Peristenus braunae Goulet & Mason 2006, n. sp.

Peristenus braunae n. sp. (Fig. 15, Table 9) Type material. Type locality: Canada, Alberta, north of Twin Lakes. Holotype, female (CNCI), labelled: [White] " Canada: AB, N of Twin Lakes, 27.VI. 2003, 639m 57 o 30.823'N 117 o 28.825'W Goulet, Carcamo & Otani"; [Red] " HOL...

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Main Authors: Goulet, Henri, Mason, Peter G.
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: Zenodo 2006
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Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5073162
https://zenodo.org/record/5073162
id ftdatacite:10.5281/zenodo.5073162
record_format openpolar
institution Open Polar
collection DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology)
op_collection_id ftdatacite
language unknown
topic Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Arthropoda
Insecta
Hymenoptera
Braconidae
Peristenus
Peristenus braunae
spellingShingle Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Arthropoda
Insecta
Hymenoptera
Braconidae
Peristenus
Peristenus braunae
Goulet, Henri
Mason, Peter G.
Peristenus braunae Goulet & Mason 2006, n. sp.
topic_facet Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Arthropoda
Insecta
Hymenoptera
Braconidae
Peristenus
Peristenus braunae
description Peristenus braunae n. sp. (Fig. 15, Table 9) Type material. Type locality: Canada, Alberta, north of Twin Lakes. Holotype, female (CNCI), labelled: [White] " Canada: AB, N of Twin Lakes, 27.VI. 2003, 639m 57 o 30.823'N 117 o 28.825'W Goulet, Carcamo & Otani"; [Red] " HOLOTYPE Peristenus braunae CNC No. 23474 " Condition of holotype: excellent. Allotype, male, with same data as holotype. Except for specimens from low elevation in coastal British Columbia, the remaining specimens, mentioned under "Material examined and range", are paratypes. Origin of species name. This species is named in honour of Lorraine Braun who reared this species from Lygus and helped to clarify a difficult part of the P. pallipes complex. Diagnosis. Clypeus black, punctures dense on head (between lateral ocellus and inner eye margin) and less dense on frons (surface smoother with shiny spaces between punctures), occurring in boreal region mainly after mid June. Description. FEMALE. Colour. Head and mesosoma black, clypeus usually black, metasoma usually black, rarely brown. Legs straw coloured or light reddish brown (metacoxa commonly brown or black (as in Fig. 5), uncommonly straw coloured). Metatibia light reddish brown and apical half often gradually becoming reddish brown, thus concolorous or almost so (as in Fig. 11). Metatarsomeres 1–5 as dark as apex of metatibia; palpi, tegula and mandible (except apex), straw coloured. Scape to flagellomere 2 straw coloured, then after flagellomere 3–4 brown to dark brown. Stigma uniformly dark brown or with a paler spot in basal half. Structure. Flagellum with 19–22 flagellomeres (respectively 14%, 51%, 31% and 4% of 106 specimens) and flagellomeres enlarged in apical 0.5 with at most 2 preapical flagellomeres quadrate or subquadrate. Genal length behind eye 1.00–1.31 times as long as length of eye. Height of eye 1.06–1.17 times as long as minimum distance between inner eye margins (as in Fig. 17). Maximum width of head behind eyes subequal (0.95–0.99) to maximum head width at eye level. Occipital carina developed in dorsal third (as in Fig. 33). Metasomal tergum 1 with lateral edges clearly convergent (posterior margin 1.8–2.4 times as wide as narrowest width near base) and elongate (medial length of tergum 1.63–2.00 times as long as maximum width at posterior end) (as in Fig. 68). Radial cell length 0.83–1.00 as long as stigma width (as in Figs. 58–63). Forewing with vein r usually developed and short (as in Figs. 61, 62) and basal cell (except extreme base) pubescent (as in Fig. 54). Sculpture. Punctures on vertex 5–10 µm in diameter, and on frons and mesoscutum about 10–15 µm in diameter (a little larger than diameter of ommatidia). Punctures 20–25 µm apart on vertex and 5–15 µm apart on frons (thus, in most specimens with shiny surface between punctures) and between lateral ocellus and inner eye margin (as in Fig. 26), 5–10 µm apart near antennal socket, 20–25 µm apart on mesoscutum. Punctures in front of median ocellus in most specimens coarsely and densely punctate. Punctures on mesopleuron dense and in most specimens coarsely punctate on anteroventral surface of mesepisternum in lateral view. Clypeus generally impunctate or mostly so over surface, or occasionally densely punctate. Metasomal tergum 1 with about 10–12 longitudinal ridges, these often anastomosing on disc and forming a puncture­like sculpture. MALE. Colour. Generally as in female, but metacoxa usually brown, sometimes brown on outer surface and paler on inner and ventral or, rarely completely straw coloured. Structure. Flagellum with 21–24 flagellomeres (respectively 29%, 54%, 14% and 3% of 56 specimens) and flagellomeres narrow in apical half. Height of eye 0.91–1.00 times as long as minimum distance between inner eye margins. Otherwise structure and sculpture as in female. Geographical variation. There are a few differences between specimens from western and eastern Canada. In the West, the mesocoxae are often reddish brown to black and the clypeus is almost always smooth or a little punctate. In the East, the mesocoxae are straw coloured to light reddish brown and the clypeus is normally punctate. In specimens from coastal British Columbia, the flagellomere frequency distribution is higher, with most specimens from coastal regions having 21 flagellomeres in females, 22 or 23 in males. The coastal British Columbia sample is small (19 female and 12 male flagella counted) so it is unclear if the population is a geographical variant of P. braunae or another cryptic species. Because of this character variation, specimens from coastal regions of the Pacific were excluded from the paratype series. Taxonomic notes. Among the species of the P. pallipes complex associated with Lygus , P. braunae is nearest P. dayi . Adults of the two species differ on flagellomere frequency, mesocoxa and metacoxa colour in females, clypeus and mesepisternum puncture development, and flight period. The nearest populations of P. braunae to those of P. dayi are 300 km apart. The populations of P. braunae nearest to those of P. dayi are not more similar than distant populations of both species. There is probably no gene flow. Thus, the boreal population of P. braunae is specifically distinct from the eastern temperate P. dayi . A summary of measurement differences between P. braunae and P. dayi is given in Table 9. Host and biological notes. Adults of this species have been reared mainly from Adelphocoris lineolatus and rarely from Lygus lineolaris . Adults occur from early June to mid August with a peak of abundance from late June to early July. This is a univoltine species on nymphs of the first generation of Lygus . Material examined and range. 