Acantholyda

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Acantholyda
Acantholyda nemoralis 1 beentree.jpg
Scientific classification e
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Insecta
Order: Hymenoptera
Suborder: Symphyta
Family: Pamphiliidae
Subfamily:
Genus: Acantholyda
Costa, 1894
Type species
Acantholyda erythrocephala

Acantholyda is a genus of sawflies.

Subgenera[]

The genus is divided into two subgenera:

  • Acantholyda Costa, 1894
  • Itycorsia Konow, 1897

Species[]

  • Middlekauff, 1958 – North America (Calif)
  • Zhelochovtsev, 1968
    • A. aglaia aglaia Zhelochovtsev, 1968
    • A. aglaia stigma Shinohara, 2001[1]
    • A. aglaia yezoensis Shinohara & Hara, 2000[2]
  • (Cresson, 1880) – North America
  • Shinohara, 2000[3] – Japan
  • (MacGillivray, 1912) – North America
  • (Westwood, 1874) – North America
  • (Cresson, 1880) – North America
  • (Cresson, 1880) – North America
  • Middlekauff, 1958 – North America (Calif)
  • Shinohara, 2005[4] – Asia
  • (MacGillivray, 1923) – North America
  • (Norton, 1869) – North America
  • (Norton, 1864) – North America
  • (Cresson, 1880) – North America
  • (Cresson, 1880) – North America
  • Middlekauff, 1958 – North America
  • (Huard, 1879) – Canada (East)
  • (Klug, 1808) – North America
  • Middlekauff, 1959 – North America
  • Middlekauff, 1958 – North America (AZ)
  • Maa, 1944[5]
  • A. erythrocephala (Linnaeus, 1758) – Europe
  • Shinohara, 1991[6]
  • (Retzius, 1783)
  • Maa, 1944[5]
  • Greenbaum, 1975[7] – North America
  • (Christ, 1791) – Northern Eurasia
  • Maa, 1949[5]
  • Shinohara, 2000[3] – Japan
  • Shinohara, 2000[3] – Japan
  • (Giraud, 1861) – Northern Eurasia
  • (Cresson, 1880) – North America
  • (Norton, 1869) – North America
  • (Cresson, 1880) – North America
  • Liston, 1996[8]
  • Shinohara, 2001[1]
  • A. nemoralis (Thomson, 1871) = A. posticalis
  • (Cresson, 1880) – North America
  • (Cresson, 1880) – North America
  • (Norton, 1869) – North America
  • Shinohara & Byun, 1996[9] – Korea, Far Eastern Russia
  • Xiao, 1963
  • Xiao & Zhou, 1986[5]
  • Rohwer, 1911 – North America
  • A. pinivora Enslin, 1918 = A. posticalis
  • Shinohara, 2000[3] – Japan, Sakhalin
  • (Brischke & Zaddach, 1865) – North America
  • (Matsumura, 1912) – Northern Eurasia
    • A. posticalis koreana Shinohara, 2000[3]
    • A. posticalis pinivora Enslin, 1918
    • A. posticalis posticalis (Matsumura, 1912)
  • (Giraud, 1861) – Alpine Europe
  • Peñalver & Arillo, 2002[10]
  • (Harrington, 1893) – North America
  • Middlekauff, 1958 – North America
  • Vasic, 1962
  • Christ, 1791
  • Shinohara, 1991[11]
  • (Cresson, 1880) – North America
  • (Klug, 1808) – North America
  • Achterberg & Aartsen, 1986
  • Middlekauff, 1958 – North America
  • Shinohara, 2001[1]
  • (Cresson, 1880) – North America
  • Wei & Niu, 2008[12]
  • Shinohara, 2000[3]
  • (Rohwer, 1920) – North America

References[]

  1. ^ a b c Shinohara, Akihiko (2001). "Conifer-feeding Webspinning Sawflies of the Genus Acantholyda (Hymenoptera : Pamphiliidae) of Japan". Species Diversity. 6 (1): 23–63. doi:10.12782/specdiv.6.23.
  2. ^ Shinohara, Akihiko; Hara, Hideho (2000). "Notes on a Spruce-feeding Webspinning Sawfly, Acantholyda aglaia (Hymenoptera, Pamphiliidae), with Description of a New Subspecies from Hokkaido, Japan". Bulletin of the National Science Museum. Series A, Zoology. 26 (1): 1–11.
  3. ^ a b c d e f Shinohara, Akihiko (2000). "Pine-feeding Webspinning Sawflies of the Acantholyda posticalis Group (Hymenoptera, Pamphiliidae)". Bulletin of the National Science Museum. Series A, Zoology. 26 (2): 57–98.
  4. ^ Shinohara, Akihiko (2005). "Acantholyda birmanica sp. nov. (Hymenoptera, Pamphiliidae) from Myanmar". Bulletin of the National Science Museum. Series A, Zoology. 31 (1): 25–28.
  5. ^ a b c d Wei, Meicai; Nie, Haiyan; Taeger, Andreas (2006). "Sawflies (Hymenoptera: Symphyta) of China - Checklist and Review of Research". Recent Sawfly Research: Synthesis and Prospects. Goecke & Evers, Keltern. pp. 505–574. ISBN 3-937783-19-9.
  6. ^ Shinohara, Akihiko (1991). "A new web-spinning sawfly of the genus Acantholyda (Hymenoptera, Pamphiliidae) from Japan". Proceedings of the Japanese Society of Systematic Zoology. 44: 65–68.
  7. ^ Greenbaum, Harold N. (1975). "A New Species of Acantholyda from Florida, with Keys to the Adults and Larvae of Florida Species (Hymenoptera: Pamphiliidae: Cephalciinae)". The Florida Entomologist. 58 (1): 45–52. doi:10.2307/3493868. JSTOR 3493868.
  8. ^ Liston, A.D. (1996). "Nomenclature of some Sawflies occurring in the Western Hemisphere (Hymenoptera, Symphyta, Pamphiliidae, Argidae)" (PDF). Entomologische Berichte Luzem. 34: 125–126.
  9. ^ Shinohara, Akihiko; Byun, Bong-Kyu (1996). "Conifer-feeding Webspinning Sawflies of the genus Acantholyda(Hymenoptera, Pamphilidae) from Korea". Insecta Koreana. 13: 91–104.
  10. ^ Peñalver, Enrique; Arillo, Antonio (2002). "Primer registro fósil del género Acantholyda (Insecta: Hymenoptera: Pamphiliidae), Mioceno Inferior de Ribesalbes (España)". Revista española de paleontología (in Spanish and English). 17: 73–81.
  11. ^ Shinohara, Akihiko (1991). "Pamphiliid Sawflies (Hymenoptera) from Taiwan". Bulletin of the National Science Museum. Series A, Zoology. 17 (4): 173–181.
  12. ^ Wei, Meicai; Niu, Gengyun (2008). "Two new species of Pamphiliidae from China". Acta Zootaxonomica Sinica. 33 (1): 57–60.


Retrieved from ""