[Stinging Insects] Wasp Species Named After UC Riverside

Entomologist Serguei Triapitsyn discovered a wasp from the Russian Far East, and named it Gonatocerus ucri.

An entomologist at the University of California, Riverside, discovered a new wasp species in Russia and named it after the university, which is commonly abbreviated as UCR.

Serguei V. Triapitsyn, principal museum scientist at the Entomology Research Museum on campus, had been sorting wasps from the Russian Far East, when he discovered several tiny female fairyflies, or mymarid wasps, 1.1 to 1.2 millimeters in body length.

He named the species Gonatocerus ucri in a research paper he published April 30, 2013, in the international scientific journal Zootaxa.

A Russian Academy of Sciences collaborator of Triapitsyn used a trap from 1999 to 2002 to collect minute wasps for the Entomology Research Museum in a remote location in Primorsky Kray, Russia, a region that has a largely unknown and rich fauna of this group of insects. The trap contained alcohol that wasps dropped into, also serving as a preservative for the insects until they could be sent to UCR for study. It took Triapitsyn several years to complete the study, since identification of these minute wasps, which are hardly visible to the naked eye, requires special preparation.
 

About the Wasp.

Gonatocerus ucri is mostly brown in color and has long antennae and wings. Its host is unknown but other species in the same genus are beneficial insects known to parasitize eggs of leafhoppers, some of which are economically important agricultural pests worldwide.

“I decided to name it after UCR because that’s where I work,” Triapitsyn said. “The UCR Entomology Research Museum has extensive collections of parasitoid wasps from throughout the world, and I routinely discover new species among the collected material.”

Triapitsyn received his doctoral degree in agricultural entomology from the Moscow Timiriazev Agricultural Academy, Russia.

As principal museum scientist at University of California, Riverside, he is in charge of the Entomology Research Museum and its collection of about three million specimens. He also conducts research in the taxonomy and biology of parasitic Hymenoptera as well as biological control.

He is the author or coauthor of more than 100 scientific publications in refereed journals, including several monographs.

 


The author is a senior public information officer at University of California, Riverside.

October 2014
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