Eucoilinae

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Phylum:Arthropoda
Class:Insecta
Family:Figitidae
Eucoilinae
Leptopilina sp.
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Insecta
Order: Hymenoptera
Family: Figitidae
Subfamily: Eucoilinae
Kirby, 1883
Genera

See text

Diversity
>80 genera

>1000 species

Eucoilinae is the largest subfamily within the wasp family Figitidae (Cynipoidea), comprising nearly 1000 described species in over 80 genera. They are small to minute parasitoid wasps that are endoparasitoids of cyclorrhaphous dipteran larvae. Eucoilines are recognized by the presence of a distinctive raised and often sculptured plate or cup on the dorsal surface of the scutellum (the mesoscutellum).[1]

Eucoilinae has historically been treated as a separate family (Eucoilidae) by some authors, but recent phylogenetic analyses have consistently placed it as a subfamily within an expanded concept of Figitidae. It is considered part of the "core figitids," a clade that also includes the subfamilies Pycnostigminae, Emargininae, Aspicerinae, and Figitinae, all of which are parasitoids of Diptera.[1]

The most distinctive and diagnostic feature of the subfamily is the scutellar plate (or cup), a raised, distinctly margined structure on the dorsal surface of the scutellum, which contains a glandular pit. This feature is universally present in eucoilines and unique to them among parasitic wasps.[1]

A comprehensive phylogenetic study in 2002 tested the monophyly of six informal genus groups proposed by Nordlander (1982). The results supported the monophyly of the Eucoilinae and suggested a revised grouping of genera, with early divergences indicating an ancient split between primarily Afrotropical and Neotropical lineages.[1]

Description

Adults are small, typically 1–5 mm in length, and most species are fully winged, though some are brachypterous. The body is usually shining black or brown and largely polished. The female antenna has 13 articles, often with a distally swollen club. The male antenna is 15-segmented, with the third or fourth segment modified to bear antennal sex glands. Many genera have a conspicuous ring of dense hairs (a "hairy ring") anteriorly on the third abdominal tergite.[1]

The key diagnostic character is the scutellar plate. The shape, size, sculpture, and position of the glandular pit on this plate vary considerably between genera and species.[1]

Distribution

The subfamily has a worldwide (cosmopolitan) distribution, with its highest diversity found in tropical regions, particularly the Neotropics.[1]

Biology and ecology

Genera

References

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