Entomological Communications (Dec 2019)

Darwin wasps: a new name heralds renewed efforts to unravel the evolutionary history of Ichneumonidae

  • Seraina Klopfstein,
  • Bernardo F. Santos,
  • Mark R. Shaw,
  • Mabel Alvarado,
  • Andrew M.R. Bennett,
  • Davide Dal Pos,
  • Madalene Giannotta,
  • Andres F. Herrera Florez,
  • Dave Karlsson,
  • Andrey I. Khalaim,
  • Alessandro R. Lima,
  • István Mikó,
  • Ilari E. Sääksjärvi,
  • So Shimizu,
  • Tamara Spasojevic,
  • Simon van Noort,
  • Lars Vilhelmsen,
  • Gavin R. Broad

DOI
https://doi.org/10.37486/2675-1305.ec01006
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 1
pp. ec01006 – ec01006

Abstract

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The parasitoid wasp family Ichneumonidae is arguably one of the groups for which current knowledge lags most strongly behind their enormous diversity. In a five-day meeting in Basel (Switzerland) in June 2019, 22 researchers from 14 countries met to discuss the most important issues in ichneumonid research, including increasing the speed of species discovery, resolving higher-level relationships, and studying the radiation of these parasitoids onto various host groups through time. All agreed that it is time to advertise ichneumonid research more broadly in the scientific community and thereby attract young talents to this group for which specialists are sorely lacking. In order to popularize the group, we here suggest a new name for the family, “Darwin wasps”, to reflect the pivotal role they played in convincing Charles Darwin that not all of creation could have been created by a benevolent god. We hope that the name catches on, and that Darwin wasps start buzzing more loudly across all disciplines of biology.

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