Euura imperfecta ( Zaddach, 1876 )

Fu, Yuanzun, Yuan, Yuan, Shen, Qian, Xu, Hao, Ye, Zheng, Guo, Li, Wu, Xiaoliang & Zhao, Yunhe, 2021, Taxonomic Notes and New Distribution and Host Plant Records for Sawflies and Woodwasps (Hymenoptera, Symphyta) of Japan VI, Bulletin of the National Museum of Nature and Science. Series A, Zoology 47 (4), pp. 163-188 : 169-177

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.50826/bnmnszool.47.4_163

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03FA87F1-FF89-D907-FCF8-0955FB34FBF3

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Euura imperfecta ( Zaddach, 1876 )
status

 

Euura imperfecta ( Zaddach, 1876)

Japanese name: Karamatsu-madara-habachi ( Figs. 3A–G, L–O View Fig , 4A–N View Fig , 5A–P View Fig , 6A–C View Fig , 7A–D View Fig )

Nematus imperfectus Zaddach, 1876: 80 .

Pachynematus imperfectus : Jörgensen, 1906: 350; Benson, 1958: 233; Ito, 1959; Pschorn-Walcher and Eichhorn, 1963: 62; Verzhutskii, 1966: 138; Verzhutskii, 1981: 210.

Pachynematus? imperfectus : Takizawa, 1957: 27.

[Unidentified species 2]: Hara and Kitagawa, 1986: 21.

Nematus (Larinematus) imperfectus : Zhelochovtsev and Zinovjev, 1988: 169.

Pikonema imperfectum : Zinovjev, 1993: 21.

Larinematus imperfectus : Lacourt, 1999: 151; Lacourt, 2020: 428.

Pachynematus (Larinematus) imperfectus : Taeger et al., 2010: 438; Macek et al., 2020: 532.

Euura imperfecta : Prous et al., 2014: 46; Shinohara and Hara, 2015: 174; Hara, 2019: 73; Hara, 2020: 89, 349.

For more references, see Lacourt (1999).

Redescription (female and male). Length 5.5– 6.5 mm in female, 5.5 mm in male. Female yellow, red yellow or brown and black ( Fig. 3A–B, E–G View Fig ); head capsule with peculiar black markings ( Fig. 4A–D, L–N View Fig ); antenna black; thorax partly black; mesepisternum black on epicnemium and often ventrally or ventrolaterally ( Fig. 4B, F–G View Fig ); legs with coxae basally black and tarsi and apex of hind tibia sometimes slightly darkened; abdomen dorsally or mostly black; valvula 3 always black. Male mostly black ( Fig. 3C–D View Fig ); legs yellow from apices of femora to tarsi but tibiae and tarsi slightly darkened apically; subgenital plate yellow. In both sexes, wings very slightly yellowish ( Fig. 3A, F, C View Fig ); stigma almost uniformly pale brown to brown, sometimes basally pale; veins mostly brown to black; vein C mostly or basally yellow.

