Review of the genus Anaphes Haliday, 1833 (Hymenoptera: Mymaridae) in Russia, part 1: subgenus Anaphes s. str.
Author
Triapitsyn, S. V.
text
Far Eastern Entomologist
2021
2021-06-06
432
1
48
http://dx.doi.org/10.25221/fee.432.1
journal article
10.25221/fee.432.1
2713-2196
7165990
8EBC19E9-BA98-44AF-ACEB-11C085CF06B6
Anaphes
(
Anaphes
)
nipponicus
Kuwayama, 1932
Figs 70–76
Anaphes nipponicus
Kuwayama, 1932: 93
.
Anaphes nipponicus
Kuwayama
: Togashi, 1974: 12 (host egg parasitism); Huber, 1992: 75
(list); Storozheva, 1989: 14–16 (host in the Russian Far East); Storozheva, 1990a: 113
(host); Storozheva, 1990b: 29 (parasitism, biology); Triapitsyn & Proshchalykin, 2012:
207 (list), Samková
et al.
, 2017: 690–697 (taxonomic history,
type
information,
redescription, comparison with
A. flavipes
, distribution, host association); Triapitsyn &
Tselikh, 2019: 194 (list).
Anaphes
(
Anaphes
)
nipponicus
Kuwayama
: Huber & Thuróczy, 2018: 27 (list,
type
information).
MATERIAL EXAMINED
.
Russia
:
Primorskii krai, Spasskiy rayon, Novosel’skoye,
sovkhoz Novosel’skiy,
2.VII 1986
(Buryi), from eggs of
Oulema oryzae
(Kuwayama, 1931)
on rice [1 badly shriveled
♀
(
Fig. 73
) + 2 incomplete specimens of undetermined sex +
parasitized eggs of the host (
Figs 70, 71
),
IBPV
], examined virtually (M.Yu. Proshchalykin,
Figs 70–74.
Anaphes
(
Anaphes
)
nipponicus
(Novosel’skoye, Spasskiy rayon, Primorskii
krai,
Russia
). 70) Parasitized eggs of the host,
Oulema oryzae
, in rice leaf, 71) wings of unknown sex, 72) labels, 73) habitus of female in lateral view, 74) labels.
personal communication); the original labels (in Russian,
Figs 72, 74
) also include the initial misidentification as “
Anaphes flavipes
” (determined by N.A. Storozheva).
EXTRALIMITAL
MATERIAL EXAMINED
.
Japan
:
Honshu Island
:
Ishikawa Prefecture
,
Wajima
,
VII 1973
, from eggs of
Oulema oryzae
on rice (
I. Togashi
) [
5 ♀
,
3 ♂
,
ELKU
]
(determined by
T
. Tachikawa in 1976).
Kanagawa Prefecture
,
Yokohama
,
10.VIII 1920
(C.
P. Clausen) [
1 ♀
,
UCRC
].
Republic of Korea
:
Kyungki-do, Kwangiu, Dochek, Taehwasan,
5.VIII 1998
(
J.-B. Leon
,
S.-H. Lee
) [
1 ♀
,
UCRC
]
.
Figs 75, 76.
Anaphes
(
Anaphes
)
nipponicus
, female (Wajima, Ishikawa Prefecture, Honshu
Island, Japan). 75) Head and antenna, 76) fore wing.
DIAGNOSIS. FEMALE. Diagnosed, redescribed and illustrated in detail by Samková
et al.
(2017) except for the clava and the wings. Here I provide illustrations of the antenna (
Fig.
75) and fore wing (
Fig. 76
) to facilitate its recognition while using the key. In the reared specimens from Wajima,
Ishikawa Prefecture
,
Japan
, antenna (
Fig. 75
) with F2 very short and the combined length of F1 and F2 usually slightly shorter than F3 or at most about as long as F3, clava 3.1–3.9× as long as wide, a little shorter (about 0.9×) than the combined length of F5 and F6, with 6 mps; fore wing (
Fig. 76
)
0.63 mm
long, 6.4× as long as wide,
longest marginal seta 1.3× maximum wing width, marginal space separated from medial space by 1 complete line of setae; hind wing about 19× as long as wide, longest marginal seta 3.3×
maximum wing width, disc with 1 irregular, short row of a few setae apically; metatarsomere
1 at most about as long as metatarsomere 2.
MALE. Known (Kuwayama, 1932) and redescribed by Samková
et al.
(2017).
DISTRIBUTION.
Russia
;
China
(
Fujian
,
Taiwan)
,
Japan
(Bai, 2007; Samková
et al.
,
2017), and
Republic of Korea
*.
HOST.
Chrysomelidae
:
Oulema oryzae
(Kuwayama, 1931)
. Under quarantine laboratory conditions in
Washington State
,
USA
,
Anaphes nipponicus
readily attacked, oviposited and successfully completed two generations on eggs of the fictitious host,
O. melanopus
(Miller
& Roberts, 2009).
REMARKS. I personally looked for the missing
syntypes
of
A. nipponicus
in the collection of Insect Museum, National Institute for Agro-Environmental Sciences, NARO, Tsukuba,
Ibaraki
,
Japan
(
ITLJ
), to where
S. Kuwayama’s
collection had been moved (Samková
et al.
,
2017), during a brief visit in
November 2019
, but could not locate any.
The
examined specimens from
Wajima City
,
Ishikawa Prefecture
,
Japan
are vouchers of the study by
Togashi
(1974).
Anaphes
(
Anaphes
)
nipponicus
of
Fujian
,
China
origin was evaluated in quarantine in
Washington State
as a potential neoclassical biological control agent against the cereal leaf beetle
O. melanopus
; it was concluded that it was not well adapted to the Pacific Northwest of the
USA
and thus not suitable for introduction and release against this invasive pest
(Miller & Roberts, 2009; Roberts, 2016).
Morphological separation of
A.
(
Anaphes
)
nipponicus
from
A.
(
Anaphes
)
flavipes
, as given by Samková
et al.
(2017), is not clearcut; their diagnosis of the former nominal species was not based on a sufficient number of complete female specimens. Their genetic comparison is thus highly warranted.