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Nine new species of D imophora from A ustralia ( H ymenoptera: I chneumonidae): new insights on the distribution of a poorly known genus of parasitoid wasps
Author(s) -
Klopfstein Seraina
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
austral entomology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.502
H-Index - 39
eISSN - 2052-1758
pISSN - 2052-174X
DOI - 10.1111/aen.12166
Subject(s) - biology , genus , zoology , parasitoid , phylogenetic tree , ecology , hymenoptera , biochemistry , gene
Parasitoid wasps fulfil a vital role in all terrestrial ecosystems as natural enemies of spiders and insects, including many agricultural pests. Despite their value in biological control, even the most basic knowledge of species diversity is missing for large parts of the world, including A ustralia. The ichneumonid genus D imophora ( C remastinae) was previously known from eight extant species that, with the exception of the N eotropical D imophora daschi G auld, were all believed to occur only in the N orthern H emisphere. Here, 11 species of this genus are reported for the first time from A ustralia, nine of which are described as new ( D . biquadra n. sp. , D . diabolica n. sp. , D . kentmartini n. sp. , D . lutulenta n. sp. , D . migrosi n. sp. , D . ocellata n. sp. , D . ryhsi n. sp. , D . ruficollis n. sp. and D . turista n. sp. ). The two remaining species, D . nitens ( G ravenhorst) and D . evanialis ( G ravenhorst), also occur in the H olarctic region; their presence in A ustralia might thus reflect recent invasions. However, as the current study illustrates, our knowledge of ichneumonid diversity is far too patchy in most regions of the world to draw sound conclusions about biogeographical patterns. Phylogenetic analyses are needed to decide whether the surprisingly high diversity of D imophora in A ustralia is due to a recent radiation, if it indicates that this is its centre of origin, or if it simply reflects a relict distribution of the genus. In any case, the doubling of the number of species of this rare genus demonstrates the need for taxonomic studies on parasitoid wasps in A ustralia.