4.5 Article

New genera Buserphites and Mesoserphites (Hymenoptera: Serphitidae) from mid-Cretaceous amber of Myanmar

Journal

CRETACEOUS RESEARCH
Volume 130, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS LTD- ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.cretres.2021.105025

Keywords

Burmese amber; Serphitoidea; Taxonomy; Albian-Cenomanian; Mesozoic

Funding

  1. French scholarship Fondation Rennes 1
  2. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada [201500681]
  3. Royal Saskatchewan Museum

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Two new genera and seven new species are described from mid-Cretaceous Burmese amber, showing a high diversity of Serphitidae family in the region. The presence of multiple endemic groups in the Western Burma Block as it approached contact with mainland Asia is supported by the discovery of unknown serphitid genera in Burmese amber. The collections from this region may represent a broader range of time and habitats than initially thought, suggesting that we are still in the early stages of documenting the fauna.
Two new genera, Burserphites and Mesoserphites, belonging to the subfamily Serphitinae (Serphitidae, Hymenoptera) are described from Burmese mid-Cretaceous amber. Two new species are erected within Buserphites n. gen.: B. applanatus, and B. myanmarensis; and five new species are established within Mesoserphites n. gen.: M. annulus, M. giganteus, M. engeli, M. scutatus, and M. viraneacapitis. These taxa show that the family Serphitidae was highly diverse in Burmese amber, adding substantially to recent discoveries within the endemic subfamily Supraserphitinae Rasnitsyn and O euro hm-Kuhnle. The presence of multiple serphitid genera in Burmese amber that are unknown from other amber deposits adds support to the idea that the Western Burma Block supported a fauna with multiple endemic groups as it approached contact with mainland Asia in the latest Albian or earliest Cenomanian. Despite the growing number of species recognized from Burmese amber, most of the newly described taxa are represented by very few specimens, suggesting that we are still within the early stages of documenting the fauna, or that the collections from this region represent a broader range of time and habitats than originally thought. (C) 2021 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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