Talk:Encyrtidae

Latest comment: 7 years ago by Kunadam in topic Host range

Formatting edit

All taxa above genus are plural by design and language (borrowed/created from Latin or Greek plurals). I can't help it if some biologists or taxonomists are ignorant of this. They probably think "bacteria" are singular, too. The only sense where Encrytidae (and the like) would be singular is "Encrytidae is the name of ...". In that case, leave the word "name" in place to recognize the sense.165.225.34.56 (talk) 21:03, 16 June 2016 (UTC)Reply

Cite your sourcing for this assertion that the grammtical usage you are removing is NOT commonly used by taxonomists and WP. WP works via consensus and the biology working groups all use the singular form. You are the one editing against consensus, as shown by many editors reverting your edits.--Kevmin § 00:27, 17 June 2016 (UTC)Reply
We are not writing in Latin, but English. Both singular and plural uses of the names of taxa are commonly used. Do not make changes without consensus. Peter coxhead (talk) 05:33, 17 June 2016 (UTC)Reply

Host range edit

I do not know if Hemiptera is the primary host of Encyrtidae or not, but that part of page gave me the feeling that other hosts are rare or do not even exist (maybe except in hyperparasitoids). But a quick look at some papers clearly indicate that beetles (Coleoptera) and Lepidoptera can be their hosts too.
All polyembrionic genera (Copidosoma, Copidosomopsis and Ageniaspis) parasitize the larvae of moths according to Strand and Grbic (Strand, M. R. and Grbić, M. 1997. The development and evolution of polyembryonic insects. - In: A. P. Roger és P. S. Gerald (eds.), Current Topics in Developmental Biology. Academic Press, pp. 121-159) — Preceding unsigned comment added by Kunadam (talkcontribs) 08:44, 13 September 2016 (UTC)Reply