On Scottish sawflies, with results of the 14th International Sawfly Workshop, in the southern Highlands, 2010 (Hymenoptera, Symphyta).

Authors

  • Andrew D. Liston
  • Guy Knight
  • Erik Heibo
  • K. P. Bland
  • T.-E. Barstad
  • Stephan M. Blank
  • Jean-Luc Boevé
  • Carl Fiedler
  • K. J. Grearson
  • A. Halstead
  • Hans-Joachim Jacobs
  • Ewald Jansen
  • O. Lønnve
  • Marko Prous
  • J. Robinson
  • Andreas Taeger

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.21248/contrib.entomol.62.1.1-68

Abstract

Results of fieldwork are presented from the 14th International Sawfly Workshop, held in the southern Highlands of Scotland, mostly in Perthshire. Some records of Symphyta from other parts of Scotland are included. First records in the British Isles are given for eight tenthredinid species: Amauronematus mimus, Phyllocolpa alienata, P. erythropyga, P. plicalapponum, P. plicaphylicifolia, P. prussica, Pristiphora thalictri and Tenthredo ignobilis. A. mimus is also recorded from Ireland. Amauronematus stenogaster is removed from the list of British Isles Symphyta. Recorded for the first time in Scotland are one cephid (Hartigia xanthostoma) and ten tenthredinids (Claremontia uncta, Dolerus brevicornis, Empria basalis, Empria parvula, Parna apicalis, Pristiphora decipiens, Pristiphora leucopus, Pristiphora testacea, Tenthredo mandibularis and Tenthredopsis ornata). Characters useful for the distinction of some species are illustrated. The type locality of Nematus herbaceae Cameron, 1876 is clarified. Geranium pratense is confirmed as a host of Macrophya albipuncta. Salix reticulata is a host of Amauronematus mcluckieae [mandatory correction of spelling of species name]. Sedum rosea may be a host of Tenthredo ignobilis. General conclusions: high species richness of Perthshire sawfly fauna compared to other regions of Scotland, including several species only known in British Isles from there; importance to conservation of rock-ledge habitats; large data deficits for many species, particularly on hosts, phenology and distribution; high value of Malaise traps in faunal survey of Symphyta, because spectrum of taxa captured differs from that recorded by hand-netting; as indicated by species and sex composition of ‘fall-out’ on snow patches, adult sawflies undertake active dispersal, within landmasses, to a greater extent than is often assumed.

Keywords

British Isles, Cephidae, Pamphiliidae, Tenthredinoidea, hosts, phenology, distribution.

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Published

2012-05-15

How to Cite

Liston, A. D., Knight, G., Heibo, E., Bland, K. P., Barstad, T.-E., Blank, S. M., … Taeger, A. 2012: On Scottish sawflies, with results of the 14th International Sawfly Workshop, in the southern Highlands, 2010 (Hymenoptera, Symphyta). - Contributions to Entomology = Beiträge Zur Entomologie 62(1): 1–68 - doi: 10.21248/contrib.entomol.62.1.1-68

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