind femur very long, slender, weakly bilobed. T1 (Figs 63, 65, 86, 87) completely striate, the striae curving medially from basal-lateral area adjacent dorsal tendon attachment, completely obscuring dorsal and lateral carinae; dorsope and laterope absent; T1 spiracle indistinct, situated posteriad midlength of T1; T1 nearly parallel-sided, 2.1 × longer than apical width; S1 appears fused to T1; S1 0.5 × length of T1.</p><p>Remarks . This species is very similar to Tubiformopius tubibasis, but differs in having a little more of the labrum exposed between the apex of the clypeus and the tightly closed mandibles. The hind coxae are yellow in Tubiformopius tubigaster and distinctly infumate in Tubiformopius tubibasis . Both species were described from Ecuador.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/AF1FE3078D25862A401F0B5AEE1FA57C	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	Wharton, Robert;Ward, Lauren;Miko, Istvan	Wharton, Robert, Ward, Lauren, Miko, Istvan (2012): New neotropical species of Opiinae (Hymenoptera, Braconidae) reared from fruit-infesting and leaf-mining Tephritidae (Diptera) with comments on the Diachasmimorpha mexicana species group and the genera Lorenzopius and Tubiformopius. ZooKeys 243: 27-82, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.243.3990, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.243.3990
730326A7E6C5F4B50EA0EE6E9548865A.text	730326A7E6C5F4B50EA0EE6E9548865A.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Tubiformopius tubibasis Fischer	<div><p>Tubiformopius tubibasis Fischer comb. n. Fig. 84</p><p>Opius (Opius) tubibasis Fischer, 1978: 163-165. Holotype female in AEIC.</p><p>Opius (Opius) tubibasis: Yu et al. 2005, 2012 (electronic catalogs).</p><p>Type locality.</p><p>Ecuador, Cañar, Naupán, 3200 m.</p><p>Type material.</p><p>Holotype. Female (AEIC), first label, first line: W. Naupán(Cañar) second line: 3200m. Ecuador third line: XII. 10. 70 fourth line: Luis Peña second label [red]: Holotype third label, first line: [female symbol] Opius second line: tubibasis third line: Holotype sp. n. fourth line: det. Fischer fourth label [yellow] Type 1195</p><p>Diagnosis.</p><p>Holotype female. Labrum completely concealed by mandibles; clypeus tall, narrow, weakly protruding in profile, ventral margin truncate. Mandible with weak basal lobe, apically nearly parallel-sided. Malar space distinct, malar sulcus not evident except as a small impression adjacent eye. Antenna with 24 flagellomeres. Pronotum dorsally not readily visible in holotype. Disc of mesoscutum nearly bare, with a very sparse row of setae between notauli and transscutal articulation; midpit absent or nearly so, with faint indication of a depression when viewed in certain angles; notauli weak, present as short, weakly sculptured grooves on anterior declivity, not extending posteriorly onto disc of mesoscutum; supra-marginal carina between base of notaulus and tegula absent. Scuto-scutellar sulcus relatively narrow as in Opius tubigaster, crenulate throughout. Precoxal sulcus barely visible as a short, broad, very shallow, completely unsculptured indentation. Propodeum granular rugose, without median carina anteriorly, moderately setose. Fore wing with stigma long, curled in holotype, but very gradually tapered distally; r1 equal to or slightly longer than stigma width; second submarginal cell long, distinctly narrowing distally; m-cu widely antefurcal; 2CUb arising slightly below middle of hind margin of first subdiscal cell, 2cu-a absent, first subdiscal cell broadly open at posterior-distal corner. Hind coxa smooth; hind femur very long, slender, weakly bilobed. T1 completely striate, the striae curving medially from basal-lateral area adjacent dorsal tendon attachment, completely obscuring dorsal and lateral carinae; dorsope and laterope absent; T1 spiracle indistinct, situated at 0.65 length of T1; T1 parallel-sided, 2.5 × longer than apical width; S1 appears fused to T1; S1 0.6 × length of T1.</p><p>Remarks.</p><p>Van Achterberg and Salvo (1997) suggested the possibility that tubibasis might belong in Lorenzopius despite the absence of a midpit on the mesoscutum. The subsequently described Tubiformopius is a better fit because tubibasis is nearly identical to the type species of Tubiformopius, especially with respect to critical features of mesosomal sculpture and fore wing venation in addition to the shape of the mandible.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/730326A7E6C5F4B50EA0EE6E9548865A	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	Wharton, Robert;Ward, Lauren;Miko, Istvan	Wharton, Robert, Ward, Lauren, Miko, Istvan (2012): New neotropical species of Opiinae (Hymenoptera, Braconidae) reared from fruit-infesting and leaf-mining Tephritidae (Diptera) with comments on the Diachasmimorpha mexicana species group and the genera Lorenzopius and Tubiformopius. ZooKeys 243: 27-82, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.243.3990, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.243.3990
