Orussidae

Orussidae
Orussus coronatus Fabricius, 1798,[1] junior synonym of O. abietinus (Scopoli, 1763) and type species of Orussus Latreille, 1797.
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Insecta
Order: Hymenoptera
Suborder: "Symphyta"
Superfamily: Orussoidea
Family: Orussidae
Wikispecies has information related to: Orussidae

The Orussidae or the parasitic wood wasps represent a small family of sawflies ("Symphyta"). Currently, about 85 extant and four fossil species are known.[2] They take a key position in phylogenetic analyses of Hymenoptera, because they form the sister taxon of the megadiverse apocritan wasps, and the common ancestor of Orussidae + Apocrita invented parasitism for the first time in course of the evolution of the Hymenoptera.

Biology

The fully winged wasps are 2−23 mm long. They are predominantly black but species of Chalinus, Mocsarya and Orussobaius are more or less metallic. Some species have a red thorax or abdomen and conspicuous white or golden pilosity. Many Orussus species bear white spots on the legs. The antennae of males are composed of 11, those of females of 10 articles. The modified distal antennal articles of females (article 9 enlarged, article 10 very small) are involved in vibrational sounding to detect suitable oviposition sites and the host larvae living concealed inside wood.[3] Contrary to other "Symphyta", the antennae insert near the lower edge of the compound eyes and close to the mandible. The mandibles are orthognathous and lack evident teeth. The number of palpomeres of the maxilla and the labium varies and is used as a taxonomic character. On the wings, some cross-veins are reduced in comparison with the more complete venation of other basal Hymenoptera. Similar as in most other sawflies, the wings are hold at rest with a device called "cenchri". The complete body is strongly sclerotized and bears a species-specific microstructure, which is relevant for species identification. The ovipositor is several times as long as the body, and at rest it extends inside the body from the abdomen to the prothorax, where it is coiled, and back towards the tip of the abdomen again.

Orussidae and Stephanidae are the sole Hymenoptera, in which the head bears a corona of erected teeth around the frontal ocellus. Contrary to Orussidae, the Stephanidae lack cenchri, and their mesosoma and metasoma are separated by a wasp waist, which is absent in Orussidae.

Larvae

Similar to the larvae of apocritan Hymenoptera, larvae of Orussidae have reduced some morphological features as a result of their parasitic life style inside the tunnels of wood-boring insects. They are white, subcylindrical, weakly sclerotized with a distinct head capsule. The mouthparts are hypognathous. Eyes and legs are reduced or completely absent. The mandibles are well developed and strongly sclerotized. Palps of maxilla and labium lack. The surface of the body is subdivided into distinct segments, each bearing a transverse row of 8−10 backward pointing spines.[4]

Biology and behavior of larvae and wasps

Orussid wasps have generally been collected only seldom. Over the years, their abundance obviously is subject to strong fluctuations.[5] The species are thermophilous and wasps are active during the hottest hours of the day. Therefore, they are rarely found by the entomologists specialized in sawflies.

Only for few species the larval biology is known. Orussidae are parasitoids of xylobiontic larvae of beetles or Hymenoptera, particularly of the larvae of jewel beetles (Buprestidae), long-horned beetles (Cerambycidae), and wood wasps (Siricidae, Xiphydriidae).[6][7] Wasps can be observed running around quickly on dead tree trunks. The females locate the host larvae living concealed inside wood by generating vibrations by tapping the tips of their antennae against the wood surface. The vibrations are picked up by the modified fore legs.[3][8] After locating the host, the female drills into the wood with the very long ovipositor and lays the egg. The egg is very elongate with a small expansion on the anterior end and a long expansion on the posterior end. The egg is coiled on the host.[6] In some species the egg is possibly laid into the tunnel of the host if the host itself can not be reached, and the orussid larva itself crawls to the host. On its way to the host it may gnaw through the wood shavings left by the host. It has been disputed whether this material contributes to the nutrition of the larva. At least in Guiglia schauinslandi, the larva lives externally for its first two instars and then enters the putrid(?) liquid in the dead host, where it remains until the adult emerges.[6]

Systematics

The suborder "Symphyta" or sawflies and woodwasps undoubtedly is a paraphyletic assemblage.[9] The ca 9,000 species[2] cover the ancestral hymenopteran lineages. Numerous morphological and genetic studies indicate that the Orussidae form the sister taxon of the apocritan wasps.[9][10] Accordingly, parasitic life style has not evolved first in Apocrita but in the common ancestor of Orussidae + Apocrita.

Earlier, the Orussidae were sometimes put into a separate suborder, Idiogastra,[4] but today they are classified with an own superfamily, Orussoidea.[9][11] Orussidae are demonstrably monophyletic.[9] Tribes and subfamilies within the Orussidae have been abandoned, since such earlier subdivisions could not be corroborated in phylogenetic analyses.[12]

Orussidae genera and species of the World

An identification key for the genera of the World was published by Vilhemsen (2003).[12] The following list summarizes the genera and species and their gross distribution together with indications on identifikation keys:

Orussidae of the United States, Canada and Great Britain

Twelve species of Orussidae are distributed in the United States and in Canada:

In Great Britain, Orussus abietinus (Scopoli, 1763) was recorded by Stephens (1835)[27] upon two specimens caught by William Elford Leach in Darenth Wood and Devonshire around 1817. Morice (1904)[28] recorded a more recent specimen taken at Hastings about 1880, but after re-examination this turned out to be Xiphydria prolongata (Geoffroy, 1785) (Xiphydriidae).[29][30] Benson (1951)[31] supposed O. abietinus "to have occurred in Britain in former times."