Head in dorsal view with length behind eye 0.6–0.8 × eye length in female, 0.4–0.5 × in male ( Fig. 4A, H, L View Fig ); length behind lateral ocellus 2.0–2.8 × length of lateral ocellus in female, 1.7–1.8 × in male. Frontal area with lateral and anterior ridges usually distinct ( Fig. 4B, I, M View Fig ); anterior ridge not grooved medially. Distance between eyes at torulus 1.4–1.5 × eye height in female, 1.2 × in male ( Fig. 4C, J, N View Fig ). Area just above torulus almost flat and triangular, laterally with long straight furrow ( Fig. 4E View Fig ). Dorsal tento- rial pit obscure. Narrow ridge around torulus dorsally widely vague or disappearing. Paraantennal field normal, covered with setae except for narrow medial margin. Clypeus distinctly concave roundly on ventral margin ( Fig. 4C, J, N View Fig ); depth of ventral emargination 0.3–0.7 × median height of clypeus; clypeus with width 3.3–3.9 × maximum height; maximum height 0.7–0.9 × torulus height. Malar space length 1.2–1.4 × median ocellus width in female, 0.8–0.9 × in male. Antenna length 2.1–2.5 × head width in female, 3.0 × in male ( Fig. 3A, C, E View Fig ); flagellomere 1 0.8–0.9 × as long as major axis of eye, simple in female, slightly convex basally on ventral margin in lateral view in male ( Fig. 4K View Fig ); flagellomere 2 1.1–1.3 × as long as flagellomere 1. Left mandible 1.1–1.2 × as long as right one, and in outer view sharply tapering basally, thin from middle to apex, with middle part same thickness or slightly thickening towards apex ( Fig. 4F View Fig ). Right mandible rather sharply tapering on basal half and gradually tapering on apical half ( Fig. 4G View Fig ). Basal outer surfaces of both mandibles not widely flattened or concave. Maxillary palpus rather short, with palpomere 2 0.7–0.8 × as long as palpomere 3 and palpomere 6 0.7–0.8 × as long as torulus height.

Mesoscutellar appendage with length 0.9– 1.6 × minor axis of cenchrus ( Fig. 5A, I View Fig ). Metascutellum length 0.9–1.3 × minor axis of cenchrus. Mesepisternum with groove along anterior edge extending into epicnemium. Epicnemium with ventral edge distinctly grooved. Katepimeron entirely glabrous. Anterior fore tibial spur with velum. Hind tibia normal, 0.8 × as broad as hind femur in anterior view; posterior hind tibial spur 0.9–1.2 × as long as apical breadth of hind tibia, 0.4–0.5 × as long as hind tarsomere 1. Hind tarsus 0.8–1.0 × as long as hind tibia. Tarsal claws narrow, with small inner tooth ( Fig. 5B, J, L View Fig ); depth of concavity between apical and inner teeth 0.3–0.5 × distance between these teeth. Fore wing with cell Sc 0.2–0.6 × as wide as vein C at level of base of vein Rs+M ( Fig. 5C View Fig ). Hind wing with section of vein 1A between cell 1A and crossvein cu-a 1.9–2.1 × as long as crossvein cu-a.

In female abdomen, sternum 7 with posterior margin deeply concave beside median projection ( Fig. 5D View Fig ). Tergum 9 normal in size, in lateral view 0.8–1.6 × as long as tergum 8 at level of spiracle 8 ( Fig. 5E, M View Fig ). Cercus 3.0–5.0 × as long as wide, posteriorly extending to or slightly beyond apex of valvula 3 ( Fig. 5E, G, M, O View Fig ). Ovipositor sheath 0.3 × as long as abdomen ( Fig. 3B, G View Fig ), 0.6–0.7 × as long as hind tibia; valvula 3 in lateral view with apical edge nearly truncate or widely rounded ( Fig. 4E, M View Fig ); both valvulae 3 combined apically slightly or distinctly concave, with apicolateral ridge sharp ( Fig. 5F–G, M–P View Fig ). Lance in lateral view with dorsal margin slightly concave ( Fig. 6A View Fig ); radix with subdorsal carina; annuli distinctly oblique. Lancet with radix 1.2– 1.3 × as long as lamnium ( Fig. 6B, C View Fig ); lamnium with 14–15 annuli; annuli arched; ctenidial setae absent on ventrobasal and dorsoapical parts of lamnium; annulus 1 usually without ctenidial setae; ctenidial setae about as long as length of annulus; ventral margin of lamnium not serrate, without distinct denticles.

In male abdomen, procidentia with sharply defined median area ( Fig. 5K View Fig ); tergal hollow with anterior edge distinctly ridged laterally. Subgenital plate 0.4–0.5 × as long as abdomen, 0.7–0.8 × as long as hind tibia ( Fig. 3D View Fig ), gradually tapering and narrowly rounded apically ( Fig. 5K View Fig ). Genitalia with harpe in ventral view about as long as wide ( Fig. 7A View Fig ); parapennis apically pointed; penis valve with paravalva apically protruding below valvispina ( Fig. 7B–D View Fig ); valvispina narrow and acute.

Head capsule mostly distinctly or slightly microsculptured and inconspicuously punctured; clypeus not microsculptured. Thorax predomi- nantly microsculptured; medial part of mesopostnotum, whole metapostnotum, etc. not microsculptured; punctures generally inconspicuous; mesoscutum, propleuron and ventrolateral part of mesepisternum with small punctures. Abdomen microsculptured; sterna slightly or inconspicuously microsculptured.

Immature stages. Egg long oval ( Fig. 3 L View Fig ). Semifinal instar larva ( Fig. 3M View Fig ): head and legs pale yellow brown; legs basally narrowly black; trunk pale green, with slightly blackish subdorsal stripe. Final instar larva ( Fig. 3N–O View Fig ): 15 mm long, as in semifinal larva, but trunk with distinct blackish green subdorsal stripe and narrow dark green pleural stripe. Cocoon: 8 mm long, brown, double walled; outer wall thin. For more information, see Jörgensen (1906), Verzhutskii (1966) and Macek et al. (2020).

Material examined. HOKKAIDO: 1˂ ( Fig. 6A View Fig ), Shintoku, Shintoku, 8. V. 2012, H. Hara (cited by Hara, 2020); 1 ˂ ( Figs. 5B View Fig , 6B View Fig ), Bibai, 9. V. 1961, K. Kamijo; 1˂, same locality, 7. V. 1987, H. Hara; 1 ˂ ( Figs. 5I View Fig , 7A, C–D View Fig ), same data but 3. V. 1988; 1 ˁ, same data but 6. V. 1988; 1 ˂, same data but 8. V. 1988; 1 ˁ ( Figs. 3C–D View Fig , 4H–K View Fig , 5J–K View Fig , 7B View Fig ), Hayakita, 13. V. 1986, H. Hara; 1˂, same data but 11. V. 1987; 1˂ ( Fig. 5D View Fig ), same locality, coll. cocoon in litter under Larix kaempferi , 30. IV. 1987, em. 25. V. 1987, H. Hara; 1 ˂, same locality but 19. V. 1987, H. Hara; 1 ˂ ( Figs. 4D, F–G View Fig , 5A, C View Fig ), same data but 6. V. 1988; 3˂ ( Figs. 3A–B View Fig , 4A–C, E View Fig , 5E–H View Fig ), same locality, coll. litter under Larix kaempferi , em. 28, 30. IV. 1992, H. Hara, and their progeny ( Fig. 3 L View Fig ). — HONSHU: Nagano Pref.: 3˂, Ueda, Sanada-machi, Soehi, 30. IV. 1956, Takeuchi (probably reared); 1 ˂, Aoki-toge, coll. larva on Larix kaempferi 1956, em. 19. III. 1957, Ito (cited by Ito, 1959).

Distribution. Japan: Hokkaido ( Shinohara and Hara, 2015), Honshu ( Takizawa, 1957; Ito, 1959). Russia: European part, Siberia ( Verzhutskii, 1981; Zhelochovtsev and Zinovjev, 1988). Europe ( Zaddach, 1876; Benson, 1958; Taeger et al., 2018).

Host plants. Pinaceae : Larix decidua Mill. ( Jörgensen, 1906), L. kaempferi (Lamb.) Carrière ( Takizawa, 1957; Ito, 1959), L. sibirica Ledeb. ( Verzhutskii, 1966, as lлиственницы сибирскойz).

Life history. In our observation in Hokkaido, Japan, this sawfly has one generation a year; the adults were collected in May; under rearing con- dition, the female laid her eggs singly on needles ( Fig. 3 L View Fig ); the cocoons were found within the litter in larch forests. For more information, see Jörgensen (1906), Pschorn-Walcher and Eichhorn (1963), Verzhutskii (1966) and Macek et al. (2020).

