Eupathocera lugubris Pierce, 1909, stat. res.
Eupathocera lugubris Pierce, 1909: 143.
Eupathocera lugubris Pierce, 1908: nomen nudum
Paraxenos lugubris (Pierce, 1908) (new combination by Kinzelbach 1971b).
Eupathocera pruinosae Pierce, 1909 (synonymized by Bohart 1941).
Eupathocera pictipennidis Pierce, 1911 (synonymized by Bohart 1941).
Eupathocera vulgaridis Pierce, 1911 (synonymized by Bohart 1941).
Hosts.
Ammophila aberti Haldeman, 1852 (as Sphex transversus Ferdanand, 1934); Ammophila arvensis Lepeletier, 1845 (as Sphex arvensis (Dahlbom, 1843)); Ammophila breviceps F. Smith, 1856 (= Sphex breviceps (F. Smith, 1856)); Ammophila extremitata Cresson, 1865; Ammophila fernaldi (Murray, 1938); Ammophila gracilis Lepeletier, 1845 (as Sphex (Ammophila) fragilis (F. Smith, 1856)); Ammophila kennedyi (Murray, 1938) (as Sphex (Ammophila) vulgaris (Cresson, 1865)); Ammophila nasalis Provancher, 1895 (as Sphex craspedotus Fernald, 1934 and S. nasalis (Provancher, 1895)); Ammophila pictipennis Walsh, 1869 (as Sphex (Ammophila) pictipennis (Walsh, 1869)); Ammophila pruinosa Cresson, 1865 (as Sphex (Ammophila) pruinosa (Cresson, 1865)); Ammophila urnaria Dahlbom, 1843 (as Sphex urnarius (Dahlbom, 1843)); Eremnophila aureonotata (Cameron, 1888) (as Sphex aureonotatus (Cameron, 1888)) (Pierce 1909; Bohart 1941; Kathirithamby et al. 2012; Cook 2019).
Distribution.
USA: Ohio, Colorado, Illinois, Iowa (Pierce 1909; Bohart 1941; Cook 2019).