Fossils

The extant Orussidae are believed to have originated in the Jurassic. Fossils have been reported from the Lower Jurassic of Grimmen (Lower Toarcian, Germany) and the Middle Jurassic of Daohugou (China), which display a mixture of characters associated with Orussoidea and with basal Apocrita, thus it is impossible to classify these specimens which one of these clades.[32] Ophrynopus peritus Engel, 2008 was described from Dominican Amber,[33] Baltorussus velteni Schedl, 2011 from Baltic Amber,[14] Mesorussus taimyrensis Rasnitsyn, 1977 from the Late Cretaceous of Taimyr, Sibiria[18] und Minyorussus luzzii Basibuyuk, Quicke & Rasnitsyn, 2000 from the Late Cretaceous of New Jersey.[19]

References

  1. Curtis, J. 1833: British Entomology; being illustrations and descriptions of the genera of Insects found in Great Britain and Ireland: containing Coloured Figures from Nature of the most rare and beautiful species, and in many instances of the plants upon which they are found. London, published by the Author 10(part 109-120): tabs 434-481, 2 pages of text associated with each tab.
  2. 1 2 Blank, S.M., Groll, E.K., Liston, A.D., Prous, M. & Taeger, A. 2012: ECatSym - Electronic World Catalog of Symphyta (Insecta, Hymenoptera). Program version 4.0 beta, data version 39 (18. Dezember 2012). Digital Entomological Information, Müncheberg
  3. 1 2 Vilhelmsen, L., Isidoro, N., Romani, R., Basibuyuk, H.H. & Quicke, D.L.J. 2001: Host location and oviposition in a basal group of parasitic wasps: the subgenual organ, ovipositor apparatus and associated structures in the Orussidae (Hymenoptera, Insecta). Zoomorphology 121: 63-84.
  4. 1 2 Rohwer, S.A. & Cushman, R.A. 1917: Idiogastra, a new suborder of Hymenoptera with notes on the immature stages of Oryssus. Proceedings of the entomological Society of Washington 19(1-4): 89-98.
  5. Burger, F. & Taeger, A. 1994: Aktuelle Nachweise von Orussus abietinus (Scopoli, 1763) (Hymenoptera, Orussidae). Brandenburgische Entomologische Nachrichten 2(1): 61-62.
  6. 1 2 3 Rawlings, G.B. 1957: Guiglia schauinslandi (Ashmead) (Hym. Orussidae) a parasite of Sirex noctilio (Fabricius) in New Zealand. Entomologist 90(1125): 35-36.
  7. 1 2 Kraus, M. 1998: Die Orussidae Europas und des Nahen Ostens (Hymenoptera: Orussidae). Pp. 283-300. In: Taeger, A. & Blank, S. M. (eds): Pflanzenwespen Deutschlands (Hymenoptera, Symphyta). Kommentierte Bestandsaufnahme. Goecke & Evers, Keltern.
  8. Vilhelmsen, L. & Turrisi, G.F. 2011: Per arborem ad astra: Morphological adaptations to exploiting the woody habitat in the early evolution of Hymenoptera. Arthropod Structure & Development 40: 2-20. doi:10.1016/j.asd.2010.10.001
  9. 1 2 3 4 Vilhelmsen, L. 2001: Phylogeny and classification of the extant basal lineages of the Hymenoptera (Insecta). Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society 131: 393-442.
  10. Sharkey, M.J., Carpenter, J.M., Vilhelmsen, L., Heraty, J., Liljeblad, J., Dowling, A.P.G., Schulmeister, S., Murray, D., Deans, A.R., Ronquist, F., Krogmann, L., Wheeler, W.C. 2012: Phylogenetic relationships among superfamilies of Hymenoptera. Cladistics 28: 80-112. doi:10.1111/j.1096-0031.2011.00366.x
  11. Taeger, A., Blank, S.M. & Liston, A.D. 2010: World Catalog of Symphyta (Hymenoptera). Zootaxa 2580: 1-1064. Abstract
  12. 1 2 3 4 5 Vilhelmsen, L. 2003: Phylogeny and classification of the Orussidae (Insecta: Hymenoptera), a basal parasitic wasp taxon. Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society 139: 337-418.
  13. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Vilhelmsen, L. & Smith, D.R. 2002: Revision of the 'ophrynopine' genera Argentophrynopus gen. n., Guiglia Benson, Kulcania Benson, Ophrella Middlekauff, Ophrynon Middlekauff, Ophrynopus Konow, and Stirocorsia Konow (Hymenoptera: Orussidae). Insect Systematics & Evolution 33(4): 387-420.
  14. 1 2 Schedl, W. 2011: Eine Orussidae aus dem baltischen Bernstein (Hymenoptera: Symphyta). Zeitschrift der Arbeitsgemeinschaft Österreichischer Entomologen 63: 33-36.
