Tuberoxenos sphecidarum (Siebold, 1839) Benda & Pohl & Nakase & Beutel & Straka, 2022

Benda, Daniel, Pohl, Hans, Nakase, Yuta, Beutel, Rolf & Straka, Jakub, 2022, A generic classification of Xenidae (Strepsiptera) based on the morphology of the female cephalothorax and male cephalotheca with a preliminary checklist of species, ZooKeys 1093, pp. 1-134 : 1

publication ID

https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.1093.72339

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:23B70708-49A9-4681-AC20-494D06F98CCE

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/91CDC942-6D57-58BB-A836-47FA9EE58C10

treatment provided by

ZooKeys by Pensoft

scientific name

Tuberoxenos sphecidarum (Siebold, 1839)
status

comb. nov.

Tuberoxenos sphecidarum (Siebold, 1839) comb. nov.

Xenos sphecidarum Siebold, 1839: 72.

Eupathocera sphecidarum (Dufour, 1837) (new combination by Pierce, 1908, incorrectly assigned authorship).

Paraxenos sieboldii Saunders, 1872 (synonymized by Pierce, 1909).

Paraxenos sieboldii (Dufour, 1837) (new combination by Pierce 1919, incorrectly assigned authorship).

Pseudoxenos sphecidarum (Dufour, 1837) (new combination by Bohart 1937, incorrectly assigned authorship).

Paraxenos sphecidarum (Dufour, 1837) (new combination by Kinzelbach 1971b, incorrectly assigned authorship).

Hosts.

Ammophila apicalis Guérin-Méneville, 1835 (as Ammophila apicalis Brullé, 1839); A. campestris Latreille, 1809; A. heydeni Dahlbom, 1845 (as Ammophila heydeni Dahlberg?); A. holosericea (Fabricius, 1793); A. nasuta Lepeletier, 1845; A. pubescens Curtis, 1836; A. sabulosa (Linnaeus, 1758); Podalonia affinis (Kirby, 1798) (as Ammophila affinis Kirby, 1798); P. dispar (Taschenberg, 1869) (as Ammophila dispar Taschenberg, 1869); P. ebenina (Spinola, 1839) (as Ammophila ebenina Spinola, 1839); P. hirsuta (Scopoli, 1763) (as Ammophila hirsuta Scopoli); P. nigrohirta (Kohl, 1888) (as Ammophila nigrohirta Kohl, 1888); P. tydei (Le Guillou, 1841) (as Ammophila tydei Le Guillou, 1841); Eremochares dives ( Brullé, 1833) (as Ammophila dives Brullé, 1833); Prionyx kirbii (Vander Linden, 1827) (as Sphex albisectus Lep. & Serv., 1828); P. viduatus (Christ, 1791) (as Sphex viduatus Christ, 1791); P. niveatus (Dufour, 1854) (as Sphex niveatus Dufour, 1854) ( Kinzelbach 1978); Ammophila dupla Kohl, 1901; Podalonia chalybea (Kohl, 1906); Podalonia flavida (Kohl, 1901) ( Benda et al. 2021).

Distribution.

Poland: Gdańsk ( Siebold 1839); Palearctic ( Kinzelbach 1978).

Note.

Benda et al. (2021) proposed at least four distinctive T. sphecidarum lineages possibly representing separate species. More comprehensive sampling and detailed study are necessary.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Strepsiptera

Family

Xenidae

Genus

Tuberoxenos

Loc

Tuberoxenos sphecidarum (Siebold, 1839)

Benda, Daniel, Pohl, Hans, Nakase, Yuta, Beutel, Rolf & Straka, Jakub 2022
2022
Loc

Xenos sphecidarum

Benda & Pohl & Nakase & Beutel & Straka 2022
2022
Loc

Eupathocera sphecidarum

Benda & Pohl & Nakase & Beutel & Straka 2022
2022
Loc

Paraxenos sieboldii

Benda & Pohl & Nakase & Beutel & Straka 2022
2022
Loc

Paraxenos sieboldii

Benda & Pohl & Nakase & Beutel & Straka 2022
2022
Loc

Pseudoxenos sphecidarum

Benda & Pohl & Nakase & Beutel & Straka 2022
2022
Loc

Paraxenos sphecidarum

Benda & Pohl & Nakase & Beutel & Straka 2022
2022