About Macrophya parvula and larvae of several Central European Macrophya (Hymenoptera: Tenthredinidae)
Author
Macek, Jan
text
Zootaxa
2012
3487
65
76
journal article
10.5281/zenodo.282414
e3867ffc-d8e0-46e2-8332-9c65f9604f89
1175-5326
282414
2247D9E8-00C0-49E0-A4FC-C383E80F664C
Macrophya erythrocnema
Costa, 1859
(
Fig. 19
)
Material examined.
Bohemia
centr.:
Czech karst PLA, Karlštejn NNR (6510),
26.vi.2010
,
16 larvae
on
Knautia arvensis
.
Description of full-grown larva.
Body length:
13–15 mm
; head pale brownish, body pale green, annulet 2 with large, annulet 5 with small black rounded spot above the spiracular line, subspiracular and suprapedal lobe with more or less developed dark transverse spot; base of coxae with variable dark patch.
Head covered with short setae, clypeus with four setae, labrum with six setae, mandibles with two setae, stipes with one seta, palpifer with 3 setae, the second article of maxillary palpus with one seta; abdominal segments with seven smooth annulets; annulets 2, 4, 7 with 6–8 scattered tiny setae, annulet 2 with 2–4, annulet 4 with 2–3 small conical pale glandubae; spiracles yellow, the first postspiraculart lobe with one glanduba and 4–6 tiny setae, the second postspiracular lobe with three glandubae and 4–6 tiny setae, subspiracular lobe with 10–13 tiny setae and one glanduba, surpedal lobe with one glanduba and 11–13 tiny setae; exterior side of proleg bare, on interior side neare base with 6–7 setae.
Notes on identification of larva.
Pschorn-Walcher & Altenhofer (2006)
first mentioned
Knautia arvensis
as the food plant of this species. The larva of
M. erythrocnema
, as described above, is very similar to that of
M. recognata
,
but differs in its ecology. Unlike
M. recognata
this is a xerophilous species associated with xeric grasslands in lower altitudes.
Bionomics.
Habitat: dry grasslands and xeric fringes in lowland and foothill zones. Univoltine. Flight period from mid May to the beginning of July; larval period from mid June to the end of July. Host plant:
Knautia arvensis
. The larvae rest on the underside of leaves. The infested plants are traced by the large holes on the leaves. Larval development is relatively fast, lasting about four to five weeks; the eonymph rests for a longer time (up to six weeks) coiled on the underside of the leaves of various surrounding vegetation before burrowing into the soil for hibernation diapause.