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A remarkable new family of stinging wasps from the Cretaceous of Myanmar and China (Hymenoptera, Aculeata)

Burmese amber provides a unique window to the Cretaceous entomofauna, being the most prolific source of fossil insects for the period. Presently, about 61% of the Hymenoptera described from amber deposits in Myanmar are stinging wasps (Aculeata), including eight families known solely from Burmese am...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Journal of Hymenoptera research 2022-12, Vol.94 (11), p.163-190
Main Authors: Lepeco, Anderson, Barbosa, Diego N, Melo, Gabriel A. R
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:Burmese amber provides a unique window to the Cretaceous entomofauna, being the most prolific source of fossil insects for the period. Presently, about 61% of the Hymenoptera described from amber deposits in Myanmar are stinging wasps (Aculeata), including eight families known solely from Burmese amber. In the present work we describe the aculeate family †Trifionychidae fam. nov. , as well as three new genera: † Prionaspidion gen. nov. , including † Prionaspidion brevidens sp. nov. and † P. nanus sp. nov. ; † Trifionyx gen. nov. , including † Trifionyx pilosus sp. nov. ; and † Trifionyximus gen. nov. , including † Trifionyximus cracens sp. nov. We also reinterpret the fossil genus † Mirabythus , described based on rock impressions from the Yixian formation in China and originally attributed to Scolebythidae. † Mirabythus is moved to the new family, based mainly on the characteristic mandible; the large clypeus with a series of small denticles on the apical margin; the frons protruding over lateral portions of clypeus, directing the antennal sockets downwards below ocular level; and the presence of nine flagellomeres. Based on resemblances with fossil impressions attributed to †Bethylonymidae, we tentatively include the new family within the superfamily †Bethylonymoidea. Discovery of †Trifionychidae fam. nov. adds a novel lineage to the pool of aculeate families from the Cretaceous which did not survive to the present day.
ISSN:1070-9428
1314-2607
DOI:10.3897/jhr.94.85613