Hymenoptera
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.6620/ZS.2022.61-57 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/1E1F87DD-FF95-FFD1-9A92-2B9A9A57FDE8 |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Hymenoptera |
status |
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( Hymenoptera : Chalcidoidea: Eurytomidae : Eurytominae )
16,712 individuals (mean = 253.2, range 1–9,934) reared from 66 gall types ( Table S1).
Summary of Natural History: Sycophila are known as parasitoids of endophytic insects, including gall wasps ( Balduf 1932; Askew et al. 2006 2013; Gómez et al. 2013). Some species are known from just a single host (e.g., Sycophila marylandica (Girault) ( Balduf 1932) , while the Palearctic species Sycophila buguttata (Swederus) has 80 recorded hosts ( Askew et al. 2013). Recent molecular work has shown considerable cryptic diversity and more limited host ranges among the Nearctic species, ( Zhang et al. 2022).
Relationship to galler phylogeny: Sycophila in our collections were broadly associated with almost all clades in the Nearctic gall wasp phylogeny ( Ward et al. 2022), including all Palearctic clades ( Fig. 6a View Fig ). Two clades from which no Sycophila were reared were a mixture of cluster galls on leaves and stems, early spring bud galls, and small unilocular leaf galls. Sycophila appear to be reared more often from large galls ( Fig. 6e View Fig ; Hall 2001; Zhang et al. 2022) such that this apparent absence may reflect a general favoring of larger galls, but could also or instead be related to phenology or a bias in survivorship from smaller galls when using our rearing methods.
Biogeography and oak tree section: Sycophila were reared from galls on oaks across all three floristic regions and in all three oak sections ( Fig. 6b c View Fig ). Nine of 10 galls reared from live oaks (section Virentes ) were host to Sycophila .
Tree organ and gall size: We reared Sycophila from all surveyed host tree organs ( Fig. 6d View Fig ). At least at this genus-level resolution, they were reared from a larger fraction (74%) of large galls than from medium (59%) or small (26%) galls ( Fig. 6e View Fig ). PCoA analyses of Sycophila from these and other collections also suggest that wasps in the genus generally favor medium and large galls ( Zhang et al. 2022).
Co-occurrence with other natural enemies: Sycophila did not co-occur significantly in a positive or negative direction with any of the other seven genera analyzed ( Fig. 6f View Fig ).
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