167 (62♂, 105♀) adults were studied. Of these, 7 were reared from Miridae and 156 were field collected. The species is known from boreal regions of North America between the Northwest Territories and Alaska to southwestern British Columbia, south to montane regions of California and Utah and coastal regions of New Brunswick and Nova Scotia. CANADA. NT: Aklavik (1♀); Norman Wells (1♀); Wrigley (1♀); NS: Cape Breton Highlands Nat. Park, Meat Cove (1♀); Sable Island (1♂); Yarmouth (1♂, 1♀). NB: Kouchibouguac Nat. Park (5♂, 3♀). QC: vic. Frelighsburg, 45º05'N 72º50'W (1♂); vic. La Corne, 48º24'19''N 78º00'12''W (1♂, 13♀); La Vérendrye Prov. Park, 47º36'57''N 77º33' 42''W (15♂, 8♀); Matagami, 49º45'08''N 77º37'14''W (5♂, 5♀). MB: Brandon (1♀). SK: E lbow (2♀); vic. Saskatoon, 52º09.1'N 106º34.9'W (1♂). AB: Banff (1♂); Beaverlodge, Mountain Trail (2♂, 3♀); Blairmore (1♀); Burmis (1♂, 1♀); Dunvagan (1♂, 1♀); Gilchrist Beach, Aden (1♀); N of Grande Cache, between 54º09'N 118º45'W and 54º34'N 118º42'W (1♂, 3♀); 1 km E Jasper Nat. Park, 53º14.138'N 117º49.418'W (1♂); vic. La Crete, 58º01.257'N 116º19.621'W (1♂); Lethbridge (3♂, 18♀); Lethbridge, 49º42.279'N 112º44.951'W (1♀); Long view, 50º24.335'N 114º31.028'W (2♀); Milk River, 49º08'N 110º48'W (1♀); Oyen (1♀); Saskatoon Mtn., 55º13.204'N 119º17.042'W (3♂, 4♀); Shaunessey (1♂); Tompcam's Landing, 57º59.034'N 117º06.291'W (1♀); vic. Twin Lake, 57º30.823'N 117º28.825'W (2♂, 4♀); Waterton Lakes Nat. Park, Cameron Lake (1♀); Waterton Lakes Nat. Park, 1300 m (4♀). BC: 15 km N Boston Bar, 49º58'39''N 121º29'49''W (4♂, 4♀); 20–25 km E Chilliwack Lake Rd. (1♀); Cowichan Lk. (1♀); Crownest (1♂, 1♀); Diamond Head trail near Squamish (1♀); Fort St. John (1♂); Harrison Bay (1♀); vic. Langley (4♀); vic. Lytton, 50º31'20''N 121º43'57''W (1♀); vic. Lytton, 50º14'38''N 121º34'35''W (1♀); Madden Lake, Oliver (2♀); Saltspring Is. Tuam Mtn. (1♂); Summit Lake, mi 392 Alaska Hwy. (1♀). USA. AK: Fairbanks (1♀). CA: Nevada Co., Sagehen Cr., 13 km W Truckee (1♂). CO: Doolittle Ranch (1♂, 2♀); Estes Park (3♂); 3 km S Meeker (2♂, 2♀). UT: Summit Co., Cobble Cr. (1♀). : Published as part of Goulet, Henri & Mason, Peter G., 2006, Review of the Nearctic species of Leiophron and Peristenus (Hymenoptera Braconidae: Euphorinae) parasitizing Lygus (Hemiptera: Miridae: Mirini:), pp. 1-118 in Zootaxa 1323 (1) on pages 41-43, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.1323.1.1, http://zenodo.org/record/5071178
format Text
author Goulet, Henri
Mason, Peter G.
author_facet Goulet, Henri
Mason, Peter G.
author_sort Goulet, Henri
title Peristenus braunae Goulet & Mason 2006, n. sp.
title_short Peristenus braunae Goulet & Mason 2006, n. sp.
title_full Peristenus braunae Goulet & Mason 2006, n. sp.
title_fullStr Peristenus braunae Goulet & Mason 2006, n. sp.
title_full_unstemmed Peristenus braunae Goulet & Mason 2006, n. sp.
title_sort peristenus braunae goulet & mason 2006, n. sp.
