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HYMENOPTERA, Liopteridae (Cynipoidea). -- <Images>
& <Juveniles> Description
Liopteridae. -- These
insects have a petiolate abdomen, which is attached above the bases of the
hind coxae. Three are rare species about which few details are known. There were three subfamilies known as of 1993 (Ritchie
(1993): Liopterinae,
Oberthuerellinae, and Mesocynipinae.
Oberthuerellinae has a noticeable spine on the underside of the
metafemur; Liopterinae has the metasomal petiole elongated; and the petiole
of the Mesocynipinae is shorter than wide. Some species are believed to be
parasitic on wood-boring insects (Coleoptera: Buprestidae; Hymenoptera:
Siricidae). There were 13 genera more
than 143 species known worldwide as of 2011, but they are found primarily in
tropical areas. = = = = = = = = = =
= = References: Please refer to <biology.ref.htm>, [Additional references
may be found at: MELVYL
Library] Benoit, P.L.G.
1955. Les Liopteridae Oberthurellinae du Congo Belge. Revue de Zoologie
et de Botanique Africaines 52: 283–293. Liu, Z, Ronquist, F. & Nordlander, G.
2007. The cynipoid genus Paramblynotus:
revision, phylogeny, and historical biogeography (Hymenoptera, Liopteridae). Bulletin
of the American Museum of Natural History 304: 1-151. Ritchie,
A.J. 1993. Superfamily Cynipoidea (pp. 521-536). In: Goulet, H. & J.
Huber (eds). Hymenoptera of the World: an identification guide to
families. Research Branch, Agriculture Canada,
Ottawa, Canada, 668 pp. Ronquist,
F. 1995 Phylogeny and
classification of the Liopteridae, an archaic group of cynipoid wasps
(Hymenoptera). Entomologica scandinavica, supplement 46: 1-74. Ronquist, F. 1999. Phylogeny,
classification and evolution of the Cynipoidea. Zoologica Scripta
28:139–164. |