Aulacidae Evaniidae Gasteruptiidae †Anomopterellidae †Andreneliidae †Baissidae †Othniodellithidae †Praeaulacidae The Evanioidea are a small hymenopteran superfamily that includes three extant families, two of which (Aulacidae and Gasteruptiidae) are much more closely related to one another than they are to the remaining family, Evaniidae.
The rich fossil record, however, helps fill in the gaps between these lineages.
They all share the trait of having the metasoma attached very high above the hind coxae on the propodeum.
The oldest records of the group date to the Middle Jurassic, and were diverse from the Middle Jurassic to mid Cretaceous, however, during the mid-Cretaceous they were overtaken in diversity by the Ichneumonoidea, and since the end of the Cretaceous have a relatively scant fossil record.
[1] Early-diverging families Neoevaniodes Engel, 2006