Remarks. Euura imperfecta is mainly characterized by the following features: area just above torulus almost flat and triangular and laterally with long straight furrow ( Fig. 4E View Fig ); female sternum 7 with posterior margin deeply concave beside median projection ( Fig. 5D View Fig ); male procidentia with median area sharply defined ( Fig. 5K View Fig ). The following character states are also useful to distinguish this species from other congeners of Euura and similar genera: tarsal claws with small inner tooth ( Fig. 5B, J, L View Fig ) and depth between apical and inner teeth about half or less of distance between apices of these teeth; narrow ridge around torulus widely vague or disappearing dorsally ( Fig. 4E View Fig ); mandibles asymmetrical, in outer view left mandible with middle part same thickness or slightly thickening towards apex ( Fig. 3F View Fig ), right mandible continuously tapering from base to apex ( Fig. 4G View Fig ); katepimeron entirely glabrous; in female, valvulae 3 not tapering and apically concave ( Fig. 5F–H, N–P View Fig ); in lancet, lamnium without serrulae and denticles on ventral margin; in male, tergal hollow of tergum 8 with anterior edge distinctly ridged laterally ( Fig. 5K View Fig ).

Zhelochovtsev in Zhelochovtsev and Zinovjev (1988) established Larinematus Zhelochovtsev, 1988 as a subgenus of Nematus Panzer, 1801 for three species, E. imperfecta ( Fig. 3A–D View Fig ), E. itoi ( Fig. 3H–K View Fig ) and one unstated species. Zinovjev (1993) considered this subgenus a species group of Pikonema Ross, 1937 . Lacourt (1999, 2020) raised Larinematus to the rank of genus. Roller and Haris (2008) described a new species under l Pachynematus (Larinematus) z. Taeger et al. (2010) and Macek et al. (2020) treated Larinematus as a subgenus of Pachynematus Konow, 1890 . On the other hand, Prous et al. (2014) syn- onymized Larinematus , Pachynematus and Pikonema with Euura Newman, 1837 . Actually, the features of Larinematus stated by previous authors are not stable or difficult to recognize, judging from Japanese specimens of these two species. Zhelochovtsev and Zinovjev (1988), Zinovjev (1993), Macek et al. (2020) and Lacourt (2020) distinguished Larinematus or the E. imperfecta group from other species of former Pachynematus mainly by the relative lengths of hind tibia and tarsus and the shape of the ovipositor sheath. Zhelochovtsev and Zinovjev (1988), Macek et al. (2020) and Lacourt (2020) stated that Larinematus has the hind tarsus as long as or longer than the hind tibia. Benson (1958) also characterized E. imperfecta by a long hind tarsus. However, in the Japanese specimens of the two species, the hind tarsus is often distinctly shorter than the hind tibia in E. imperfecta ( Fig. 3B View Fig ) and always so in E. itoi ( Fig. 3I View Fig ) (the ratio is 0.83– 0.97: 1.0 in E. imperfecta and 0.78–0.86:1.0 in E. itoi ). Zhelochovtsev and Zinovjev (1988) stated that the ovipositor sheath of Larinematus was with lопорной плоЩадкойz (probably refers to a wide concavity at the apex; Fig. 5F, N View Fig ) with a figure of the ovipositor sheath of E. imperfecta . Macek et al. (2020) also adopted this feature for Pachynematus (Larinematus) . However, in Euura itoi , the apex of the ovipositor sheath is mostly flattened, dorsally narrowly elevated and with a median carina ( Fig. 5V, X View Fig ). Lacourt (2020) wrote that the ovipositor sheath was incised when viewed from above as a generic feature of Larinematus . The sheaths combined are apically incised in dorsal view in E. imperfecta ( Fig. 5G, O View Fig ) but truncate in E. itoi ( Fig. 5W View Fig ). It is impossible to separate Larinematus or the E. imperfecta group from other species of former Pachynematus except for the host plant. Furthermore, there are some significant differences between these two species apart from their morphological differences. The antenna of E. imperfecta shows distinct sexual difference. The male antenna is longer than that of the female ( Fig. 3A, C View Fig ), and the male flagellomere 1 is basally convex on the ventral margin ( Fig. 4K View Fig ) while the female flagellomere 1 is simple. On the other hand, there is no distinct structural difference between the female and male antennae of E. itoi . The life cycle of E. imperfecta is univoltine while that of E. itoi is multivoltine. These two species do not appear to be closely related.

