North-Western Palaearctic species of Pristiphora (Hymenoptera, Tenthredinidae)
Author
Prous, Marko
Author
Kramp, Katja
Author
Liston 1, Veli VikbergAndrew
text
Journal of Hymenoptera Research
2017
59
1
190
http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/jhr.59.12565
journal article
http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/jhr.59.12565
1314-2607-59-1
598C5BB321364D91B522FA14D8874A52
Pristiphora melanocarpa (Hartig, 1840)
Figs 191, 264
Nematus melanocarpus
Hartig, 1840: 27. Lectotype ♀ (GBIF-GISHym3349; designated by
Prous et al. 2016
) in ZSM, examined. Type locality: North Germany (according to introduction).
Nematus funerulus
Costa, 1859: 20-21. Syntypes ♂♀ possibly in MZUN, not examined. Type locality: vicinity of Naples, Campania, Italy. Synonymised with
P. wustneii
[sic!] by
Ghigi (1905)
.
Nematus wuestneii
Stein, 1885 [mandatory correction of incorrect original spelling N.
Wuestneii
]: 304. Lectotype ♀ (designated by
Prous et al. 2016
) in BMNH, examined. Type locality: Chodov [Chodau], Czech Republic.
Pristiphora ortinga
Kincaid, 1900: 349-350. Holotype ♀ (USNMENT00778199) in USNM, not examined. Type locality: Kukak Bay, Alaska, USA. Synonymised with
P. melanocarpa
by by
Smith (1979)
.
Similar species.
The most similar species is
P. ruficornis
, which has paler antennae compared to
P. melanocarpa
. Females have the ventral side of antennae uniformly black (Fig. 14) or only slightly paler, while
P. ruficornis
has a distinctly paler ventral side (Fig. 15). Males of
P. melanocarpa
also tend to have darker antennae than in
P. ruficornis
, but penis valves should be studied in specimens that have conspicuously pale antennae. The valvispina of the penis valve bends distinctly more sharply (being almost L-shaped) and is usually narrower (Fig. 264) than in
P. ruficornis
(Fig. 266).
Genetic data.
Based on COI barcode sequences, specimens are divided between three BIN clusters (BOLD:AAG3540, BOLD:ACZ4465, BOLD:ACZ4466), two of them (BOLD:ACZ4465 and BOLD:ACZ4466) including also
P. ruficornis
(Fig. 1 in
Prous et al. 2016
). These BIN clusters form a monophyletic group (Fig. 4) and minimum distances between them are only 1.13-1.50%. Based on nuclear data, maximum within species divergence is 0.9% (based on seven specimens and NaK, TPI, or both genes) and the nearest neighbour is 0.0% different (
P. ruficornis
, only TPI including introns).
Host plants.
Betula pendula
Roth (
Kangas 1985
),
B. pubescens
Ehrh.,
B. nana
L. (
Prous et al. 2016
). The records from
Salix
are doubtful (
Prous et al. 2016
).
Distribution and material examined.
Holarctic. Specimens studied are from Canada, Estonia, Finland, France, Germany, Norway, Russia (Primorsky Krai), and Sweden.