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Biology / Hosts

provided by Deans Deitz Wharton et al
All described species are from the Afrotropical region, and we have reared two of these (Rhynchosteres brunigaster Fischer and Rhynchosteres mandibularis Kimani-Njogu and Wharton) from fruit-infesting Tephritidae in Kenya. Rhynchosteres mandibularis was reared from one or both of the two species of Trirhithrum infesting fruits of Rawsonia lucida (Kimani-Njogu and Wharton 2002).
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Robert Wharton

Description

provided by Deans Deitz Wharton et al
Nearly identical to Fopius in all respects except for the shape of the clypeus. In Rhynchosteres_, the clypeus is strongly bulging medially (especially evident in Figs. 2 and 5), with ventral portion of bulge deeply excavated, the clypeus thus forming either a tunnel-like or a hood-like structure, with the exact shape varying among species (Figs. 1-5). The labrum is consequently partially exposed by the median protrusion and excavation of the clypeus. The mandible in most species also has the outer surface flattened to slightly concave, especially basally (shown best in Fig. 3). The 0000506">mandible is evenly convex in species of other opiine genera reared from Tephritidae.
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Robert Wharton

Diagnosis and Relationships

provided by Deans Deitz Wharton et al
The species of Rhynchosteres are virtually identical to certain species of Fopius except for the more unusually developed clypeus (see figures above). The mandibles (with the exception of tuberculatus van Achterberg) are also highly modified (see Fig. 3 above). The species of Rhynchosteres and members of the Fopius desideratus species group share the same pattern of body sculpture (complete, sculptured notauli, oblique carina on propleuron, striate frons (1, 2), and postpectal carina), and reduction of setae on the ovipositor sheath (1, 2). This combination of characters separates both Rhynchosteres and the Fopius desideratus species group from all other opiines with long ovipositors and a small second submarginal cell (1, 2). Wharton (1987, 1997) has discussed the relationships of Rhynchosteres and Fopius.
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Robert Wharton

Remarks

provided by Deans Deitz Wharton et al
The genus was fairly completely defined by both Fischer (1965) and van Achterberg (1983). Van Achterberg and Maetô (1990) stressed the unusual form of the clypeus in separating Rhynchosteres from other genera of the what they referred to as the Diachasmimorpha group. While the protruding nature of the clypeus is indeed unusual for opiines, what is equally of interest is that the shape of the clypeus differs among most of the six described species, sometimes dramatically.

For additional information, see the Braconidae, Opiinae, and Fopius pages.

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cc-by-nc-sa-3.0
copyright
Robert Wharton