  15. 1 2 Vilhelmsen, L. 2001: Systematic revision of the genera Chalinus Konow, 1897 and Mocsarya Konow, 1897 (Hymenoptera: Orussidae). Insect Systematics & Evolution 32: 361-380
  16. Vilhelmsen, L. 2005: Chalinus albitibialis, a new species of Orussidae (Insecta, Hymenoptera) from Morocco. Zootaxa 880: 1-7
  17. Vilhelmsen, L. 2007: The Phylogeny of Orussidae (Insecta: Hymenoptera) Revisited. Arthropod Systematics & Phylogeny 65: 111-118.
  18. 1 2 Rasnitsyn, A.P. 1977: Novye pereponchatokrylye iz jury i mela Azii. [New Hymenoptera from the Jurassic and Cretaceous of Asia.] (In Russian). Paleontologicheskij Zhurnal [1977](3): 98-108.
  19. 1 2 Basibuyuk, H.H., Quicke, D.L.J. & Rasnitsyn, A.P. 2000: A new genus of the Orussidae (Insecta: Hymenoptera) from Late Cretaceous New Jersey amber. Pp. 305-311. In: Grimaldi, D. (ed.): Studies on Fossils in Amber, with Particular Reference to the Cretaceous of New Jersey. Leiden: Backhuys Publ.
  20. 1 2 3 Vilhelmsen, L., Blank, S.M., Costa, V.A., Alvarenga, T.M. & Smith, D.R. 2013: Phylogeny of the ophrynopine clade revisited: review of the parasitoid sawfly genera Ophrella Middlekauff, Ophrynopus Konow and Stirocorsia Konow (Hymenoptera: Orussidae). Invertebrate Systematics 27(4): 450-483.
  21. 1 2 Blank, S.M. & Vilhelmsen, L. & Smith, D. R. 2010: Ophrynon (Hymenoptera: Orussidae) in California: diversity, distribution and phylogeny. Insect Systematics & Evolution 41: 3-27. Abstract
  22. Schmidt, S. & Vilhelmsen, L. 2002: Revision of the Australasian genus Orussobaius Benson (Hymenoptera: Symphyta: Orussidae). Australian Journal of Entomology 41: 226-235.
  23. Schmidt, S. & Gibson, G.A.P. 2001: A New Species of the Genus Orussonia Riek and the Female of O. depressa Riek (Hymenoptera: Symphyta, Orussidae). Journal of Hymenoptera Research 10: 113-118.
  24. 1 2 Blank, S. M., Kraus, M. & Taeger, A. 2006: Orussus smithi sp. n. and Notes on Other West Palaearctic Orussidae (Hymenoptera). Pp. 265-278. In: Blank, S. M.; Schmidt, S. & Taeger, A. (eds): Recent Sawfly Research: Synthesis and Prospects. Goecke & Evers, Keltern.
  25. 1 2 Vilhelmsen, L., Blank S.M., Liu, Z.-W. & Smith, D.R. 2013: Discovery of new species confirms Oriental origin of Orussus Latreille (Hymenoptera: Orussidae). Insect Systematic & Evolution 44: 1-41
  26. 1 2 Middlekauff, W.W. 1983: A Revision of the Sawfly Family Orussidae for North and Central America (Hymenoptera: Symphyta, Orussidae). University of California Publications in Entomology 101: 1-46.
  27. Stephens, J.F. 1835: Illustrations of British Entomology; or, a Synopsis of Indigenous Insects: containing their generic and specific distinctions;with an account of their metamorphosis, times of appearance, localities, food, and economy, as far as practicable. Mandibulata. Baldwin & Cradock, London 7: 1-312, tabs XXXV-XLVII.
  28. Morice, F.D. 1904: Help-notes towards the determination of British Tenthredinidae, &c. (8). Entomologist's Monthly Magazine, Second Series 40: 49-51.
  29. Benson, R. B. 1935: The alien element in the British sawfly fauna. Ann. appl. Ent. 22(4): 754-768.
  30. Benson, R.B. 1943: Some reputed British sawflies not found since Stephens's days (Hym., Symphyta). Entomologist's Monthly Magazine, Fourth Series 79(4): 5-7.
  31. Benson, R.B. 1951: Hymenoptera, Symphyta. Handbooks for the Identification of British Insects 6(2a): 1-49.
  32. Rasnitsyn, A.P., Ansorge, J. & Zhang, H. 2006: Ancestry of the orussoid wasps, with description of three new genera and species of Karatavitidae (Hymenoptera = Vespida: Karatavitoidea stat. nov.). Insect Systematics and Evolution 37(2): 179-190.
  33. Engel, M. S. 2008: An orussid wood wasp in amber from the Dominican Republic (Hymenoptera: Orussidae). Transactions of the Kansas Academy of Sciences 111(1/2): 39-44.

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Saturday, April 23, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.