Biology:Aprostocetus

From HandWiki

Aprostocetus is a genus of hymenopteran insects of the family Eulophidae.[1] The genus was erected by John O. Westwood in 1833. This very large group (about 800 described species) of parasitoid wasps has a global distribution.[1]

Species

Widespread species

Palaearctic species

A parasitoid of the gall wasp Biorhiza pallida (which causes oak apples)
A parasitoid on various eriophyid mites
  • A. ermaki – Far eastern Russia
  • A. escherichi – Palaearctic
  • A. esherensis – Britain
  • A. euagoras – Britain
  • A. eupatorii – Palaearctic
  • A. eupolis – Britain
  • A. eurystoma – Palaearctic
  • A. eurytomae – Palaearctic, Near East
  • A. eurytus – Europe
  • A. extensus – France
  • A. fabicola – Palaearctic
  • A. facetus – Russia (Adygea)
  • A. femoralis – Palaearctic
  • A. flavicapitus – Far eastern Russia
  • A. flavifrons – Italy, Madeira
  • A. flavovarius – Europe
  • A. flumenius – Far eastern Russia
  • A. fonscolombei – Palaearctic
  • A. foraminifer – France
  • A. forsteri – Palaearctic
  • A. fukutai – China (Hebei), Taiwan
  • A. fulvipes – Palaearctic
  • A. fusificola – France
    • A parasitoid on the gall wasp Plagiotrochus fusifex
  • A. garganensis – Greece, Italy
  • A. gaus – Europe
    • A parasitoid on the gall midge Dasineura leguminicola
  • A. glandicola – France
    • A parasitoid on the gall wasp Callirhytis glandium
  • A. gnomus – Palaearctic
  • A. graciliclava – Greece
  • A. grahami – Moldova
  • A. grandicauda – Far eastern Russia
  • A. grandii – Palaearctic
  • A. gratus – Palaearctic
  • A. grylli – Palaearctic
  • A. habarovi – Far eastern Russia
  • A. hanka – Far eastern Russia
  • A. hedqvisti – Palaearctic
  • A. hians – Madeira
  • A. holomelas – Hungary
  • A. holoxanthus – Eastern Palaearctic
  • A. humilis – Western Europe
  • A. hyperfuniculus – Far eastern Russia
  • A. ibericus – Spain
  • A. ilexi – China (Jiangxi)
  • A. impurusSwitzerland
  • A. incrassatus – Britain, Sweden, Russia, Turkey [3]
    • Host unknown but associated with Carex spp [3]
  • A. invidus – Southern Europe, Near East
  • A. ione – Britain
  • A. krusenschterni – Far eastern Russia
  • A. lacaena – Britain
  • A. lachares – Europe
  • A. lacunatus – Britain
  • A. larzacensis – Palaearctic
  • A. laticeps – France
  • A. leptocerus – Palaearctic
  • A. leptoneuros – Palaearctic
  • A. levadiensis – Greece
  • A. ligus – Britain
  • A. lituratus – Poland
  • A. longiclava – Far eastern Russia
  • A. longipectus – Southern Russia (Astrakhan Oblast)
  • A. longiscapus – Palaearctic
  • A. longispinus – Far eastern Russia
  • A. longistigma – Far eastern Russia
  • A. longulus – Europe
  • A. lutescens – Spain
  • A. luteus – Europe
  • A. lycidas – Europe, North Africa
  • A. lycidoides – Greece
  • A. lysippe – Palaearctic
  • A. malagensis – Spain
  • A. mandanis – Europe
  • A. masculinus – France
  • A. massonianae – China (Guizhou)
  • A. maurus – Hungary
  • A. mazaeus – Britain
  • A. menius – Palaearctic
  • A. meridionalis – Southern Europe
  • A. meroe – Western Europe
  • A. metra – Palaearctic
  • A. micantulus – Palaearctic
  • A. microocellus – Far eastern Russia
  • A. mimulus – Greece
  • A. minimus – Palaearctic
  • A. miridivorus – France, Italy
  • A. moldavicus – Moldova
  • A. morairensis – Spain
  • A. muiri – China (Guangdong)
  • A. mycerinus – Palaearctic
    • Host unknown but associated with Salix spp
  • A. myrsus – Britain
  • A. natans – Central Russia, Ukraine
  • A. nigriventris – Far eastern Russia
  • A. novatus – Europe
  • A. nubigenus – Palaearctic
  • A. nymphis – Britain
  • A. obliquus – Palaearctic