publisher Zenodo
publishDate 2006
url https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5073162
https://zenodo.org/record/5073162
long_lat ENVELOPE(-125.003,-125.003,54.000,54.000)
ENVELOPE(-135.011,-135.011,68.219,68.219)
ENVELOPE(-126.833,-126.833,65.282,65.282)
ENVELOPE(-123.354,-123.354,63.194,63.194)
ENVELOPE(-120.837,-120.837,56.244,56.244)
ENVELOPE(76.358,76.358,-69.403,-69.403)
ENVELOPE(76.358,76.358,-69.403,-69.403)
ENVELOPE(73.600,73.600,-53.033,-53.033)
ENVELOPE(-108.552,-108.552,59.467,59.467)
geographic Northwest Territories
Fairbanks
Canada
Pacific
British Columbia
Aklavik
Norman Wells
Wrigley
Fort St. John
Cameron Lake
Cameron, Lake
Gilchrist Beach
Beaverlodge Mountain
geographic_facet Northwest Territories
Fairbanks
Canada
Pacific
British Columbia
Aklavik
Norman Wells
Wrigley
Fort St. John
Cameron Lake
Cameron, Lake
Gilchrist Beach
Beaverlodge Mountain
genre Aklavik
La Crete
Northwest Territories
Wrigley
Alaska
genre_facet Aklavik
La Crete
Northwest Territories
Wrigley
Alaska
op_relation http://zenodo.org/record/5071178
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op_rights Open Access
info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
op_doi https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5073162
https://doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.1323.1.1
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spelling ftdatacite:10.5281/zenodo.5073162 2023-05-15T13:08:06+02:00 Peristenus braunae Goulet & Mason 2006, n. sp. Goulet, Henri Mason, Peter G. 2006 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5073162 https://zenodo.org/record/5073162 unknown Zenodo http://zenodo.org/record/5071178 http://publication.plazi.org/id/FF95DE03637C6553610CFFD91967FFE6 http://zoobank.org/071E8D92-514B-4E2B-9F3F-E085CACA976A https://zenodo.org/communities/biosyslit https://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.1323.1.1 http://zenodo.org/record/5071178 http://publication.plazi.org/id/FF95DE03637C6553610CFFD91967FFE6 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5071184 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5071180 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5071182 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5071186 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5071196 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5071192 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5071194 http://zoobank.org/071E8D92-514B-4E2B-9F3F-E085CACA976A https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5073163 https://zenodo.org/communities/biosyslit Open Access info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess Biodiversity Taxonomy Animalia Arthropoda Insecta Hymenoptera Braconidae Peristenus Peristenus braunae Text Taxonomic treatment article-journal ScholarlyArticle 2006 ftdatacite https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5073162 https://doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.1323.1.1 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5071184 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5071180 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5071182 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5071186 https: 2021-11-05T12:55:41Z Peristenus braunae n. sp. (Fig. 15, Table 9) Type material. Type locality: Canada, Alberta, north of Twin Lakes. Holotype, female (CNCI), labelled: [White] " Canada: AB, N of Twin Lakes, 27.VI. 2003, 639m 57 o 30.823'N 117 o 28.825'W Goulet, Carcamo & Otani"; [Red] " HOLOTYPE Peristenus braunae CNC No. 23474 " Condition of holotype: excellent. Allotype, male, with same data as holotype. Except for specimens from low elevation in coastal British Columbia, the remaining specimens, mentioned under "Material examined and range", are paratypes. Origin of species name. This species is named in honour of Lorraine Braun who reared this species from Lygus and helped to clarify a difficult part of the P. pallipes complex. Diagnosis. Clypeus black, punctures dense on head (between lateral ocellus and inner eye margin) and less dense on frons (surface smoother with shiny spaces between punctures), occurring in boreal region mainly after mid June. Description. FEMALE. Colour. Head and mesosoma black, clypeus usually black, metasoma usually black, rarely brown. Legs straw coloured or light reddish brown (metacoxa commonly brown or black (as in Fig. 5), uncommonly straw coloured). Metatibia light reddish brown and apical half often gradually becoming reddish brown, thus concolorous or almost so (as in Fig. 11). Metatarsomeres 1–5 as dark as apex of metatibia; palpi, tegula and mandible (except apex), straw coloured. Scape to flagellomere 2 straw coloured, then after flagellomere 3–4 brown to dark brown. Stigma uniformly dark brown or with a paler spot in basal half. Structure. Flagellum with 19–22 flagellomeres (respectively 14%, 51%, 31% and 4% of 106 specimens) and flagellomeres enlarged in apical 0.5 with at most 2 preapical flagellomeres quadrate or subquadrate. Genal length behind eye 1.00–1.31 times as long as length of eye. Height of eye 1.06–1.17 times as long as minimum distance between inner eye margins (as in Fig. 17). Maximum width of head behind eyes subequal (0.95–0.99) to maximum head width at eye level. Occipital carina developed in dorsal third (as in Fig. 33). Metasomal tergum 1 with lateral edges clearly convergent (posterior margin 1.8–2.4 times as wide as narrowest width near base) and elongate (medial length of tergum 1.63–2.00 times as long as maximum width at posterior end) (as in Fig. 68). Radial cell length 0.83–1.00 as long as stigma width (as in Figs. 58–63). Forewing with vein r usually developed and short (as in Figs. 61, 62) and basal cell (except extreme base) pubescent (as in Fig. 54). Sculpture. Punctures on vertex 5–10 µm in diameter, and on frons and mesoscutum about 10–15 µm in diameter (a little larger than diameter of ommatidia). Punctures 20–25 µm apart on vertex and 5–15 µm apart on frons (thus, in most specimens with shiny surface between punctures) and between lateral ocellus and inner eye margin (as in Fig. 26), 5–10 µm apart near antennal socket, 20–25 µm apart on mesoscutum. Punctures in front of median ocellus in most specimens coarsely and densely punctate. Punctures on mesopleuron dense and in most specimens coarsely punctate on anteroventral surface of mesepisternum in lateral view. Clypeus generally impunctate or mostly so over surface, or occasionally densely punctate. Metasomal tergum 1 with about 10–12 longitudinal ridges, these often anastomosing on disc and forming a puncture­like sculpture. MALE. Colour. Generally as in female, but metacoxa usually brown, sometimes brown on outer surface and paler on inner and ventral or, rarely completely straw coloured. Structure. Flagellum with 21–24 flagellomeres (respectively 29%, 54%, 14% and 3% of 56 specimens) and flagellomeres narrow in apical half. Height of eye 0.91–1.00 times as long as minimum distance between inner eye margins. Otherwise structure and sculpture as in female. Geographical variation. There are a few differences between specimens from western and eastern Canada. In the West, the mesocoxae are often reddish brown to black and the clypeus is almost always smooth or a little punctate. In the East, the mesocoxae are straw coloured to light reddish brown and the clypeus is normally punctate. In specimens from coastal British Columbia, the flagellomere frequency distribution is higher, with most specimens from coastal regions having 21 flagellomeres in females, 22 or 23 in males. The coastal British Columbia sample is small (19 female and 12 male flagella counted) so it is unclear if the population is a geographical variant of P. braunae or another cryptic species. Because of this character variation, specimens from coastal regions of the Pacific were excluded from the paratype series. Taxonomic notes. Among the species of the P. pallipes complex associated with Lygus , P. braunae is nearest P. dayi . Adults of the two species