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HYMENOPTERA, Stephanidae (Stephenoidea) -- <Images> & <Juveniles> Description & Statistics
Stephanidae. -- Stephanids are a small of rare hymenopterans
that are parasitoids of the larvae of wood-boring beetles. The adults vary in
length from 4-20 mm. They are slim
and resemble ichneumonids with their long ovipositor. The head is quite
spherical, and protrudes on a neck.
It also has a crown of about four or five teeth around the median
ocellus. The hind coxae are long, and
the hind femora are swollen and also have teeth. Most American species occur
in the western Nearctic.
Stephanids are rare insects, represented by only a few genera and
species. Clausen (1940/1962) regarded
them as parasitic on the larvae of wood-boring insects.
The single family, Stephanidae
has 9 genera and about 305 species.
They are primarily tropical and subtropical in distribution. They all
have a slender and elongated body, highly modified hind legs, and an almost
spherical head on a long "neck", bearing a set of about five
"teeth" on the face surrounding the ocelli. They resemble
Gasteruptiidae, but they are glossy and often sculptured, and the swollen
hind femora are unlike any gasteruptiid leg. Some species are parasitoids of
xylophagous beetle larvae, while one species, Schlettererius cinctipes,
is a parasitoid of horntail wasps. . References: Please refer to
<biology.ref.htm>, [Additional references may be
found at: MELVYL Library] |