Abstract:
The highly distinctive parasitoid wasp genus Yelicones is cosmopolitan and not
infrequently collected, but very little is known about its biology. Here we report
that Y. iranus is a parasitoid of caterpillars of the pyralid moth Phycita diaphana
in Israel, the first host record for the genus from outside of the Americas. We
illustrate the wasp’s mummified host, emergence hole and the wasp’s own cocoon
which is constructed within the tanned mummified host remains. We hypothesize
that a physiological or behavioural association of Yelicones parasitoids with the
Pyralidae commenced at least during the early Miocene (ca. 16 Mya)