  • A. occidentalis – Southern Europe, Canary Islands, Madeira
  • A. oculisetatus – Far eastern Russia
  • A. oreophilus – Europe
  • A. orestes – Central Europe
  • A. orithyia – Palaearctic
  • A. oropus – Britain
  • A. ovivorax – Europe
  • A. pachyneuros – Europe
  • A. pallidipedes – Far eastern Russia
  • A. pallidipesJapan
  • A. palustris – Northern Europe
  • A. pantshenkoi – Southern Russia
  • A. paralus – Britain
  • A. peischula – Far eastern Russia
  • A. perfulvescens – Greece
  • A. perone – Northern Europe
  • A. phillyreae – Palaearctic
    • Host unknown but associated with Phillyrea spp
  • A. phineus – Europe
  • A. phloeophthori – Palaearctic
    • A parasitoid on the bark beetle Phloeophthorus rhododactylus
  • A. phragmiticola – Palaearctic
    • A parasitoid on the gall midge Giraudiella inclusa
  • A. phragmitinus – Europe
  • A. ping – Spain
  • A. plagioderae – Moldova
  • A. plangon – Britain
  • A. planiusculus – Palaearctic
  • A. polygoni – Central Europe
    • Host unknown but associated with Polygonum persicaria
  • A. popovi – Far eastern Russia
  • A. problematicus – Hungary
  • A. productus – Palaearctic
  • A. prolidice – Palaearctic
  • A. prolixus – China (Hebei), Taiwan
  • A. prosymna – Britain
  • A. pseudopodiellus – Europe
  • A. ptarmicae – Europe
  • A. rhacius – Palaearctic
  • A. rhipheus – Europe
  • A. rhode – Britain
  • A. rimskykorsakovi – Central Russia
  • A. roesellae – Palaearctic
  • A. rubi – Palaearctic
  • A. rubicola – Palaearctic
  • A. rufescens – Western Europe
  • A. rufiscapus – Britain
  • A. rufus – Europe
  • A. rumicis – Northern Europe
  • A. salictorum – Palaearctic
  • A. schambala – Far eastern Russia
  • A. scoticus – Britain
    • A parasitoid of the gall midge Jaapiella veronicae
  • A. sensuna – Switzerland
  • A. serratularum – Palaearctic
  • A. setosulus – Central Europe
  • A. sibiricus – Far eastern Russia
  • A. silaceus – Greece
  • A. silvestris – Far eastern Russia
  • A. spassk – Far eastern Russia
  • A. specularis – France
  • A. stenus – Europe
  • A. stigmaticalis – Britain
  • A. subanellatus – Palaearctic
    • Host unknown but associated with Agrostis spp.
  • A. subcylindricus – Czech Republic
  • A. subplanus – Central Europe
  • A. subterraneus – Hungary
  • A. suevius – Europe
  • A. taiga – Far eastern Russia
  • A. tanaceticola – Northern Europe
    • A parasitoid of the gall midge Rhopalomyia tanaceticola
  • A. taxi – Europe
  • A. tenuiradialis – Europe
  • A. tiliaceae – Czech Republic
    • A parasitoid of the gall midge Didymomyia tiliacea
  • A. tilicola – Palaearctic
    • A parasitoid of the gall midge Contarinia tiliarum
  • A. tompanus – Palaearctic
  • A. torquentis – Palaearctic
  • A. totis – Britain
  • A. trjapitzini – Palaearctic, Near East
  • A. truncatulus – France
  • A. tymber – Palaearctic
  • A. vaccus – Britain
  • A. vassolensis – Central Europe
  • A. veronicae – Britain
    • A parasitoid of the gall midge Jaapiella veronicae
  • A. verticalis – Britain
  • A. verutus – Palaearctic
    • Host unknown but associated with various grasses
  • A. viatorum – Madeira
  • A. vicinus – Far eastern Russia
  • A. viridescens – Central Europe
  • A. viridinitens – Palaearctic
  • A. volgodonicus – Southern Russia
  • A. voranus – Britain
  • A. westwoodii – Central and Southern Europe
  • A. wrangeli – Far eastern Russia
  • A. xanthomelas – Central Europe
  • A. xanthopus – Palaearctic
    • A parasitoid on various moths, also recorded on the bark beetle Carphoborus minimus
  • A. xeuxes – Britain
  • A. zerovae – Ukraine, Central Russia
  • A. zoilus – Palaearctic

