Trogus_(wasp)

<i>Trogus</i> (wasp)

Trogus (wasp)

Genus of wasps


Quick Facts Trogus, Scientific classification ...

Trogus is a genus of parasitoid wasp found in the Holarctic and Neotropic regions. It is placed in the subfamily Ichneumoninae and the tribe Ichneumonini.[4] Trogus species are parasites of larvae and pupae of the swallowtail butterfly family, Papilionidae.[2] The genus consists of twelve extant and one extinct species.

Etymology

The generic name Trogus comes from the ancient Greek word τρώγω (trṓgō) meaning "to gnaw" or "to nibble".[5][6][7]

Taxonomy and phylogeny

German entomologist Georg Wolfgang Franz Panzer created the genus Trogus in 1806. He included one species in his circumscription: Trogus coeruleator,[lower-alpha 1] first named in 1804 by Johan Christian Fabricius as Ichneumon coeruleator.[8][1] In 1829, Johann Ludwig Christian Gravenhorst included eight species in his taxonomy of Trogus.[9] Some subsequent researchers, for instance Arnold Förster[3] and William Harris Ashmead,[10] have referred to a Trogus whose authority is Gravenhorst, but Panzer's sole species in his circumscription of Trogus is included in Gravenhorst's treatment of Trogus and the two of them had the same concept for the genus.[11] In 1840, John O. Westwood designated Gravenhorst's Trogus alboguttatus to be the type species of Trogus.[12][13] However, this species was later transferred to the genus Goedartia and made its type species.[13] Fabricius's Ichneumon lutorius, included in Gravenhorst's 1829 taxonomy, was also historically considered to be the type species of Trogus; this species is now known as Callajoppa cirrogaster.[2] In 1914, Viereck designated Fabricius's I. coeruleator—the only species Panzer initially included—as the type species for Trogus; this has subsequently been accepted by following taxonomists.[13][14][2]

In 1869, Förster created the genus Dinotomus,[3] but did not designate a type species[2] or include any species.[13] In 1900, Ashmead designated Fabricius's Ichneumon lapidator to be the type species;[10] this was one of three species included in V. Berthoumieu's 1896 taxonomy of Dinotomus.[5][15][2] In 1910, Per Abraham Roman found Fabricius's I. coeruleator and I. lapidator to be cospecific.[16][2] This led to Henry Lorenz Viereck synonymizing Dinotomus and Trogus in 1914.[13][2] The generic name Dinotomus comes from the ancient Greek words δεινός (deinós; "strange") and τομή (tomḗ; "segment").[5] The genus Psilomastax, named in 1868 by Peter Friedrich Ludwig Tischbein, was once considered to be cogeneric with Dinotomus[17][16] hence later with Trogus, until it was reinstated as its own genus in 1961 by Henry Townes and colleagues.[18][2] Ashmead also considered the genus Tricyphus, named by Joseph Kriechbaumer in 1898, to be a synonym of Trogus,[10][19] but it has since been accepted as its own genus.[20]

Förster placed Trogus in a new family Trogoidae in 1869 alongside Dinotomus and Automalus.[3][19][20] In 1895, Ashmead created the tribe Trogini within Ichneumoninae.[21][20] In 1962, Gerd Heinrich placed Trogus in a new subtribe within Trogini, namely Trogina.[14] In 1979, Robert W. Carlson illegally emended the subtribe name to Trogusina.[15][11] In 2002, Sime and Wahl synonymized Trogini with Heresiarchini because they found Heresiarchini to be paraphyletic with respect to Trogini; they renamed the clade historically known as Trogini as the Callajoppa genus-group and the clade historically known as Trogina as the Trogus subgroup.[20] In 2021, Santos and colleagues synonymized the tribe Heresiarchini under Ichneumonini and demonstrated that the Trogus subgroup did not nest within the Callajoppa group. Further, the Trogus subgroup of earlier authors did not represent a monophyletic lineage.[4]

Description and identification

Trogus species have a body length of 14–18 mm (0.55–0.71 in). Their abdomens resemble a row of rectangular blocks due to each abdominal segment having thick edges and deep cuts.[22] An autapomorphy of Trogus is a concave apical edge of the clypeus.[20]

Distribution

Trogus species are found in the Holarctic and Neotropics.[2]:584 Sime and Wahl, in part following Gerd Heinrich, proposed Trogus originated in the Palaearctic and crossed into North America following ancestors of the Papilio machaon clade over Beringia.[2]:588–589 Most Trogus species are found in North America.[2]:588

The fossil species T. vetus was found in the Florissant Formation and dates to the Eocene.[23][lower-alpha 2]

