Review of the European Eumenes Latreille (Hymenoptera, Vespidae) using morphology and DNA barcodes, with an illustrated key to species
Author
van Achterberg, Cornelis
https://orcid.org/0000-0002-6495-4853
Naturalis Biodiversity Center, P. O. 9517, 2300 RA Leiden, Netherlands
kees@vanachterberg.org
Author
Smit, John T.
https://orcid.org/0000-0002-1568-5183
Naturalis Biodiversity Center, P. O. 9517, 2300 RA Leiden, Netherlands & European Invertebrate Survey - Netherlands, P. O. 9517, 2300 RA Leiden, Netherlands
Author
Ljubomirov, Toshko
Institute of Biodiversity and Ecosystem Research, Bulgarian Academy of Sciences, Tzar Osvoboditel Boulevard 1, 1000 Sofia, Bulgaria
text
ZooKeys
2023
2023-01-31
1143
93
163
http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.1143.94951
journal article
http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.1143.94951
1313-2970-1143-93
9156C6A84BF5472FA7010C2F089CE134
5E978E6177BE5B39B380B105500D7DA5
Eumenes subpomiformis
Bluethgen
, 1938
Figs 227-235
, 236-243
Eumenes subpomiformis
Bluethgen
, 1938: 480, 496;
Gusenleitner 1972
: 101-103,
1999
: 574,
2013
: 29;
Tobias and Kurzenko 1978
: 161;
Castro 1997
: 4;
Schmid-Egger and Schmidt 2002
: 18;
Woydak 2006
: 46-47;
Castro and Sanza 2009
: 267;
Arens 2012
: 489;
Schmid-Egger 2010
: 23,
2011
: 44;
Neumeyer 2014
: 367,
2019
: 276;
Baldock et al. 2020
: 44.
Eumenes (Eumenes) subpomiformis
;
van der Vecht and Fischer 1972
: 133-134 (literature before 1972);
Verges
Serra 1985
: 147;
Castro 1992
: 25;
Sanza 1997
: 463;
Schmid-Egger 2004
: 73;
Gereys 2006
: 387,
2016
: 137;
Fateryga 2017
: 182;
Dal Pos et al. 2022
: 16.
Eumenes subpomiformis subpomiformis
;
Giordani Soika and Borsato 1995
: 7;
Borsato and Turrisi 2004
: 145.
Eumenes subpomiformis crassipunctatus
Bluethgen
, 1956: 3;
van der Vecht and Fischer 1972
: 133 (literature before 1972);
Gusenleitner 1972
: 101-103 (as synonym of
E. subpomiformis
):
Fateryga 2017
: 182 (as synonym of
E. sareptanus
).
Notes.
As pointed out by
Gusenleitner (1972)
E. subpomiformis
is very similar to
E. pomiformis
("
Eumenes pomiformis
steht der Art
Eumenes subpomiformis
sehr nahe und nicht der Art
Eumenes lunulatus
") and is easily misidentified when the medium-sized or long setae of the propleuron of
E. subpomiformis
are not well exposed (head too much down), depressed or damaged. He also correctly denounced the differences in shape of the clypeus as illustrated by
Bluethgen
(1938)
("Die Form des Clypeus, wie sie
Bluethgen
fuer
Eumenes subpomiformis
angibt (Ausschnittecken nach den Seiten gezogen) tritt auch bei
Eumenes pomiformis
auf".) What remains in both sexes for separation according to the keys by
Gusenleitner (1972
,
1999
) is the length of the setae on the propleuron (with equal shorter setae in
E. pomiformis
and with unequal longer setae in
E. subpomiformis
). However, the setosity seems rather variable (especially in males) and should be used in combination with other characters. Recent molecular research (
Neumeyer and Praz 2015
;
Schmid-Egger and Schmidt 2021
; this paper) revealed distinct genetic differences between
E. subpomiformis
and
E. pomiformis
(Fig.
3
) despite their overall similarity.
Specimens in RMNH identified by
Bluethgen
(in 1950 and 1955) as
E. pomiformis barbatulus
belong either to
E. subpomiformis
(Portugal; females with mostly comparatively short setae on propleuron and deeply emarginate clypeus) or to
E. coarctatus
(most specimens (with medium-sized to long setae on propleuron) from Portugal, Spain, France, Algeria, Morocco).
Figures 227-235.
Eumenes subpomiformis
Bluethgen
, Bulgaria, female
227
metasoma lateral
228
first metasomal tergite dorsal
229
first tergite ventral
230
mesosoma dorsal
231
second metasomal tergite latero-dorsal
232
head anterior
233
head and propleuron lateral
234
hind tarsal claw
235
antenna.
Figures 236-243.
Eumenes subpomiformis
Bluethgen
, Bulgaria, male
236
metasoma lateral
237
first metasomal tergite dorsal
238
first tergite ventral
239
head and mesosoma dorsal
240
propodeum dorsal
241
head anterior
242
head and mesosoma lateral
243
apical hook of antenna lateral.
Distribution.
C and S Europe, but unknown from Sardinia (
Giordani Soika and Borsato 1995
); outside Europe known from Morocco, Israel, Lebanon, and Asia Minor. In Switzerland found up to 1920 m altitude (
Neumeyer 2019
) as in Greece (
Arens 2012
).