Indomalayan species

  • A. ajmerensis – India (Rajasthan)
    • A parasitoid on the mealybug Coccidohystrix insolita
  • A. annulicornis – India (Rajasthan)
    • A parasitoid on the mealybug Coccidohystrix insolita
  • A. asphondyliae – India (Karnataka)
    • A parasitoid on the gall midge Asphondylia pongamiae
  • A. bangaloricus – India (Karnataka)
  • A. basalis – Indonesia (South Moluccas)
  • A. coimbatorensis – India (Andhra Pradesh, Tamil Nadu)
    • A parasitoid on various gall midges
  • A. distinguendus – Indonesia (South Moluccas)
  • A. flavidus – India (Andhra Pradesh)
  • A. holochlorus – Indonesia (South Moluccas)
  • A. homochromus – Indonesia (South Moluccas)
  • A. java – Indonesia (Java, Bali)
  • A. kuriani – India (Orissa)
  • A. lasallei – India (Uttarakhand)
  • A. lecanii – Indonesia (Java, Bali)
  • A. maculatus – India (Uttar Pradesh)
  • A. metallicus – Indonesia (South Moluccas)
  • A. nainitalensis – India (Uttarakhand, Uttar Pradesh)
  • A parasitoid on the kerriid bug Kerria lacca
  • A. nigricornis – India (Uttar Pradesh)
    • A parasitoid on the mealybug Nipaecoccus vastator
  • A. plesispae – Indonesia (Java, Bali)
  • A. psyllidis – India (Uttar Pradesh)
  • A. purpureus – Pakistan, India, Bangladesh, Malaysia
  • A. sankarani – India
  • A. santalinus – India (Karnataka)
  • A. tarsalis – Indonesia (South Moluccas)
  • A. versicolor – Sri Lanka
  • A. yoshimotoi – India (Uttar Pradesh)

