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 biscalis (
Foerster
, 1854)
Figs 27, 52, 76-77, 129, 253
Nematus biscalis
Foerster
, 1854b: 326-327. Lectotype ♀ (GBIF-GISHym3698; here designated) in ZSM, examined. Type locality: Aachen, North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany.
Nematus conspersus
Zaddach in Brischke, 1883b: 186. Syntype(s) possibly destroyed (
Blank and Taeger 1998
). Type locality: not stated. Synonymised with
Lygaeonematus biscalis
by
Konow (1905)
.
Nematus pruni
Brischke, 1883: pl. I, 2. Holotype (sex not stated, see
Brischke 1884
) possibly destroyed (
Blank and Taeger 1998
). Type locality: Oliwa (Oliva),
Gdansk
, Poland. Listed as a synonym of
P. biscalis
by
Taeger et al. (2010)
, but see commentary by Blank & Taeger (1998).
Nematus lateralis
Brischke, 1885: 246. Primary homonym of
Nematus lateralis
Norton, 1867. Holotype ♀ possibly destroyed (
Blank and Taeger 1998
). Type locality: Matemblewo,
Gdansk
, Poland. Synonymised with
Lygaeonematus biscalis
by
Konow (1898)
.
Nematus postumus
Dalla Torre, 1894: 251. Replacement name for
Nematus lateralis
Brischke, 1885.
Similar species.
Females are perhaps most similar to
P. maesta
, from which
P. biscalis
differs by having black cercus (usually pale in
P. maesta
) and at least partly pale clypeus (black in
P. maesta
). Males are best recognised by examining penis valves (see the Key). A female specimen DEI-GISHym11094 (GenBank accession KC975746) from Brandenburg, Germany, is morphologically almost indistinguishable from
P. biscalis
, but might represent a different species based on rather divergent COI barcode sequence. Additional specimens are needed to evaluate if there are reliable morphological differences between these two forms and to check if nuclear sequences support the divergence found in COI.
Genetic data.
Based on COI barcode sequences,
P. biscalis
forms its own BIN cluster (BOLD:AAM9740) (Fig. 3). Maximum distance within the BIN is 0.16%. The nearest neighbour to BOLD:AAM9740, diverging by minimum of 7.43%, is BOLD:ABX2630 (specimen DEI-GISHym11094, which we have identified as
P. biscalis
, but might be a different species). Based on nuclear data (one specimen and NaK), the nearest neighbour is 2.5% different (
P. dedeara
).
Host plants.
Prunus spinosa
L. (
Weiffenbach 1985
).
Distribution and material examined.
West Palaearctic. Specimens studied are from Germany and Sweden.