Caliadurgus fasciatellus
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Insecta
Order: Hymenoptera
Family: Pompilidae
Subfamily: Pepsinae
Tribe: Pepsini
Genus: Caliadurgus
Species:
C. fasciatellus
Binomial name
Caliadurgus fasciatellus
(Spinola, 1808)
Synonyms
  • Pompilus fasciatellus Spinola, 1808
  • Pompilus calcaratus Dahlbom, 1829
  • Pompilus maculipennis Dahlbom, 1829
  • Pompilus albispinus Herrich-Schäffer, 1830
  • Pompilus curtus Zetterstedt, 1838
  • Priocnemis gyllenhali Dahlbom, 1843
  • Anoplius labiatus Lepeletier, 1845
  • Calicurgus odontellus Lepeletier, 1845
  • Pompilus bivirgulatus Costa, 1881
  • Priocnemis fuscopennis Verhoeff, 1892[1]
Caliadurgus fasciatellus female with Garden Spider (24168265720)

Caliadurgus fasciatellus is a species of spider wasp from the subfamily Pepsinae found from Western Europe to the Far East of Asia.

Taxonomy

The name Caliadurgus was proposed originally by Pate in 1946 as a replacement for a preoccupied name, Calicurgus, published by Lepeletier in 1845. However, Pate explicitly selected Sphex hyalinata as the type species, while Kohl had selected Pompilus fasciatellus to be the type of Lepeletier's genus. Pate and others mistakenly thought that fasciatellus and hyalinata were the same species,[2] but later researchers discovered that these were two different taxa, one now known as Caliadurgus fasciatellus and the other now known as Priocnemis hyalinata.[1]

Description

C. fasciatellus reaches 6–10 millimetres (0.24–0.39 in) in length. The 1st and 2nd segments of the abdomen are brownish red with white spurs in the middle and hind legs.

Distribution

In Europe found from Great Britain east to Russia and Finland south to Spain and the Balkans.[3] In Great Britain it is mainly confined to the south and east.[4]

Biology

The flight period in Britain is June to October with a peak in July and August.[4] It is not known what plants are used by the adults for feeding on nectar.

It hunts orb web spiders of the genera Araneus and Meta.[5] It excavates short, vertical burrows in sandy substrate once the prey has been caught. The prey is gripped in the jaws, between the thorax and abdomen, and transported to the burrow by being carried in front of the wasp. The prey is placed in a vertical position in the cell.[4]

Habitat

Exposed dry sandy or sandy clay soils.[4]

References

  1. 1 2 Else, G. R., Bolton, B., & Broad, G. R. (2016). Checklist of British and Irish Hymenoptera - aculeates (Apoidea, Chrysidoidea and Vespoidea). Biodiversity data journal, (4), e8050. https://doi.org/10.3897/BDJ.4.e8050
  2. V. S. L. Pate (1946) The generic names of the spider wasps (Psammocharidae olim Pompilidae) and their type species (Hymenoptera: Aculeata) Transactions of the American Entomological Society 72:65-137
  3. Loktionov,V. M. & Lelej, A. S. 2012 New Distributional Date On the Spider Wasps (Hymenoptera, Pompilidae) from the Russian Far East. Far Eastern Entomologist. 244 10-12.
  4. 1 2 3 4 Edwards R. & Telfer M. (eds), 2001, Provisional Atlas for the aculeate Hymenoptera of Britain and Ireland Part 3, NERC ISBN 1-870393-58-9
  5. Bogdan Wisniowski: Spider-hunting wasps (Hymenoptera: Pompilidae). of Poland Ojców National Park, Ojców 2009, OCLC 751138831 (ISBN formally incorrect 83-60337-15-4).
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.