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Brachycistidinae

Brachycistidinae
Tiphiid Wasp - Brachycistidinae subfamily, Great Basin National Park, Baker, Nevada.jpg
Tiphiid Wasp species of the Brachycistidinae subfamily, from the Great Basin National Park, Baker, Nevada
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Insecta
Order: Hymenoptera
Family: Tiphiidae
Subfamily: Brachycistidinae
Kimsey 1991
Genera

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Brachycistidinae is a subfamily of the flower wasp family Tiphiidae which contains 10 genera and 85 species, and which is confined to the Nearctic Zoogegraphic region.

The wasps in the subfamily Brachycistidinae are distinguished from the subfamily Tiphiinae by having simple claws and the lack of an epicnemial suture, while the tegulae do not cover the axillary sclerites of the forewing. These wasps demonstrate extreme sexual dimorphism the females resemble ants and are wingless while the males are winged and nocturnal. These extreme differences between the sexes have led to instances where the males and females are described as separate species, known as "dual-taxonomy", and later work shows the two "species" to be synonymous. The identification of both sexes as a single species is often only achieved when they are collected in copula.

The female wasps of the family Tiphiidae are mainly ectoparasitic on fossorial beetle larvae, especially members of the family Scarabaeidae and Carabid subfamily Cicindelinae, known as tiger beetles. The nocturnal, winged males are often attracted to lights and are therefore well represented in museum collections, the wingless females mainly live underground and are more difficult to collect, although they do emerge at night when they may also be attracted to lights. There are few observations of the hosts of Brachycistidinae but a female of the genus Stilbopogon was observed stinging a beetle larva which was identified as belonging to a species of darkling beetle probably a species within the genus Eusattus.

The taxonomy of the subfamily is difficult to resolve due to similarity of the structures of the species and their lack of distinctive colouration and patterning. However, the males show a number of distinguishing characters in the structures of their genitalia, heads, thorax and in the venation of the wings. The following general are currently placed within the Brachycistidinae in two well supported clades:


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