Paraspathius
A small genus with less than 10 species described [1].
References
- , “Taxapad 2012, Ichneumonoidea 2011. Database on flash-drive.”. www.taxapad.com, Ottawa, Canada., 2012.
Unknown.
Head subcubical; ocellar triangle with base larger than its sides; eyes glabrous; occipital carina present, reduced ventrally and not fused with hypostomal carina; postgenal bridge narrow; palpi formula 6-4; scape narrow and long, with apical lobe; first flagellar segment weakly curved, not shorter than second segment; neck of promesosoma long, convex dorsally; pronotal keel present; anterior mesonotum gently curving posteriorly, slightly raised above pronotum; notauli present, wide, shallow posteriorly; sternaulus distinct, long, almost straight; prepectal carina present; propodeum with marginated areas; lateral tubercles and propodeal bridge absent; fore tibia with slender spines arranged almost in single row; hind coxa without basoventral corner and tooth; hind tibia without spines along dorsal surface; hind basitarsus 0.8-0.9 times as long as segments 2-5 combined; fore wing marginal cell not shortened; 2RS and r-m present; 1m-cu postfurcal; 1cu-a postfurcal or interstitial; 3CU not interstitial, arising from anterior 1/5-1/3 of distal margin of first subdiscal cell; first subdiscal cell closed; hind wing cu-a present; subbasal cell short; m-cu present, oblique toward base of wing; RS arising from R; marginal cell without r; in male hind wing usually without stigma-like enlargement, but sometimes small enlargement developed; first metasomal tergite distinctly petiolate, narrow and very long, without dorsope; acrosternite 0.7 times as long as tergite; second suture present and straight or absent; second tergite without furrows or defined area; ovipositor distinctly longer than metasoma, almost as long as body [1].
References
- , “Systematics, distribution and diversity of the Australasian doryctine wasps (Hymenoptera, Braconidae, Doryctinae).”, Records of the South Australian Museum Monograph Series, vol. 8, pp. 1-150, 2004.
Australasian, Oriental.