Introduction
According to the latest update, the family Diapriidae comprises three subfamilies: Ambositrinae, Belytinae, and Diapriinae. The subfamily Belytinae comprises 54 genera and about 700 described species. Belytinae wasps have a global distribution and are usually found in humid, shaded habitats such as forests, pastures, gardens, and wet meadows (Quadros & Brandão, 2017). Members of Belytinae are parasitoids of the larvae and pupae of Diptera from the families Mycetophilidae and Sciaridae (Yoder, 2007). The tribal taxonomy of the subfamily is extremely poorly developed; however, three tribes have been distinguished up to now: Pantolytini Hellen, 1964, Belytini Förster, 1856, and Cinetini Macek, 1989. The genus Zygota Förster, 1856 belongs to the tribe Belytini Förster, 1856 (Macek, 1989; Chemyreva, 2019).
To date, 31 species belonging to 14 genera of wasps in the family Diapriidae have been identified in Iran (Amini et al., 2014; Izadizadeh et al., 2020, 2021, 2023a, 2023b, 2023c, 2023d, 2024), of which only eight species from two genera (Belyta Jurine, 1807 and Diphora Foerster, 1856) belong to the tribe Belytini (Izadizadeh et al., 2023a, 2023b). Compared to the well-documented Palaearctic fauna (800 species in 90 genera), and exemplified by the extensively studied Russian diversity (153 species in 29 genera), the current records from Iran and the broader Middle East show significant gaps. This region, spanning Western Asia to North Africa, has notably sparse sampling. This contrast underscores the high potential for discovering numerous additional species in the Middle East, including Iran (Gadallah et al., 2023; Hübner et al., 2024).
The genus Zygota comprises 75 described species globally, of which 38 species are known in the Palearctic region (Hübner et al., 2024), and 10 species are recorded in Russia (Chemyreva, 2019; Hübner et al., 2024). Zygota species are distributed worldwide but are more commonly recorded from the Palearctic (38 species) and Nearctic (about 20 species). However, taxonomic revisions and further research on the genus Zygota in the Nearctic region are likely to lead to changes in their nomenclatural adjustments (Johnson, 1992; Buhl, 1997, 1998; Macek, 1997; Hübner et al., 2024). Despite their wide distribution, the genus remains under-collected and understudied, especially in the Afrotropical and Palearctic regions (Hübner et al., 2024). Taxonomic revisions and regional faunal surveys are ongoing, and new species continue to be discovered and described, often with the aid of modern morphological and molecular techniques (Chemyreva, 2023; Hübner et al., 2024). The taxonomic position of all Palaearctic species of the genus Zygota has recently been discussed by Hübner et al. (2024), and 13 species of Zygota sensu Nixon (1957) were transferred to the genus Pantoclis Foerster, 1856.
Prior to this study, no species of the genus Zygota had been reported from Iran. The present study contributes to the understanding of the genus Zygota by reporting new faunistic records from Iran, providing the detailed diagnostic characters, and discussing these findings within the context of Iran’s parasitoid wasp biodiversity.
Materials and methods
Materials for this study were collected from northern provinces of Iran using Malaise traps (Golestan, Guilan, and Mazandaran provinces). The specimens were extracted from the traps and sorted monthly, transferred to 70% ethyl alcohol, and then stored in a low temperature (- 20 °C) for further studies. For the preparation of samples, the specimens were placed on a piece of absorbing paper for drying. The dried specimens were card-mounted and labelled. Illustrations were done using an Olympus AX70 microscope and Olympus SZX9 stereomicroscope equipped with a BMZ-04-DZ digital imaging system (Behin Pajouhesh Co., Iran). A series of four or five captured images was merged into a single in-focus image using the image-stacking software Combine ZP1.0. Morphological terminology follows Nixon (1957), Masner & García (2002), Quadros & Brandao (2017), Chemyreva & Kolyada (2019), and Hübner et al. (2024). A map of the distribution of species is generated using SimpleMappr (Shorthouse, 2010). Specimens are deposited in the insect collection of the Department of Entomology, Tarbiat Modares University, Tehran (TMUC) and the Research Institute of Forests and Rangelands, Tehran (RIFR).
