Diglyphus chabrias (Walker)
Figs 21, 22, 29, 34, 54, 55, 72, 78
Cirrospilus chabrias Walker, 1838:451, lectotype male in BMNH (type no. 5.2589), examined.
Diglyphus chabrias; Walker, 1844: 407 –410. Asecodes chabrias; Dalla Torre, 1898: 46.
Diagnosis. Scape completely dark (Figs 54, 55); legs (Fig. 34): femora dark and metallic with apical ¼ –¼ white; fore tibia with anterior surface white and posterior surface dark and metallic or dark brown, mid and hind tibiae dark and metallic with apical ¼ –¼ white; fore wing speculum with a few scattered setae (Fig. 72); male with antennal flagellomeres densely setose with short hairs (Fig. 55); male gaster completely dark and metallic (Fig. 22).
Material. Denmark: 1♀ 1♂ (BMNH, MZLU) . France: 6♀ 2♂ (BMNH) . Greece (Crete): 5♀ (BMNH) . Hungary: 1♂ (BMNH) . Italy: 2♀ (BMNH) . Norway: 1♀ (BMNH) . Portugal (Madeira): 1♀ 1♂ (BMNH) . Russia: 1♀ 3♂ (ZISP) . Spain (Canary Islands): 4♂ (BMNH) . Sweden: 44♀ 24♂ (BMNH, MZLU) . United Kingdom: 58♀ 55♂ (BMNH) .
The specimens from Sweden, identified as D. chabrias in Hansson (1987), were misidentified, instead they are D. begini .
Distribution. Bulgaria (Boyadzhiev 1997), Czech Republic (Kalina 1989), Denmark *, France *, Germany (Bouček & Askew 1968), Greece *, Hungary (Bouček & Askew 1968), Iran (Yefremova et al. 2007), Italy *, Netherlands (Gijswijt 2003), Norway (Bouček & Askew 1968), Portugal (Madeira) (Koponen & Askew 2002), Russia (Yefremova 2002), Slovakia (Kalina 1989), Spain (Canary Islands) (Koponen & Askew 2002), Sweden (Bouček & Askew 1968), Turkey (Yefremova et al. 2011), United Kingdom (Walker 1838).