differ on flagellomere frequency, mesocoxa and metacoxa colour in females, clypeus and mesepisternum puncture development, and flight period. The nearest populations of P. braunae to those of P. dayi are 300 km apart. The populations of P. braunae nearest to those of P. dayi are not more similar than distant populations of both species. There is probably no gene flow. Thus, the boreal population of P. braunae is specifically distinct from the eastern temperate P. dayi . A summary of measurement differences between P. braunae and P. dayi is given in Table 9. Host and biological notes. Adults of this species have been reared mainly from Adelphocoris lineolatus and rarely from Lygus lineolaris . Adults occur from early June to mid August with a peak of abundance from late June to early July. This is a univoltine species on nymphs of the first generation of Lygus . Material examined and range. 167 (62♂, 105♀) adults were studied. Of these, 7 were reared from Miridae and 156 were field collected. The species is known from boreal regions of North America between the Northwest Territories and Alaska to southwestern British Columbia, south to montane regions of California and Utah and coastal regions of New Brunswick and Nova Scotia. CANADA. NT: Aklavik (1♀); Norman Wells (1♀); Wrigley (1♀); NS: Cape Breton Highlands Nat. Park, Meat Cove (1♀); Sable Island (1♂); Yarmouth (1♂, 1♀). NB: Kouchibouguac Nat. Park (5♂, 3♀). QC: vic. Frelighsburg, 45º05'N 72º50'W (1♂); vic. La Corne, 48º24'19''N 78º00'12''W (1♂, 13♀); La Vérendrye Prov. Park, 47º36'57''N 77º33' 42''W (15♂, 8♀); Matagami, 49º45'08''N 77º37'14''W (5♂, 5♀). MB: Brandon (1♀). SK: E lbow (2♀); vic. Saskatoon, 52º09.1'N 106º34.9'W (1♂). AB: Banff (1♂); Beaverlodge, Mountain Trail (2♂, 3♀); Blairmore (1♀); Burmis (1♂, 1♀); Dunvagan (1♂, 1♀); Gilchrist Beach, Aden (1♀); N of Grande Cache, between 54º09'N 118º45'W and 54º34'N 118º42'W (1♂, 3♀); 1 km E Jasper Nat. Park, 53º14.138'N 117º49.418'W (1♂); vic. La Crete, 58º01.257'N 116º19.621'W (1♂); Lethbridge (3♂, 18♀); Lethbridge, 49º42.279'N 112º44.951'W (1♀); Long view, 50º24.335'N 114º31.028'W (2♀); Milk River, 49º08'N 110º48'W (1♀); Oyen (1♀); Saskatoon Mtn., 55º13.204'N 119º17.042'W (3♂, 4♀); Shaunessey (1♂); Tompcam's Landing, 57º59.034'N 117º06.291'W (1♀); vic. Twin Lake, 57º30.823'N 117º28.825'W (2♂, 4♀); Waterton Lakes Nat. Park, Cameron Lake (1♀); Waterton Lakes Nat. Park, 1300 m (4♀). BC: 15 km N Boston Bar, 49º58'39''N 121º29'49''W (4♂, 4♀); 20–25 km E Chilliwack Lake Rd. (1♀); Cowichan Lk. (1♀); Crownest (1♂, 1♀); Diamond Head trail near Squamish (1♀); Fort St. John (1♂); Harrison Bay (1♀); vic. Langley (4♀); vic. Lytton, 50º31'20''N 121º43'57''W (1♀); vic. Lytton, 50º14'38''N 121º34'35''W (1♀); Madden Lake, Oliver (2♀); Saltspring Is. Tuam Mtn. (1♂); Summit Lake, mi 392 Alaska Hwy. (1♀). USA. AK: Fairbanks (1♀). CA: Nevada Co., Sagehen Cr., 13 km W Truckee (1♂). CO: Doolittle Ranch (1♂, 2♀); Estes Park (3♂); 3 km S Meeker (2♂, 2♀). UT: Summit Co., Cobble Cr. (1♀). : Published as part of Goulet, Henri & Mason, Peter G., 2006, Review of the Nearctic species of Leiophron and Peristenus (Hymenoptera Braconidae: Euphorinae) parasitizing Lygus (Hemiptera: Miridae: Mirini:), pp. 1-118 in Zootaxa 1323 (1) on pages 41-43, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.1323.1.1, http://zenodo.org/record/5071178 Text Aklavik La Crete Northwest Territories Wrigley Alaska DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology) Northwest Territories Fairbanks Canada Pacific British Columbia ENVELOPE(-125.003,-125.003,54.000,54.000) Aklavik ENVELOPE(-135.011,-135.011,68.219,68.219) Norman Wells ENVELOPE(-126.833,-126.833,65.282,65.282) Wrigley ENVELOPE(-123.354,-123.354,63.194,63.194) Fort St. John ENVELOPE(-120.837,-120.837,56.244,56.244) Cameron Lake ENVELOPE(76.358,76.358,-69.403,-69.403) Cameron, Lake ENVELOPE(76.358,76.358,-69.403,-69.403) Gilchrist Beach ENVELOPE(73.600,73.600,-53.033,-53.033) Beaverlodge Mountain ENVELOPE(-108.552,-108.552,59.467,59.467)