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Family TORYMIDAE


Compiler and date details

July 2012 - Danielle N. Stringer, Sarah Mantel, John T. Jennings & Andrew D. Austin, Australian Centre for Evolutionary Biology and Biodiversity, and the School of Earth and Environmental Science, The University of Adelaide, South Australia, Australia

Introduction

The Torymidae are a fairly large group with more than 130 species decribed for Australia. Torymids are characterised by the cerci situated on distinct peg-like structures; the occiput (back of the head) with a horseshoe-shaped carina; stigmal vein in fore wing either at a right angle to the wing margin and the stigma distinctly swollen (Megastigminae), or short and less than one-fifth the length of marginal vein (Toryminae, Monodontomerinae); and the ovipositor usually strongly exserted and curving upward.

Many species are associated with plant tissue, either through parasitising hosts hidden with plant tissue, or through phytophagy. Megastigminae are almost all phytophagous, feeding on seeds of mainly Pinaceae and Rosaceae, although a few species are known to parasitise gall-inducing Cynipidae. Torymines mostly attack gall-inducing insects, mainly Cecidomyiidae (gall flies) and Cynipidae, but also Tephritidae (Diptera) and Psyllidae (Hemiptera). Some torymines are phytophagous, or perhaps inqulines in galls. A few species are similar to some eurytomids in that the larva will feed upon anything it finds inside the gall, including gall-inducing insects, inquilines, and plant tissue. Monodontomerinae attack the larvae of several holometabolous orders, including Diptera (flies), Hymenoptera, Lepidoptera (moths and butterflies) and Coleoptera (beetles), many of them being parasitoids of solitary wasps and bees. One group, the Podagrioni, are all parasitoids within the oothecae (egg cases) of Mantidae (praying mantids). A few species are phytophagous pests of plants.

Boucek (1988) recognised three subfamilies, but Grissell (1995) subsequently reduced the number to two: Torymidae and Megastigminae. Keys to Australasian genera are included in Boucek (1988). More recently, Grissell (1995) provided updated keys to world genera of Toryminae.

Jennings & Austin (2015) list one unidentified species from Lord Howe Island in the Australian Museum.

 

History of changes

Note that this list may be incomplete for dates prior to September 2013.
Published As part of group Action Date Action Type Compiler(s)
23-Mar-2015 CHALCIDOIDEA 18-Mar-2015 MODIFIED
07-Aug-2012 07-Aug-2012 MODIFIED
06-Feb-2012 MODIFIED