“…This nuclear insertion is displaced to one side (asymmetric) as we also observed in Microstigmus. Despite these exceptions, the acrosome in Hymenoptera is made up of an acrosomal vesicle and a perforatorium (bilayered pattern) ( Cruz-Höfling et al, 1970, Wheeler et al, 1990, Quicke et al, 1992, Newman and Quicke, 1999a, Lino-Neto and Dolder, 2001a, Lino-Neto and Dolder, 2002, Zama et al, 2001, Zama et al, 2004, Zama et al, 2005c, Báo et al, 2004, Badke et al, 2005, Fiorillo et al, 2005a, Fiorillo et al, 2005band Mancini et al, 2006 or includes an additional third layer, an extracellular sheath, which covers all the acrosomal vesicle and part of the nucleus ( Quicke et al, 1992, Newman and Quicke, 1998, Newman and Quicke, 1999b, Lino-Neto et al, 1999, Lino-Neto et al, 2000aand Lino-Neto and Dolder, 2001a. As a rule, the perforatorium is dense and compact, but in some bees ( Báo et al, 2004, Fiorillo et al, 2005a and in the Vespidae Agelaia vicina ( Mancini et al, 2006), it appears slightly paracrystalline.…”