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Type: Short Communication
Published: 2020-02-26
Page range: 041–045
Abstract views: 331
PDF downloaded: 4

First scolebythid wasp (Hymenoptera: Chrysidoidea, Scolebythidae) in the mid-Cretaceous Burmese amber

School of Geography and Tourism, Qufu Normal University, Rizhao 276826, China State Key Laboratory of Palaeobiology and Stratigraphy, Center for Excellence in Life and Paleoenvironment, Nanjing Institute of Geology and Palaeontology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Nanjing 210008, China
A.A. Borissiak Palaeontological Institute, Russian Academy of Sciences, Moscow 117647, Russia Natural History Museum, Cromwell Road, London SW7 5BD, UK
Tropical Entomology Research Center, Via De Gasperi 10, I-01100 Viterbo, Italy
Schmalhausen Institute of Zoology, National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine, B. Khmelnytskogo, 15, 01030 Kiev, Ukraine
A.A. Borissiak Palaeontological Institute, Russian Academy of Sciences, Moscow 117647, Russia Schmalhausen Institute of Zoology, National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine, B. Khmelnytskogo, 15, 01030 Kiev, Ukraine
Hymenoptera Chrysidoidea Scolebythidae Sclerogibbidae Chrysobythidae Falsiformicidae Pristapenesiinae

Abstract

Scolebythidae is a small relict family of ordinary looking small wasps with only four genera and six species in the contemporary fauna of Central and South America, South Africa, Madagascar, north China, Thailand, Australia and Fiji; and with 11 genera and 13 species in various Cretaceous, Eocene and Miocene ambers and rocks (Engel, 2015; present paper) ascribed to two subfamilies, one predominantly living and another mostly extinct (Engel et al., 2013). Biologically, Scolebythidae are known as gregarious parasites of xylophagous larvae of Cerambycidae and Ptinidae (Anobiinae) (summarized by Engel, 2015). Based on the morphology, the family is usually considered phylogenetically as the second most (after Plumariidae) basal one in Chrysidoidea (Brothers, 1975; Rasnitsyn, 1988, 2002; Brothers & Carpenter, 1993).

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