Afrotropical species

  • A. aeruginosus – Seychelles
  • A. agnatus – Seychelles
  • A. ambilobei – Madagascar
  • A. ankaratrae – Madagascar
  • A. aphloiae – Madagascar
  • A. aspidomorphae – Kenya, Uganda
    • A parasitoid on tortoise beetles of the genera Aspidomorpha and Conchyloctenia
  • A. brevistylus – Central Africa
    • A parasitoid on the diopsid fly Diopsis thoracica
  • A. camerounensis – Cameroon
  • A. cassidocida – Senegal
    • A parasitoid on tortoise beetles of the genus Aspidomorpha
  • A. dineuri – Republic of Congo
  • A. dolichocerus – Seychelles
  • A. ghananensisGhana
  • A. gowdeyi – Uganda
  • A. gravans – Eritrea, Tanzania
  • A. hanangensis – Tanzania
  • A. harongae – Madagascar
  • A. hofferi – Algeria
  • A. lamiicidus – Ghana, Nigeria
  • A. leroyi – Democratic Republic of the Congo
  • A. leucopterae – Tanzania
  • A. longiscutulum – Tanzania
  • A. marinikius – Algeria
  • A. melichlorus – Ghana
  • A. microfuniculus – Algeria
  • A. negetae – Senegal
  • A. nigriceps – Seychelles
  • A. pauliani – Madagascar
    • A parasitoid on gall-producing insects on Plectronia spp
  • A. phytolymae – Côte d'Ivoire
  • A. procerae – West Africa
  • A. regnieri – Congo, Kenya
  • A. roseveari – Central Africa
  • A. salebrosus – Central Africa
  • A. scutellaris – Tanzania
  • A. senegalensis – Senegal
  • A. spinicornisRwanda
  • A. stictococci – West Africa
  • A. theioneurus – Kenya, Madagascar, Seychelles
  • A. trichionotus – Central Africa
  • A. ugandaensis – Uganda

Nearctic species

Neotropical species

  • A. acutipennis – Grenada, Saint Vincent and the Grenadines
  • A. arachnophagus – Argentina, Uruguay
  • A. ashmeadi – Grenada
  • A. baccharidis – Chile
  • A. bahiensis – Brazil (Bahia)
  • A. basilaris – Grenada, Saint Vincent and the Grenadines
  • A. basimaculata – Nicaragua
  • A. bondari – Brazil (Bahia)
    • A parasitoid on the pauliniid grasshopper Paulinia elegans
  • A. brasiliensis – Brazil (Mato Grosso)
  • A. cacus – Brazil (Bahia)
  • A. chapadae – South America
  • A. cleonica – Brazil (Bahia)
  • A. colliguayae – Chile
  • A. coxalis – Grenada
  • A. cupreus – Grenada, Saint Vincent and the Grenadines
  • A. daimachus – Brazil (Bahia)
  • A. elevatus – Grenada
  • A. februus – Brazil (Bahia)
  • A. femoratus – Grenada, Saint Vincent and the Grenadines
  • A. hyalinipennis – Paraguay
  • A. ignigenus – Argentina
  • A. infulatus – Argentina
  • A. longicornis – Grenada, Saint Vincent and the Grenadines
  • A. melleus – Brazil (Pará)
  • A. narcaeus – Chile
  • A. naucles – Chile
  • A. norax – Chile
  • A. phryno – Brazil (Bahia)
  • A. polypaea – Chile
  • A. punctifrons – Saint Vincent and the Grenadines
  • A. riverai – South America
  • A. similis – Grenada
  • A. socialis – Chile
  • A. thomasi – Chile
  • A. vaquitarum – South America, Caribbean
  • A. viridis – Grenada
  • A. vulgaris – Grenada, Saint Vincent and the Grenadines
  • A. xenocles – Chile
  • A. zemani – South America

