2014
DOI: 10.3897/zookeys.389.6066
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A new species of Grotea Cresson (Hymenoptera, Ichneumonidae, Labeninae) from Colombia

Abstract: The genus Grotea has 18 described species. A new species, Grotea villosissima sp. n., is described here and its host information included. This is the first record of Grotea for Colombia.

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Cited by 4 publications
(3 citation statements)
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“…Remarks. Grotea ambarosa does not run well to any of the species in the keys of Slobodchikoff (1970) or Gauld (2000) and does not correspond either to the species described later on by Herrera-Florez (2014, 2018 and Herrera-Florez and Penteado-Dias (2019). Among described species, it is most similar to G. paulista Herrera-Florez and G. perplexa Slobodchikoff.…”
Section: Grotea Cresson 1864mentioning
confidence: 84%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Remarks. Grotea ambarosa does not run well to any of the species in the keys of Slobodchikoff (1970) or Gauld (2000) and does not correspond either to the species described later on by Herrera-Florez (2014, 2018 and Herrera-Florez and Penteado-Dias (2019). Among described species, it is most similar to G. paulista Herrera-Florez and G. perplexa Slobodchikoff.…”
Section: Grotea Cresson 1864mentioning
confidence: 84%
“…The genus currently includes 26 species broadly distributed in the New World, from Canada to southern Chile (Slobodchikoff 1970;Gauld 2000;Herrera-Florez 2014;Herrera-Florez and Penteado-Dias 2019). However, there are no records for the genus, and in fact for any species of Labeninae, from the Greater Antilles.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…and more specifically their contents, as a means of assuring the development of their own young. Brood predators, such as blister beetles (Meloidae), as well as various types of parasites including ectoparasites, such as Varroa destructor Anderson and Trueman, 2000; endoparasites, including the bee fungal parasite Nosema; and parasitoids, such as the majority of bee flies (Bombyliidae) and the ichneumonid genus Grotea, all target developing brood in the nests of various species of Hymenoptera [6][7][8][9]. Brood parasitism, however, is a specialized form of parasitism in which the parasite targets not the brood of a host but rather the provisions stored by the host for its own offspring.…”
Section: Brood Parasitism: a Definitionmentioning
confidence: 99%