Apart from the relative lengths of hind tibia and tarsus, Japanese specimens of E. imperfecta well agree with the concept of this species by Benson (1958). He wrote lUnderthorax with at least mesosternum blackz. In the Japanese specimens, the mesepisternum is often not darkened ventrally. The Japanese specimens also well agree with the description by Muche (1974) except for the color of the stigma. He wrote lStigma braun mit breiter weisser Basisz, but the Japanese specimens have the uniformly brown stigma ( Fig. 3A, C, E View Fig ).

The Hokkaido larva agrees with the description of the European larva by Jörgensen (1906). The trunks of these mature larvae are green with two dark longitudinal stripes (subdorsal and pleural stripes) ( Fig. 3N–O; p View Fig . 533-fig. 3 in Macek et al., 2020). However, according to Verzhutskii (1966), the Siberian larva has the trunk with only one dark longitudinal stripe (subdorsal stripe) and the ventral side is distinctly paler than the dorsal side (Рис. 34-8 and Рис. 43 in Verzhutskii, 1966). Furthermore, the Honshu larva quite dif- fers from the Hokkaido, European and Siberian larvae. According to Ito (1959), the Honshu larva is wholly purplish black in the semifinal instar and younger larvae and has the head blackish brown and the trunk dark brown with a pale brown middorsal line in the final instar larva. Therefore, Ito (1959) questioned identifying the Honshu specimens with E. imperfecta and stated the identification was tentative. We have not found any difference between the Hokkaido and Honshu adults and so consider them conspecific. More material and genetical study will be needed to interpret the large larval color variation.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Hymenoptera

Family

Tenthredinidae

Genus

Euura

Loc

Euura imperfecta ( Zaddach, 1876 )

Fu, Yuanzun, Yuan, Yuan, Shen, Qian, Xu, Hao, Ye, Zheng, Guo, Li, Wu, Xiaoliang & Zhao, Yunhe 2021
2021
Loc

Euura imperfecta

Hara, H. 2019: 73
Shinohara, A. & H. Hara 2015: 174
Prous, M. & S. M. Blank & H. Goulet & E. Heibo & A. Liston & T. Malm & T. Nyman & S. Schmidt & D. R. Smith & H. Vardal & M. Viitasaari & V. Vikberg & A. Taeger 2014: 46
2014
Loc

Pachynematus (Larinematus) imperfectus

Macek, J. & L. Roller & K. Benes & K. Holy & J. Holusa 2020: 532
Taeger, A. & S. M. Blank & A. D. Liston 2010: 438
2010
Loc

Larinematus imperfectus

Lacourt, J. 2020: 428
Lacourt, J. 1999: 151
1999
Loc

Pikonema imperfectum

Zinovjev, A. G. 1993: 21
1993
Loc

Nematus (Larinematus) imperfectus

Zhelochovtsev, A. N. & A. G. Zinovjev 1988: 169
1988
Loc

Pachynematus? imperfectus

Takizawa, Y. 1957: 27
1957
Loc

Pachynematus imperfectus

Verzhutskii, B. N. 1981: 210
Verzhutskii, B. N. 1966: 138
Pschorn-Walcher, H. & O. Eichhorn 1963: 62
Benson, R. B. 1958: 233
Jorgensen, P. 1906: 350
1906
Loc

Nematus imperfectus

Zaddach, G. 1876: 80
1876
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