The British species of Enicospilus (Hymenoptera: Ichneumonidae: Ophioninae)
Author
Broad, Gavin R.
D06689DE-526F-4CFA-8BEB-9FB38850754A
Dept. of Life Sciences, the Natural History Museum, Cromwell Road, London SW 7 5 BD, United Kingdom. & urn: lsid: zoobank. org: author: D 06689 DE- 526 F- 4 CFA- 8 BEB- 9 FB 38850754 A & Corresponding author: g. broad @ nhm. ac. uk
g.broad@nhm.ac.uk
Author
Shaw, Mark R.
EBB32AF8-6A45-4AB9-8131-24812F916E99
National Museums of Scotland, Chambers Street, Edinburgh EH 1 1 JF, United Kingdom. & E-mail: markshaw @ xenarcha. com & urn: lsid: zoobank. org: author: EBB 32 AF 8 - 6 A 45 - 4 AB 9 - 8131 - 24812 F 916 E 99
text
European Journal of Taxonomy
2016
2016-04-04
187
1
31
journal article
21973
10.5852/ejt.2016.187
984e9b18-d26e-4a46-8dce-d8aea73d88a2
2118-9773
3837502
8ACE88A9-6CC8-4824-837B-3F20311E7957
Genus
Enicospilus
Stephens, 1835
Taxonomy of British
Enicospilus
There have been no identification keys to British
Enicospilus
since
Gauld’s (1973)
key and update (
Gauld 1974
). Unfortunately, these works contained significant misidentifications and lumped some species together. This is not surprising, as Gauld had access to rather small sample sizes and relied heavily on the number and shape of fore wing sclerites, which are of great use in
Enicospilus
taxonomy but are, unfortunately, almost identical in five of the British species. There has never been a thorough revision of European
Enicospilus
species, which is reflected in some frequent misunderstandings regarding species names and limits, although
Viktorov’s (1957)
key is very useful. In Britain,
Enicospilus
can be divided into three species-groups, based on the sclerites in the fore wing discosubmarginal cell:
E. inflexus
and
E. undulatus
entirely lack sclerites (and have been referred to the genus
Allocamptus
Förster, 1869
by some authors);
E. merdarius
(=
Ophion tournieri
Vollenhoven, 1879
) and
E. repentinus
have a welldefined proximal sclerite, with the central sclerite either absent or transparent; and the remaining five species (the
ramidulus
species-group) have both the proximal and central sclerites pigmented. There has been confusion in each of these species-groups, although it is within the
ramidulus
complex that species are most morphogically similar and hence have been persistently confused.
Gauld (1974)
separated the very similar
E. inflexus
(
Ratzeburg, 1844
)
and
E. undulatus
(
Gravenhorst, 1829
)
, that he had previously (
Gauld 1973
) confounded under the name
E. undulatus
; and
Viktorov (1957)
had already separated
E. repentinus
and
E. tournieri
(but see below), which
Gauld (1973)
had confused by identifying British specimens of
E. merdarius
(=
tournieri
) as
E. repentinus
, whereas the true
E. repentinus
had not been found in Britain at that time.
Most authors have recognised
E. merdarius
auctt. (but see below) as a separate species from
E. ramidulus
(
Linnaeus, 1758
)
. Although
Gauld (1973)
stated that there are specimens intermediate between
E. merdarius
auctt. and
E. ramidulus
, and treated them as synonymous, we have seen no such specimens, and
Gauld & Mitchell (1981)
subsequently recognised the two as separate species. Differences in opinion regarding the status of
E. merdarius
auctt. and
E. ramidulus
have arisen because, although
E. ramidulus
has a distinctive identifying feature in the black-tipped metasoma,
E. merdarius
auctt. has no distinctive features, which we now know is because it is in fact a complex of similar species.
Aubert (1966)
had already separated off
E. cerebrator
Aubert, 1966
, a species subsequently recognised in several European countries but never sought in Britain. We have found
E. cerebrator
to be widespread in Britain and also discovered a third species in this complex, which had no name, described here as
E. myricae
sp. nov.
The identity of
E. merdarius
has been ignored since
Fitton (1984)
designated a
lectotype
; both before and after
Fitton’s (1984)
lectotype
designation, the name
E. merdarius
has frequently been applied to any Palaearctic
Enicospilus
with two discrete fore wing sclerites and lacking either a dark tip to the metasoma or dark patches on the mesosoma (i.e., excluding
E. ramidulus
and
E. combustus
(
Gravenhorst, 1829
))
. Unfortunately, the
lectotype
of
Ophion merdarius
Gravenhorst, 1829
is the species that has generally been called
E. tournieri
, with the result that literature citations for
E. merdarius
do not refer to the species properly called
E. merdarius
(quite apart from the many misidentifications). Remarkably, for such a widespread species, there is only one potential synonym of
E. merdarius
auctt. (i.e., the larger species in the complex that includes
E. cerebrator
and
E. myricae
sp. nov.
), namely
Ophion adustus
Haller, 1885
, synonymised under
E. merdarius
by
Horstmann (
1997
)
on the basis of the brief original description, which could equally refer to
E. cerebrator
or
E. myricae
sp. nov.
The type specimen(s) of
O. adustus
cannot be found so, to stabilise usage of the name, we designate a
neotype
for
O. adustus
, meaning that the widespread, large species, usually referred to as
Enicospilus merdarius
, should be called
Enicospilus adustus
. Allowing for his misconception of
E. merdarius
, this is in line with the synonymy proposed by
Horstmann (
1997
)
.