Biology

T. lapidator emerging from a Papilio machaon pupa

Trogus select the pupae and larvae of swallowtail butterflies as hosts. The hosts are specifically limited to the tribes Graphiini and Papilionini within the subfamily Papilioninae. However, many species within these tribes are not parasitized by Trogus species; systematic gaps are thought to be a result of plant chemistry in the preferred food for various swallowtail larvae.[2] The butterfly genera with the most reliable host records for Trogus are Papilio and Eurytides. Trogus species vary in how specialized they are, ranging from having one to ten possible swallowtail hosts.[20] The host caterpillars are commonly collected by lepidopterists, amateur and professional, leading to confidence in host range delineation.[2]

All Trogus species are thought to have a similar biology.[26] One egg is laid per larva;[22] some species like T. pennator or T. lapidator can lay their eggs in caterpillars as early as the first instar.[20][27] Trogus species make their emergence hole by secreting a fluid which softens the pupa cuticle.[26][27] They emerge as adults through the wing pad creating a distinctive lateral hole; this emergence location is apomorphic for the Trogus subgroup.[20] Diapause, extended diapause, and lack of diapause have all been observed.[27]

Species

David B. Wahl and Karen R. Sime's 2006 revision of the genus recognized the following twelve extant species:[2]

  • T. crustosus Wahl, 2006
  • T. edwardsii Cresson, 1911
  • T. flavipennis Cresson, 1864
  • T. fulvipes Cresson, 1868
  • T. ixcuinae Wahl, 2006
  • T. koreensis Wahl, 2006
  • T. lapidator (Fabricius, 1787)
  • T. pennator (Fabricius, 1793)
  • T. picadoae Wahl, 2006
  • T. pompeji (Kriechbaumer, 1898)
  • T. thoracicus Cresson, 1865
  • T. vulpinus Gravenhorst, 1829

As of 2018, Fossilworks recognizes the following fossil species:[23]

Notes

  1. Panzer had actually misspelled the specific epithet in his work; he wrote caeruleator instead of Fabricius's coerulator.[lower-alpha 3][lower-alpha 4][lower-alpha 5]
  2. Other sources date T. vetus to the Miocene[24] or the Oligocene.[25]

References

  1. Panzer, Georg Wolfg. Franz (1806). Kritische Revision der Insektenfaune Deutschlands nach dem System bearbeitet. Vol. 2. Nürnberg. pp. 80–81.
  2. Wahl, David B.; Sime, Karen R. (2006). "A revision of the genus Trogus (Hymenoptera: Ichneumonidae, Ichneumoninae)". Systematic Entomology. 31 (4): 584–610. doi:10.1111/j.1365-3113.2006.00329.x. ISSN 1365-3113. S2CID 84958154.
  3. Foerster, [Arnold] (1869). "Synopsis der Familien und Gattungen der Ichneumonen". Verhandlungen des Naturhistorischen Vereins der Preussischen Rheinlande und Westfalens. 25: 188. hdl:2027/coo.31924018319255.
  4. Santos, Bernardo F.; Wahl, David B.; Rousse, Pascal; Bennett, Andrew M. R.; Kula, Robert; Brady, Seán G. (2021). "Phylogenomics of Ichneumoninae (Hymenoptera, Ichneumonidae) reveals pervasive morphological convergence and the shortcomings of previous classifications". Systematic Entomology. 46 (3). Royal Entomological Society: 704–724. doi:10.1111/syen.12484. S2CID 235363032.
  5. Berthoumieu, G.-V. (1897) [1896]. "Ichneumonides d'Europe et des pays limitrophes". Annales de la Société Entomologique de France. 65 (2): 295–298.
  6. de Dalla Torre, C. G. (1902). "Trogus". Trigonalidae, Megalyridae, Stephanidae, Ichneumonidae, Agriotypidae, Evaniidae, Pelecinidae. Catalogus Hymenopterorum. Vol. 3. Lipsia: Guilelmus Engelmann. pp. 1032–1035.
  7. Hopper, H. Pearson (1959). "The pronunciation and derivation of the names of the genera and subgenera of the family Ichneumonidae found in North America north of Mexico". Proceedings of the Entomological Society of Washington. 61 (4): 155–171. Retrieved 2023-05-24.
  8. Fabricius, Ioh. Christ. (1804). "Ichneumon". Systema Piezatorum. Brunsvigia: Carolus Reichard. p. 68.
  9. Gravenhorst, I. L. C. (1829). "Genus III. Trogus". Continens Tryphones, Trogos, Alomyas et Cryptos. Ichneumonologia Europaea. Vol. 2. Vratislavia: Sumtibus Auctoris. pp. 369–393.
  10. