The genus Gasteruption Latreille, 1796 (Hymenoptera: Gasteruptiidae) in the Czech Republic and Slovakia: distribution, checklist, ecology, and conservation status
Author
Bogusch, Petr
text
Zootaxa
2021
2021-02-24
4935
1
1
63
journal article
7438
10.11646/zootaxa.4935.1.1
5ec55ddd-306e-45a9-9925-296caf2c9bf6
1175-5326
4559034
29188279-3AC9-493D-9146-7A8F89F8991A
Gasteruption hastator
(Fabricius, 1804)
Figs. 80–90
.
For synonymy see
van Achterberg & Talebi (2014)
.
Diagnosis:
A smaller species with body length of females
8–11 mm
, ovipositor length is
1.8–2.8 mm
. Male body length is
8–11 mm
. Ovipositor is short, similar to
G. assectator
, 1.0–1.4× as long as third tibia. Species typical with the colouration, many parts of the body are whole or partly orange or light brown, especially in females. Males are often dark but legs (tibiae) are reddish, too. There is a typical triangular depression in the apex of the clypeus of both sexes.
FIGURES 80–89.
Gasteruption hastator
(Fabricius, 1804)
. 80—female, lateral habitus, 81—male, lateral habitus, 82—female, lateral head, 83—female, frontal head, 84—female, dorsal head, 85—female, lateral mesosoma, 86—female, dorsal mesosoma, 87—female, third leg, 88—male, third leg, 89—female, forewing. Scale bars represent 1 mm.
Distribution:
(
Fig. 90
): Palaearctic species. Recorded from most of south and central Europe, namely
Austria
,
Belgium
,
Bosnia and Herzegovina
,
Bulgaria
,
Croatia
,
Czech Republic
,
France
+
Corsica
,
Germany
,
Greece
+
Crete
,
Hungary
,
Italy
+
Sardinia
and
Sicily
, Macedonia,
Montenegro
,
Netherlands
,
Poland
,
Portugal
,
Romania
,
Russia
,
Serbia
,
Slovakia
,
Spain
,
Switzerland
,
Turkey
and
Ukraine
(
Ferrière 1946
;
Šedivý 1958
;
Oehlke 1984
;
Madl 1988
; 1990;
Pagliano & Scaramozzino 2000
;
van Achterberg 2013
;
Strumia & Pagliano 2014
;
van Achterberg & Talebi 2014
;
Žikić
et al.
2014
;
Ceccolini 2016
;
Madl & Mitroiu 2019
,
Wiśniowski 2020
, and personal records). Distributed also in North Africa, Middle East and Asia:
China
,
Iran
,
Jordan
,
Kazakhstan
,
Kyrgyzstan
,
Morocco
,
Syria
,
Tajikistan
,
Tunisia
and
Uzbekistan
(
van Achterberg & Talebi 2014
,
Özbek 2020
, and personal records).
Šedivý (1958
;
1989
) recorded this species both from the
Czech Republic
(
Bohemia
and
Moravia
) and from
Slovakia
. In both countries, it was recorded especially in lowlands in the warmest parts. It is rare and in recent times restricted to several parts of both countries (especially in the south). The number of localities are much lower after the year
1990 in
both countries—eight recent and 38 old localities in the
Czech Republic
and five recent and 20 old localities occurring in
Slovakia
. In
Bohemia
, it was recently recorded only in north-western dry and warm regions and one specimen in the south of the country (
Tab. 2
).
FIGURE 90.
Distribution map of
Gasteruption hastator
in the Czech Republic and Slovakia. Full circles represent distribution after 1990 and empty circles distribution until 1990.
Biology:
Recorded from May to August. This species differs in host biology from most species, because it parasitises the nests of ground-nesting hosts. It is mostly connected with the species of the family
Halictidae
:
Lasioglossum malachurum
(Kirby) (
Polidori
et al.
2009
)
,
Rophites algirus
Pérez
(
Westrich
et al.
1992
) and
Systropha curvicornis
(Scopoli)
and
Systropha planidens
Giraud (
Westrich 1989
)
. Ground-nesting species of other families were reported as hosts of this species by several authors:
Colletidae
:
Hylaeus
spp. (
Malyshev 1966
;
van Achterberg & Talebi 2014
), namely
Hylaeus variegatus
(Fabricius)
(
Höppner 1904
;
Oehlke 1984
;
Pagliano & Scaramozzino 2000
);
Crabronidae
:
Lestica subterranea
(Fabricius)
(
Höppner 1904
;
Oehlke 1984
;
Pagliano & Scaramozzino 2000
);
Megachilidae
:
Hoplitis tridentata
(Dufour & Perris)
(
Crosskey 1951
;
Oehlke 1984
;
Pagliano & Scaramozzino 2000
) and
Osmia
sp. (
Ferrière 1946
;
Gyorfi & Bajari 1962
;
Šedivý 1958
;
van Achterberg & Talebi 2014
), and
Vespidae
:
Antepipona laevigata
Bluethgen
(
Crosskey 1951
;
Oehlke 1984
;
Pagliano & Scaramozzino 2000
). It is hard to say if the species is specialised and these published records are based only on observations or if it is a generalist, which invades the nests of many species nesting in the ground or loess. It was reported from
Asteraceae
,
Apiaceae
, and sparsely also from
Fabaceae
(
Dorycnium herbaceum
) and
Ericaceae
(
Calunna vulgaris
) (
Wall 1994
).
Conservation:
This species probably has a similar biology to
G. freyi
and was also recently recorded from a much lower number of localities than in the past. The lower number of localities in both countries is certainly connected with their changes and ill-applied conservation methods in the 20
th
century. Classified as VU—vulnerable in both countries (
Tab. 2
).