The following abbreviations are used: A1–A15 = antennomeres: segments of the antenna; they are numbered from the scape (A1) to the apical segment (A15), OOL = ocular ocellar line: the shortest distance between the posterior ocellus and the eye, POL = posterior ocellar line: the shortest distance between the posterior ocelli.
Results
Family Diapriidae Haliday, 1833
Subfamily Belytinae Förster, 1856
Genus Zygota Förster, 1856
Type species: Belyta abdominalis Nees van Esenbeck, designated by Ashmead (1893).
Diagnosis
Body always black; males and females alate; occipital carina with or without occipital pit; fore tibiae modified in some males or bear several stiff setae (Figs 1E, 2B, 3B); submetapleural carina missing or reduced; radial cell long, open at apex in most species (Figs 1D, 2C, 3C); angle between pterostigmal and marginal veins at most 120 degrees; some species with small depression or micro-puncture sculpture on S2 in anterior half; male genitalia short and stout, apex of aedeagus truncate or rounded, digitus large; complete ovipositor always short, at most as long as pygidium. For further details, see Hübner et al. (2024).
Zygota abdominalis (Nees, 1834) Fig. 1A
Belyta abdominalis Nees, 1834: 344, male.
Zygota abdominalis: Macek, 1997: 37, neotype male.
Material examined: Golestan Province: Aliabad, Zarringol (36°48′58″ N, 55°02′13″ E, 694 m a.s.l), 14 May 2016 (2♂♂) (TMUC). Loh Forest (37°20′43″ N, 55°40′40″ E, 753 m a.s.l.), 14 May 2016 (2♂♂) (TMUC). Kordkuy, Darazno Forest (36°40′06″ N, 54°08′03″ E, 2179 m a.s.l.), 12 June 2016 (1♂) (TMUC); collector: Samira Farahani. Shast Kola Forest (36°44′10″ N, 54°24′11″ E, 754 m a.s.l.), 11 November 2019 (2♂♂) (RIFR). Mazandaran Province: Glandarud (36°26′56″ N, 51°51′20″ E, 1407 m a.s.l.): 23 July 2018 (1♂) (RIFR); 27 August 2018 (10♂♂) (TMUC). Neka Forest (36°30′00″ N, 53°27′14″ E, 828 m a.s.l.): 15 May 2018 (2♂♂) (TMUC); 24 June 2018 (2♂♂) (TMUC); 23 July 2018 (4♂♂) (RIFR); 19 October 2018 (3♂♂) (TMUC). Neka Forest (36°21′43″ N, 53°32′56″ E, 1495 m a.s.l.): 24 July 2018 (51♂♂, 3♀♀) (TMUC); 24 June 2018 (1♂) (RIFR). Kheiroodkenar Forest (36°34′36″ N, 51°34′37″ E, 722 m a.s.l.), 27 August 2018 (1♂) (RIFR). Guilan Province: Rezvanshahr (37°31′00″ N, 49°02′07″ E, 199 m a.s.l.), 13 May 2018 (3♂♂) (RIFR). Shafaroud Forest (37°28′18″ N, 48°49′23″ E, 1114 m a.s.l.): 24 June 2018 (17♂♂) (RIFR); 25 August 2018 (21♂♂) (TMUC). Amlash (36°58′31″ N, 50°07′03.1″ E, 1380 m a.s.l.), 24 July 2018 (1♂) (TMUC). Collector: Farzaneh Kazerani.
