Integrative taxonomy and analysis of species richness patterns of nocturnal Darwin wasps of the genus Enicospilus Stephens (Hymenoptera, Ichneumonidae, Ophioninae) in Japan
Author
Shimizu, So
Laboratory of Insect Biodiversity and Ecosystem Science, Graduate School of Agricultural Science, Kobe University, Rokkodaicho 1 - 1, Nada, Kobe, Hyogo 657 - 8501, Japan & DC and Overseas Challenge Program for Young Researchers, Japan Society for the Promotion of Science, Tokyo, Japan & Depertment of Life Sciences, the Natural History Museum, Cromwell Road, London SW 7 5 BD, UK
https://orcid.org/0000-0002-5202-4552
parasitoidwasp.sou@gmail.com
Author
Broad, Gavin R.
Depertment of Life Sciences, the Natural History Museum, Cromwell Road, London SW 7 5 BD, UK
https://orcid.org/0000-0001-7223-5333
Author
Maeto, Kaoru
Laboratory of Insect Biodiversity and Ecosystem Science, Graduate School of Agricultural Science, Kobe University, Rokkodaicho 1 - 1, Nada, Kobe, Hyogo 657 - 8501, Japan
text
ZooKeys
2020
990
1
144
http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.990.55542
journal article
http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.990.55542
1313-2970-990-1
7B73642C278D40F89091B26213C9A704
9F51F78CD53F5005A305DE65494002C4
Enicospilus combustus (Gravenhorst, 1829)
Figure 13
Ophion combustus
Gravenhorst, 1829: 701; type lost?
Specimens examined.
Total of 54 specimens (39♀♀14♂♂ and 1 unsexed): England (18♀♀2♂♂), Japan (19♀♀10♂♂ and 1 unsexed), Russia (1♂), unknown (2♀♀1♂).
Distribution.
Oriental and Palaearctic regions (
Yu et al. 2016
); this is a predominantly Palaearctic species that may be restricted to there, although
Lee et al. (2011)
reported this species from the Oriental region, probably based on a misidentification.
JAPAN: [
Hokkaido
] (
Uchida 1928
,
1935
; present study); [
Honshu
] (
Uchida 1935
; present study); [
Tohoku
] Aomori (
Uchida 1928
; present study), Yamagata*, and Fukushima (
Uchida 1928
; present study); [Hokuriku] Niigata (
Uchida 1928
; present study); [
Kanto-Koshin
] Tochigi (
Uchida 1928
; present study), Nagano*, and
Tokyo
(
Uchida 1928
,
1930
); [
Tokai
] Gifu (
Uchida 1928
); [Kinki]
Kyoto
* and
Hyogo
*; [
Chugoku
] Hiroshima*; [Shikoku] (
Uchida 1935
); [
Kyushu
] (
Uchida 1935
), Fukuoka*. *New records.
Bionomics.
Reared from one species of
Noctuidae
in Japan:
Trachea tokiensis
(Butler, 1884) (
Uchida 1928
,
1930
). Notodontid and noctuid moths are recorded as hosts, but reliable records are only from
Noctuidae
of the subfamily
Hadeninae
(e.g.,
Broad and Shaw 2016
).
Differential diagnosis.
This species is usually very easily distinguished from all other Palaearctic
Enicospilus
species by the black mesosoma, thyridium, and posterior segments of metasoma, as in Fig.
13A
.
Enicospilus combustus
has sometimes been confused with
E. multidens
stat. rev.,
E. ramidulus
, and
E. shikokuensis
; moreover, some authors have treated
E. combustus
and
E. ramidulus
as a single species (e.g.,
Viktorov 1957
;
Townes et al. 1965
;
Gauld and Mitchell 1981
). However,
E. combustus
is easily separated from
E. shikokuensis
by the separated proximal and distal sclerites of fore wing fenestra, as in Fig.
13F
(proximal and distal sclerites usually obviously confluent in
E. shikokuensis
, as in Fig.
44F
), from
E. multidens
stat. rev. and
E. ramidulus
by the entirely more or less blackish mesosoma, as in Fig.
13A, E
(mesosoma entirely orange-brown in
E. multidens
stat. rev. and
E. ramidulus
, as in Figs
29A, E
and
39A, E
respectively). Moreover, this species is similar to
E. sharkeyi
sp. nov. in colour pattern (Figs
13
,
43
), however,
E. combustus
can be readily distinguished from it by many characters, such as separated proximal and distal sclerites of fore wing fenestra, as in Fig.
13F
(proximal and distal sclerites confluent in
E. sharkeyi
sp. nov., as in Fig.
43F
), larger central sclerite of fore wing fenestra, as in Fig.
13F
(central sclerite smaller in
E. sharkeyi
sp. nov., as in Fig.
43F
), wider lower face, as in Fig.
13B
(narrower in
E. sharkeyi
sp. nov., as in Fig.
43B
), etc.
Figure 13.
Enicospilus combustus
(Gravenhorst, 1829) ♀ from Japan
A
habitus
B
head, frontal view
C
head, dorsal view
D
head, lateral view
E
mesosoma, lateral view
F
central part of fore wing.