Tomostethus nigritus (Fabricius, 1804)

Ryoo, Seung-Woo, Min, Jin-Young, Son, Seok-Yoon, Choi, Baek-Yong, Choi, Juho & Min, Kyoung-Bok, 2022, Taxonomic Notes and New Distribution and Host Plant Records for Sawflies and Woodwasps (Hymenoptera, Symphyta) of Japan VII, Bulletin of the National Museum of Nature and Science. Series A, Zoology 48 (4), pp. 193-213 : 209

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.50826/bnmnszool.48.4_193

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/6E482241-FFC5-5879-69D5-FA5726F63B49

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Tomostethus nigritus (Fabricius, 1804)
status

 

Tomostethus nigritus (Fabricius, 1804)

Japanese name: Yachidamo-habachi

( Fig. 11 View Fig )

Larva. Early instar ( Fig. 11D View Fig ): pale gray, with thoracic legs gray. Final instar ( Fig. 11E, F View Fig ): head brown with black markings; thorax and abdominal segment 1 pale yellow; thoracic legs black; abdominal segments 2–10 pale gray, pale yellow on tergum 8.

Material examined. Honshu: Tochigi Pref.: 2 $, Nakagawa, Wami , 36°47′N 140°10′E, coll. larvae on Fraxinus sieboldiana , 24. IV. 2021, mat. 5, 7. V., em. 11, 12. IV. 2022, S. Ibuki ( Fig. 11 View Fig ) GoogleMaps .

Host plant. Oleaceae : Fraxinus sieboldiana Blume in Japan (new record); F. excelsior L. and F. mandshurica Rupr. in Korea ( Okutani, 1967b); F. excelsior in Europe ( Lorenz and Kraus, 1957).

Remarks. In the paper entitled lFood plants of Japanese Symphytaz, Okutani (1967b) listed Fraxinus excelsior and F. mandshurica as the hosts of this sawfly, but he stated that those hosts were recorded in Korea. This is the first report of a host record for the Japanese population.

The above two Japanese females agree with the European specimens of Tomostethus nigritus , judging from Verheyde and Sioen (2019) and Lacourt (2020) (compare Fig. 11A–C View Fig with images in Taeger et al., 2018 and fig. 1 in Verheyde and Sioen, 2019). However, the Japanese larva is quite different from the European larva in color. According to Lorenz and Kraus (1957) and Verheyde and Sioen (2019), the European late instar larva has light green head, trunk and thoracic legs and a pair of whitish dorsal stripes under the cuticle on the trunk (fig. 3 in Verheyde and Sioen, 2019; fig. 1, p. 353 in Macek et al., 2020). Conversely, the Japanese late instar larva has a dark head, black legs and a pale yellow and pale gray trunk ( Fig. 11E, F View Fig ).

V

Royal British Columbia Museum - Herbarium

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