Comparative diagnosis
The male of Zygota abdominalis (Nees, 1834) closely resembles Z. villosa Macek, 1997 but differs as follows: propodeal plicae parallel posteriorly (vs. divergent in Z. villosa); pronotal shoulders distinct (vs. indistinct in Z. villosa) (Macek, 1997). Body length (male): 3.1–3.5 mm; forewing length: 2.3–2.5 mm; antennae length 2.8–3 mm; Head width in dorsal view 1.35× its length (Fig. 1B); POL 0.85× OOL; A1 1.25× length of A3 (Fig. 1F); flagellomeres cylindrical; A3 with a shallow emargination on the basal third; penultimate antennal segment 2.6–3.0× longer than wide (Fig. 1F); fore tibia simple, lacking a row of thick setae (Fig. 1E); anterior pit of scutellum semicircular (Fig. 1C); radial cell elongated; marginal vein 0.6–0.7× the distance between itself and the basal vein (Fig. 1D); petiole with longitudinal carinae; its dorsal length 1.25× of width; sternite of second metasomal segment with small micro-puncture depression in its anterior part.
Coloration: head, thorax, and petiole black (Figs 1A, B, C); abdomen brown (Fig. 1A); legs brownish-yellow; A1 and A2 pale brown, remaining segments brown (Fig. 1F); tegula and wing veins brown (Fig. 1D).
Distribution (Fig. 4): Western Palearctic Region: Czech Republic, Germany, Poland (Macek, 1997), Russia (European part) (Hübner et al., 2024), Iran (new record – Guilan, Mazandaran, and Golestan Provinces).
Biology: Unknown.
Zygota nigra (Thomson, 1859) Fig. 2A
Belyta nigra Thomson, 1859: 175, female.
Aclista lanceolata Kieffer, 1909. Synonymized by Macek (1997).
Material examined: Mazandaran Province: Neka Forest (36°21′43″ N, 53°32′56″ E, 1495 m a.s.l.): 24 July 2018 (3♂♂) (TMUC); 24 June 2018 (2♂♂) (RIFR). Collector: Farzaneh Kazerani.
Comparative diagnosis
Male of Zygota nigra (Thomson, 1859) closely resembles Z. parallela (Thomson, 1859) but differs as follows: fore tibiae without modification (vs. slightly modified in Z. parallela), and basal third of F1 not emarginate (vs. emarginate in Z. parallela) (Macek, 1997). Body length (male): 3.6–3.9 mm; forewing length: 3.3–3.5 mm; antennae length 3.8–3.9 mm; head width 1.3× its length; POL 0.75× OOL; A1 equal to or slightly shorter than A3 (1:1.1; Fig. 2B); all flagellomeres cylindrical; A3 with a shallow depression on the basal fifth (Fig. 2B); penultimate antennal segment 3.8–4.0× longer than wide; fore tibia simple, bearing a row of thick setae (Fig. 2D); anterior pit of scutellum semicircular; radial cell elongated (Fig. 2C); marginal vein 0.6–0.8× the distance between itself and the basal vein (Fig. 2C); petiole with longitudinal carinae; dorsal length 1.3× its width. S2 without depression and micro-puncture in its anterior part.
Coloration: body dark brown to black (Fig. 2A); antenna and wing veins yellowish-brown (Figs 2B, C); mandibles, tegula, and legs brownish-yellow (Figs 2A, D).
Distribution (Fig. 4): Western Palearctic Region: Czech Republic, Slovakia, Germany, Sweden, Algeria, Russia (European part) (Macek, 1997; Chemyreva, 2019), and Iran (new record – Mazandaran Province).
Biology: Unknown.

Fig. 1: Zygota abdominalis (Nees, 1834), male. A) General habitus, lateral view; B) Head, dorsal view; C) Thorax, dorsal view; D) Forewing; E) Foreleg; F) Antenna.
Zygota ruficornis (Curtis, 1831) Fig. 3A
Cinetus ruficornis Curtis, 1831: 380, female.
Aclista dentatipes Kieffer, 1908: 447. Synonymized by Macek (1997).
Aclista norvegica Kieffer, 1912: 20. Synonymized by Macek (1997).
