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New fossil wasp species from the earliest Eocene Fur Formation has its closest relatives in late Eocene ambers (Hymenoptera, Ichneumonidae, Pherhombinae)

Abstract

Darwin wasps (Ichneumonidae) are one of the most spe­cies-rich insect families but also one of the most understud­ied ones, both in terms of their extant and extinct diversity. We here use morphometrics of wing veins and an integrative Bayesian analysis to place a new rock fossil species from the Danish Fur Formation (~54 Ma) in the tree of Darwin wasps. The new species, Pherhombus parvulus n. sp., is placed firmly in Pherhombinae, an extinct subfamily so far only known from Baltic and Rovno-Ukranian ambers, which are estimated to be 34–48 Ma and 34–38 Ma, respectively. Our phylogenetic analysis recovers a subfamily clade within the higher Ophioniformes formed by Pherhombinae, Tow­nesitinae, and Hybrizontinae, in accordance with previous suggestions. Due to the placement of the new species as sister to the remaining members of Pherhombinae, we argue that our finding is not at odds with a much younger, late Eocene age (~34–41 Ma) of Baltic amber and instead demonstrates that Pherhombus existed over a much longer period than previously thought. Our results also exemplify the power of wing vein morphometrics and integrative phy­logenetic analyses in resolving the placement even of poorly preserved fossil specimens.

Keywords: Bayesian phylogenetic inference, compression fossil, morphometrics, parasitoid wasps, phylogeny

How to Cite:

Meier, N., Wacker, A., Klopfstein, S., Meier, N., Wacker, A. & Klopfstein, S., (2022) “New fossil wasp species from the earliest Eocene Fur Formation has its closest relatives in late Eocene ambers (Hymenoptera, Ichneumonidae, Pherhombinae)”, Bulletin of the Society of Systematic Biologists 1(1). doi: https://doi.org/10.18061/bssb.v1i1.8427

Rights: Noah Meier, Anina Wacker, Seraina Klopfstein

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Authors

  • Noah Meier
  • Anina Wacker
  • Seraina Klopfstein
  • Noah Meier (Naturhistorisches Museum Basel; University of Basel, Department of Environmental Sciences )
  • Anina Wacker (University of Basel, Department of Environmental Sciences )
  • Seraina Klopfstein (Naturhistorisches Museum Basel; Institute of Ecology and Evolution, University of Bern)

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