Australasian species

  • A. acomatus – Queensland
  • A. acuminativentris – Queensland
  • A. acuminatus – Queensland
  • A. acutiventris – Queensland
  • A. aeneithorax – Queensland
  • A. aeneoculex – Queensland
  • A. aeneon – Queensland
  • A. aenosus – Queensland
  • A. aeneus – Queensland
  • A. affinis – Queensland
  • A. anna – Queensland
  • A. arses – Tasmania
  • A. atrellus – Queensland
  • A. atristigma – Queensland
  • A. atriventris – Queensland
  • A. aura – Queensland
  • A. aurios – Queensland
  • A. auriscutellum – Queensland
  • A. auriventris – Queensland
  • A. australicus – Queensland
  • A. baucis – Western Australia
  • A. bicolor – Queensland
  • A. bilongifasciatus – Queensland
  • A. boswelli – Queensland
  • A. boussingaulti – Queensland
  • A. brevis – Queensland
  • A. brevistigma – South Australia
  • A. brunneiventris – Queensland
  • A. brunneus – Queensland
  • A. burmeisteri – Northern Territory
  • A. cinctiventer – Queensland
  • A. cinctiventris – New South Wales
  • A. cobdeni – Queensland
  • A. consimilis – Queensland
  • A. cressoni – Queensland
  • A. culex – Queensland
  • A. darwini – Queensland
  • A. darwinianus – Queensland
  • A. decii – Queensland
  • A. dei – Queensland
  • A. dymas – Tasmania
  • A. eucalypti – South Australia
  • A. fannius – Tasmania
  • A. fasciativenter – Tasmania
  • A. fasciativentrosus – Queensland
  • A. filiformis – New South Wales
  • A. flavellinus – Queensland
  • A. flavellus – Queensland
  • A. flavicaput – Queensland
  • A. flavicollis – Queensland
  • A. flavicornis – Queensland
  • A. flavios – Queensland
  • A. flavipostscutellum – Queensland
  • A. flaviscapus – Queensland
  • A. flaviscutellum – Queensland
  • A. flavobasalis – Queensland
  • A. froggatti – New South Wales
  • A. fulgens – Queensland
  • A. fulvipostscutellum – Queensland
  • A. fuscipennatus – South Australia
  • A. fuscipennis – Queensland
  • A. fuscitibiae – Tasmania
  • A. fuscosus – Queensland
  • A. fuscus – Queensland
  • A. gloriosus – Queensland
  • A. glycon – Tasmania
  • A. gobius – Queensland
  • A. gregi – Queensland
  • A. grotiusi – Queensland
  • A. guttatus – Queensland
  • A. haeckeli – Queensland
  • A. handeli – Queensland
  • A. hetaericos – Queensland
  • A. hexguttativentris – Queensland
  • A. hyalinus – Queensland
  • A. imago – New South Wales
  • A. imperialis – Queensland
  • A. indigenus – Queensland
  • A. inghamensis – Queensland
  • A. intentatus – Queensland
  • A. io – Queensland
  • A. ion – Queensland
  • A. kelloggi – Queensland
  • A. latithorax – Queensland
  • A. lelaps – Western Australia
  • A. lenini – Queensland
  • A. limbus – Tasmania
  • A. lineatus – Queensland
  • A. longiclavus – Queensland
  • A. longipennis – Queensland
  • A. longiventris – Queensland
  • A. lustris – Queensland
  • A. mahometi – Queensland
  • A. marginatus – Queensland
  • A. margiscutellum – Queensland
  • A. margiscutum – Queensland
    • A parasitoid associated with gall producing insects on Eucalyptus
  • A. margiventris – Queensland
  • A. margiventrosus – Queensland
  • A. maximus – Queensland
  • A. meridialis – Queensland
  • A. meridianus – Victoria
  • A. mesmeri – Queensland
  • A. minutissimus – Queensland
  • A. mirus – Queensland
  • A. misericordia – Queensland
  • A. montanus – Queensland
  • A. monticola – Queensland
  • A. morum – Queensland
  • A. necopinatus – Queensland
  • A. neis – Tasmania
  • A. nelsonensis – Queensland
  • A. nigriclava – Queensland
  • A. nigrithorax – Queensland
  • A. nomadis – Queensland
  • A. novifasciatus – Queensland
  • A. nubilipennis – Queensland
  • A. nugatorius – Queensland
  • A. nympha – Queensland
  • A. obscurus – Queensland
  • A. occultus – Queensland
  • A. octoguttatus – New South Wales
  • A. pallidicaput – Queensland
  • A. pallidiventris – Queensland
  • A. parvulus – Queensland
  • A. pax – Queensland
  • A. perkinsi – Queensland
  • A. perobscurus – South Australia
  • A. perpulcher – Queensland
  • A. platoni – Queensland
  • A. polychromus – Northern Territory
  • A. pomosus – Queensland
  • A. pontiac – South Australia
  • A. postscutellatus – Queensland
  • A. proto – Tasmania
  • A. pulcher – Queensland
  • A. pulchrinotatus – Queensland
  • A. pullus – Queensland
  • A. purpureicorpus – Queensland
  • A. purpureithorax – Queensland
  • A. purpureivarius – Queensland
  • A. quadrifasciatus – Queensland
  • A. quadriguttativentris – Queensland
  • A. quadrimaculae – Queensland
  • A. quadrimaculatus – Queensland
  • A. queenslandensis – Queensland
  • A. rieki – Queensland
  • A. rotundiventris – Queensland
  • A. rufiscutellum – Queensland
  • A. saintpierrei – Queensland
  • A. saltensis – Queensland
  • A. salto – Queensland
  • A. saltus – Queensland
  • A. sannio – Queensland
  • A. sannion – Queensland
  • A. schilleri – Queensland
  • A. semiflaviceps – Queensland
  • A. septemguttatus – Queensland
  • A. sexguttatus – Queensland
  • A. seymourensis – Queensland
  • A. silvarum – Queensland
  • A. silvensis – Queensland
  • A. speciosissimus – Queensland
  • A. speciosus – Queensland
  • A. spissigradus – Queensland
  • A. subfasciativentris – Queensland
  • A. sublustris – Queensland
  • A. sulcatus – Queensland
  • A. sulfureiventris – Queensland
  • A. susurrus – Queensland
  • A. tarsatus – Queensland
  • A. teiae – Queensland
    • A parasitoid on lymantriid moths of the genus Teia, also recorded on the leaf beetle Galeruca semipullata
  • A. tenuis – Queensland
  • A. thalesi – Queensland
  • A. transversifasciatus – New South Wales
  • A. trifasciatus – Queensland
  • A. trimaculosus – Queensland
  • A. unfasciativentris – Queensland
  • A. valens – Tasmania
  • A. varicolor – Queensland
  • A. verus – Victoria
  • A. victoriensis – Victoria
  • A. viridicyaneus – Queensland
  • A. viridiflavus – Queensland
  • A. viridiscapus – Queensland
  • A. viridithorax – Queensland
  • A. vivatus – Queensland
  • A. wallacei – Queensland
  • A. walsinghami – Victoria
  • A. xanther – Northern Territory, Queensland
  • A. xanthicolor – Queensland
  • A. xenares – New South Wales, Tasmania
  • A. zaleucus – Tasmania

