Hymenoptera

Ward, Anna K. G., Busbee, Robert W., Chen, Rachel A., Davis, Charles K., Driscoe, Amanda L., Egan, Scott P., Goldberg, Bailey A. R., Hood, Glen Ray, Jones, Dylan G., Kranz, Adam J., Meadely-Dunphy, Shannon A., Milks, Alyson K., Ott, James R., Prior, Kirsten M., Sheikh, Sofia I., Shzu, Shih-An, Weinersmith, Kelly L., Zhang, Linyi, Zhang, Y. Miles & Forbes, Andrew A., 2022, Borneosa aspera, Zoological Studies 61 (57), pp. 1-30 : 15-17

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.6620/ZS.2022.61-57

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/1E1F87DD-FF95-FFCF-9937-2ABA9D8CFE2B

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Hymenoptera
status

 

( Hymenoptera : Chalcidoidea: Eurytomidae : Eurytominae )

4,170 individuals (mean = 62.2, range 1–1,605) reared from 67 gall types ( Table S1).

Summary of Natural History: Eurytoma in the Nearctic comprise a large (> 80 species) group of mostly parasitic wasps associated with a large diversity of insects across several orders ( Bugbee 1967). At least 10 Nearctic species have been reared from oak galls, but their direct hosts are often uncertain, and indeed some Palearctic species are confirmed to attack nongalling inquilines ( Redfern and Askew 1998). Some Eurytoma are also phytophagous, although no exclusive phytophages are known from oak galls ( Bugbee 1967). Though some Eurytoma are apparently endoparasites ( Redfern and Askew 1998), Eurytoma in other Cynipid galls, including oak galls in the Palearctic, are uniformly ectoparasites, with species in some galls feeding on the gall organ once the primary host insect has been exhausted ( Gómez et al. 2011).

Reported host ranges of oak gall-associated Eurytoma vary from a single species to more than 75 hosts ( Bugbee 1967; Gómez et al. 2011; Askew et al. 2013). However, the diversity of the Nearctic fauna has yet to be interrogated genetically, and those in the Palearctic only marginally so. One particularly generalist-appearing species in the Palearctic, Eurytoma brunniventris Ratzeburg , has shown some evidence of genetic structure at the COI locus, with specimens reared from five species of oak gall wasps sorting genetically by tree host section ( Ács et al. 2010). Until an integrative assessment of species limits can be performed for Nearctic Eurytoma , interpretation of their host ranges will likely remain limited.

Relationship to galler phylogeny: Eurytoma were or have previously been reared from most oak galls represented in the Nearctic gall wasp phylogeny ( Ward et al. 2022) ( Fig. 7a View Fig ). If they appear sparse anywhere on the phylogeny, it is among the Neuroterus part of the tree ( Fig. S1 View Fig ; tips 4–17), many of which were collected as small flower or leaf galls.

Biogeography and oak tree section: Eurytoma were reared from galls across all three floristic regions ( Fig. 7b View Fig ) and from 48–64% of gall types collected from each oak section ( Fig. 7c View Fig ).

Tree organ and gall size: Eurytoma were reared from galls on all oak organs studied ( Fig. 7d View Fig ) though were more often reared from larger galls (84%) than from small galls (29%; Fig. 7e View Fig ).

Co-occurrence with other natural enemies: Eurytoma were significantly more likely to be present when Ormyrus (P = 0.0033) or Torymus (P = 0.0200) wasps were also present ( Fig. 7f View Fig ). This may indicate a) b)

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overlap in the types of gall morphologies favored by each parasitoid genus.

Additional Notes: Like Ormyrus and Torymus , Eurytoma are near-ubiquitous in their association with oak galls: we reared them from 64 (52.5%) of the 122 gall types that had five or more insect specimens emerge ( Table S1). Also like these other genera, Eurytoma may be more species-rich than they currently appear, with each species more specialized on particular dimensions of gall environments ( Zhang et al. 2014). A thorough integrative analysis of this group will be necessary to address questions about their evolution, ecology, and taxonomy.

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