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 caucasicum
(Guérin-Méneville, 1844)
Figs. 23–31
.
For synonymy see
van Achterberg & Talebi (2014)
.
Diagnosis:
A larger species, the body length of females is between
9–13 mm
, ovipositor length
6–9 mm
. Total length of males is
9–12 mm
. Species with a long ovipositor sheath in females (4.2–6.6× longer than third tibia), the apex of ovipositor sheath is whitish and 0.7–1.6× as long as third basitarsus. Occipital carina is wide, semi-transparent and collar-like, with a typical medial depression, which can be very conspicuous.
Gasteruption goberti
is similar in general appearance but is usually larger, has an elongated head and only small antesternal carina and third tibia without whitish markings,
Gasteruption laticeps
has narrow occipital carina with only a small pit-like medial depression, which can be rarely obsolescent. The sculpture of the head of
G. laticeps
is matte, fine and coriaceous, contrasting to the shiny and punctate head of
G. caucasicum
.
Distribution:
(
Fig. 31
): West-Palaearctic species. Widespread species in most of Europe, recorded from the following countries:
Austria
,
Belgium
,
Bulgaria
,
Croatia
,
Czech Republic
,
Denmark
,
Finland
,
France
+
Corsica
,
Greece
+
Crete
and Chalkidiki,
Hungary
,
Italy
+
Sardinia
and
Sicily
,
Israel
,
Lithuania
, Macedonia,
Montenegro
,
Poland
,
Portugal
,
Romania
,
Russia
,
Serbia
,
Slovakia
,
Slovenia
,
Spain
,
Sweden
,
Switzerland
,
Turkey
, and the
United Kingdom
, also from
Syria
and
Iran
(
Ferrière 1946
;
Šedivý 1958
;
Hedqvist 1973
;
Oehlke 1984
;
Madl 1989
;
Pagliano & Scaramozzino 2000
;
Broad & Livermore 2014
;
Strumia & Pagliano 2014
;
van Achterberg & Talebi 2014
;
Žikić
et al.
2014
;
Ceccolini 2016
;
Orlovskyté
et al.
2018
;
Madl & Mitroiu 2019
,
Özbek 2020
,
Wiśniowski 2020
, and personal records).
FIGURES 23–30.
Gasteruption caucasicum
(Guérin-Méneville, 1844)
. 23—female, lateral habitus, 24—male, lateral habitus, 25—female, lateral head, 26—female, frontal head, 27—female, dorsal head, 28—female, lateral mesosoma, 29—female, dorsal mesosoma, 30—female, third leg. Scale bars represent 1 mm.
Šedivý (1958
;
1989
) recorded this species both from the
Czech Republic
(
Bohemia
and
Moravia
) and from
Slovakia
under the synonym
G. pedemontanum.
Numerous and widespread species, recorded from lowlands to mountains. It is the third most numerous after
G. assectator
and
Gasteruption jaculator
with 67 localities known from the
Czech Republic
and 50 from
Slovakia
. The number of localities identified before and after the year 1990 is similar (34 to
33 in
the
Czech Republic
and
23 to 27 in
Slovakia
) (
Tab. 2
).
Biology:
Recorded from May to September. Hosts are bees of the families
Colletidae
and
Megachilidae
:
Colletes daviesanus
Smith
and
Hylaeus soror
(Pérez)
from the first (
Ferton 1910
;
1914
;
Malyshev 1964
;
van Achterberg & Talebi 2014
;
van Breugel 2014
) and
Heriades truncorum
and
Osmia versicolor
Latreille
from the second (
Fahringer 1922
;
Ferrière 1946
;
Crosskey 1951
;
Šedivý 1958
;
Gyorfi & Bajari 1962
;
Oehlke 1984
;
Wall 1994
), summarised by
Parslow
et al.
(2020b)
. It feeds on flowers of plants of the families
Asteraceae
and
Apiaceae
, and from
Dorycnium herbaceum
(Fabaceae)
and
Paliurus spina–christi
(Rhamnaceae)
(
Wall 1994
).
Conservation:
Widespread species with numerous occurrence records from both countries. Red List Category: LC—least concern (
Tab. 2
).