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 Gates, Michael W.; Zhang, Y. Miles; Buffington, Matthew L. (2020). "The great greenbriers gall mystery resolved? New species of Aprostocetus Westwood (Hymenoptera, Eulophidae) gall inducer and two new parasitoids (Hymenoptera, Eurytomidae) associated with Smilax L. in southern Florida, USA (English)". Journal of Hymenoptera Research 80: 71–98. doi:10.3897/jhr.80.59466. 
  2. Sampson, Blair J.; Roubos, Craig R.; Stringer, Stephen J.; Marshall, Donna; Liburd, Oscar E. (1 February 2013). "Biology and Efficacy of Aprostocetus (Eulophidae: Hymenoptera) as a Parasitoid of the Blueberry Gall Midge Complex: Dasineura oxycoccana and Prodiplosis vaccinii (Diptera: Cecidomyiidae)". Journal of Economic Entomology 106 (1): 73–79. doi:10.1603/EC12404. PMID 23448017. https://academic.oup.com/jee/article/106/1/73/839136?searchresult=1. 
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 3.4 3.5 3.6 Ariyak, Elif SAKALTAŞ; TüZüN, Ayla (1 August 2014). "Contribution to the knowledge of the Aprostocetus Westwood, 1833 (Hymenoptera: Tetrastichinae) from Kırıkkale and Çankırı (Turkey) with some new records". Turkish Journal of Entomology 38 (4): 415. doi:10.16970/ted.67737. 

Wikidata ☰ Q4782137 entry