Data from: Folding wings like a cockroach: a review of transverse wing folding ensign wasps (Hymenoptera: Evaniidae: Afrevania and Trissevania)
We revise two relatively rare ensign wasp genera, whose species are restricted to Sub-Saharan Africa: Afrevania and Trissevania. Afrevania longipetiolata sp. nov., Trissevania heatherae sp. nov., T. hugoi sp. nov., T. mrimaensis sp. nov. and T. slideri sp. nov. are described, males and females of T....
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Zusammenfassung: | We revise two relatively rare ensign wasp genera, whose species are
restricted to Sub-Saharan Africa: Afrevania and Trissevania. Afrevania
longipetiolata sp. nov., Trissevania heatherae sp. nov., T. hugoi sp.
nov., T. mrimaensis sp. nov. and T. slideri sp. nov. are described, males
and females of T. anemotis and Afrevania leroyi are redescribed, and an
identification key for Trissevaniini is provided. We argue that
Trissevania mrimaensis sp. nov. and T. heatherae sp. nov. populations are
vulnerable, given their limited distributions and threats from mining
activities in Kenya. We hypothesize that these taxa together comprise a
monophyletic lineage, Trissevaniini, tr. nov., the members of which share
the ability to fold their fore wings along two intersecting fold lines.
Although wing folding of this type has been described for the hind wing of
some insects four-plane wing folding of the fore wing has never been
documented. The wing folding mechanism and the pattern of wing folds of
Trissevaniini is shared only with some cockroach species (Blattodea). It
is an interesting coincidence that all evaniids are predators of cockroach
eggs. The major wing fold lines of Trissevaniini likely are not homologous
to any known longitudinal anatomical structures on the wings of other
Evaniidae. Members of the new tribe share the presence of a coupling
mechanism between the fore wing and the mesosoma that is composed of a
setal patch on the mesosoma and the retinaculum of the fore wing. While
the setal patch is an evolutionary novelty, the retinaculum, which
originally evolved to facilitate fore and hind wing coupling in
Hymenoptera, exemplifies morphological exaptation. We also refine and
clarify the Semantic Phenotype approach used in previous taxonomic
revisions and explore the consequences of merging new with existing data.
The way that semantic statements are formulated can evolve in parallel,
alongside improvements to the ontologies themselves. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.jg909 |