Mutillid wasps are ectoparasitic insects that parasitize the enclosed developmental stages of their hosts. Adults are sexually dimorphic, with brilliantly colored and hardened cuticles. The biology of parasitic mutillid wasps has rarely been addressed. Here, we investigated the parasitization by on an important pollinator, . The parasitic biology and dispersal ability of were observed and tested under experimental conditions. We provide the first record of parasitizing in southwestern China. As is the case with other bumblebee species, mainly parasitized the puparia of males. The dispersal and invasion ability of this parasite under experimental conditions indicates that it spreads rapidly, as far as 20 m in one week, and invades different hosts ( and ). This report not only clarifies the parasitic relationship between and , but also has important ecological implications for the conservation of bumblebees in China.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/insects10040104 | DOI Listing |
Zootaxa
July 2024
Piazza A. Cataldo; 10; I 90040 Capaci (PA); Italy.
In this work, we contribute to the knowledge of Iberian mutillids by addressing and solving the problems associated with some taxa. A new species, Physetopoda fresnoi Romano & Parejo-Pulido, sp. nov.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe sexually dimorphic mutillid wasps (Hymenoptera: Mutillidae) are generally poorly known insects; in the Iberian Peninsula several common and widespread species are known from only one sex, for which sex-associations still need to be established. Such is the case with Smicromyrme (Astomyrme) suberratus Invrea, 1957, known only from males, and Physetopoda pusilla (Klug in Waltl, 1835), known from females. In this paper, making use of conclusive sex-association experiments and other elements, S.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMutillid wasps (Mutillidae) are relatively inconspicuous ectoparasitoid Hymenoptera, distributed worldwide, with ca. 150 species known from Europe. Compared to other areas in the continent (e.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe mutillid wasps (Hymenoptera, Mutillidae) of the Iberian Peninsula, and particularly of Portugal, are insufficiently researched. In this paper, two species in the genus Smicromyrme are added to the Portuguese fauna: S. ceballosi Surez, 1959 and S.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFArthropod biodiversity is still insufficiently known in large areas of Europe, such as the Iberian Peninsula, regarding several insect groups. Mutillid wasps (Mutillidae), markedly sexually dimorphic ectoparasitic species, are poorly known Hymenoptera, with a number of species awaiting formal description and others known only from one sex. Sexual associations have been historically difficult to establish for most mutillid wasp species; in an European context, the species in tribe Smicromyrmini, particularly in the genera Smicromyrme Thomson, 1870 and Physetopoda Schuster, 1949, have presented the biggest challenges.
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