Zygota reticulata Kozlov, 1978: 575, female. Synonymized by Hübner et al. (2024)
Material examined: Mazandaran Province: Neka Forest (36°21′43″ N, 53°32′56″ E, 1495 m a.s.l.): 24 June 2018 (8♂♂) (RIFR); 24 July 2018 (14♂♂, 1♀) (TMUC). Neka Forest (36°30′00″ N, 53°27′14″ E, 828 m a.s.l.): 15 May 2018 (1♂) (TMUC); 24 June 2018 (1♂) (RIFR). Glandarud (36°26′56″ N, 51°51′20″ E, 1407 m a.s.l.), 23 July 2018 (1♂) (TMUC). Golestan Province: Shast Kola Forest (36°44′10″ N, 54°24′11″ E, 754 m a.s.l.), 25 June 2019 (5♂♂) (TMUC). Collector: Farzaneh Kazerani.

Fig. 2. Zygota nigra (Thomson, 1859), male. A) General habitus, lateral view; B) Basal antennal segments; C) Forewing; D) Fore leg.
Comparative diagnosis
Male of Zygota ruficornis (Curtis, 1831) closely resembles Z. pubescens but differs in genital morphology: the digitus bears a spine, projecting at a distinct angle (vs. deflected toward the base of digitus in Z. pubescence) (Macek, 1997; Hübner et al., 2024). Body length (male): 2.6–3.2 mm; forewing length: 2.2–2.8 mm; antennae length 2.6–2.8 mm; head width 1.3× its length; POL 0.75× OOL; A1 slightly longer than A3 (1.1:1; Fig. 3B); flagellomeres cylindrical; A3 with a shallow emargination on the basal 0.4 (Fig. 3B); penultimate antennal segment 2.9–3.3× longer than wide; fore tibia grooved, angulate, and bearing thick setae apically (Fig. 3D); anterior pit of scutellum semicircular; radial cell elongated (Fig. 3C); marginal vein 0.6–0.8× the distance between itself and the basal vein (Fig. 3C); abdominal petiole with longitudinal carinae; dorsal length 1.4× its width; S2 with a small area of micropuncture in anterior half; digitus armed with one long curved spine.
Coloration: head, thorax, and petiole black (Fig. 3A); abdomen brown (Fig. 3A); antenna and tegula brown (Figs 3A, B); mandibles, wing veins, and legs brownish-yellow; fore femur of third leg black (Fig. 3A).
Distribution (Fig. 4): Western Palearctic Region: Austria, Czech Republic, France, Germany, Hungary, Ireland, Norway, Poland, Russia (European part), Scotland, Slovenia, U.K. (Nixon, 1957; Macek, 1997; Chemyreva, 2019; Hübner et al., 2024), Iran (new record – Mazandaran and Golestan Provinces).
Biology: Unknown.
Key to the Identification of Zygota Species in Iran (Males)
- Fore leg modified, bearing long apical setae ( 3D) ……………..Zygota ruficornis (Curtis, 1831)
- Fore leg simple, with or without thick setae (Figs 1E, 2D) ……………………………..2
- Scape longer than first flagellomere ( 1F); 13th antennal segment <3.0× longer than wide; S2 with small micro-puncture depression in its anterior part … Zygota abdominalis (Nees, 1834)
- Scape equal to or shorter than first flagellomere ( 2B); 13th antennal segment >3.5× longer than wide; S2 without depression and micro-puncture in its anterior part … Zygota nigra (Thomson, 1859)

Fig. 3. Zygota ruficornis (Curtis, 1831), male. A) General habitus, lateral view; B) Basal antennal segments; C) Forewing; D) Fore leg.

Fig. 4. Distribution map of Zygota abdominalis (blue), Z. nigra (red), and Z. ruficornis (green) in the world.
Discussion
The results of this study added three species of the family Diapriidae to the Iranian fauna. Including the species reported in the present study, the number of Iranian species of Diapriidae increased to 34 species from 15 genera. The species of Zygota prefer humid habitats and are more abundant at high latitudes or at significant altitudes in the mountains, which explains the fact that the majority of these wasps were collected from the Hyrcanian Forest in northern Iran at altitudes of more than 750 meters. Only a few males of Zygota abdominalis were collected below 750 m in May (199 m and 694 m) or at the end of summer (722 m). Very few female samples (Z. abdominalis, 3 females; Z. ruficornis, 1 female) were collected during this study. Previous studies have also shown that females of Zygota species are rare in collections throughout their habitat and are much less likely to be caught in traps than males (Macek, 1997; Hübner et al., 2024). This phenomenon is not unique to Diapriidae and has been observed in other parasitoid groups such as Ichneumonidae (Aguiar & Santos, 2010). This disparity likely reflects different flight behaviors or activity patterns during mate-searching for females, potentially increasing their exposure to traps (Skvarla et al., 2021).
The primary hosts of the Zygota species are unknown, but these wasps are likely endoparasitoids of Diptera (Hübner et al., 2024). There are 38 Zygota species in the Palaearctic region (Chemyreva, 2019; Hübner et al., 2024), but this genus has not yet been recorded from Western Asia and the Middle East (see Gadallah et al., 2023). Zygota ruficornis has been known as the most common species in Europe (Macek, 1997). However, in this study, the majority of the collected samples were of the species Z. abdominalis. Anyway, more studies are needed to clarify the distribution and species diversity of this genus in Iran.
This study was conducted in the northern slopes of the Alborz Mountains (Golestan, Guilan, and Mazandaran provinces), a region representing 10% of the Caucasus biodiversity hotspot as a globally significant area renowned for its exceptional biological diversity in temperate forests (Noroozi et al., 2019; Japoshvili & Ljubomirov, 2023). The Hyrcanian forests within this hotspot are recognized as a center of species richness in Iran, as demonstrated by prior research on other Hymenoptera groups such as Chrysidoidea (Barahoei et al., 2022), Chalcidoidea (Rahmani et al., 2022; Shojaey et al., 2025), and Proctotrupidae (Izadizadeh et al., 2022). Accordingly, more than 90 % of the species of Iranian Diapriidae have been reported from Hyrcanian forests (Izadizadeh et al., 2020, 2021, 2023a, 2023b, 2023c, 2023d, 2024).
Author's Contributions
Mohammad Izadizadeh: sorting, identification of the specimens, photographs, draft preparation; Ali Asghar Talebi: visualization, conceptualization, supervision, draft preparation, review and editing; Vasilisa G. Chemyreva: contribution in identification of the specimens, review of the manuscript; Samira Farahani: collecting of specimens, review of the manuscript; Farzaneh Kazerani: collecting of specimens, review of the manuscript; Ali Ameri: review of the manuscript; All authors approved the final version of the manuscript.
Author's Information
Funding
This research was financially supported by Tarbiat Modares University, Tehran, Iran (M. Izadizadeh and A.A. Talebi), the Research Institute of Forests and Rangelands, Tehran, Iran (S.Farahani and F.Kazerani), and the Russian state research project No. 125012901042-9 (V. G. Chemyreva).
Data Availability Statement
The specimens collected are deposited in the insect collection of the Department of Entomology, Tarbiat Modares University, Tehran (TMUC), and the Research Institute of Forests and Rangelands, Tehran (RIFR), and are available from the curator, upon request.
Acknowledgments
We would like to thank the Department of Entomology, Tarbiat Modares University, Tehran, Iran, and the Research Institute of Forests and Rangelands, Tehran, Iran, for providing laboratory facilities, specimen curation resources, and technical assistance essential to this research. We cordially thank the anonymous reviewers for their critical review and constructive comments, which significantly helped the improvement of the manuscript.
Ethics Approval
Insects were used in this study. All applicable international, national, and institutional guidelines for the care and use of animals were followed. This article does not contain any studies with human participants performed by any of the authors.
Conflict of Interest
The authors declare that there is no conflict of interest regarding the publication of this paper.
Generative AI statement
The authors declare that no Gen AI was used in the creation of this manuscript.
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Citation: Izadizadeh, M., Talebi, A. A., Chemyreva, V. G., Farahani, S., Kazerani, F. & Ameri, A. (2025) First record of the genus Zygota Förster, 1856 (Hymenoptera: Diapriidae, Belytinae) in Western Asia, with three new records of species from Iran. J. Entomol. Soc. Iran, 45 (4), 529–539.
DOI : https://doi.org/10.22034/jesi.45.4.4
URL: https://jesi.areeo.ac.ir/article_131275.html
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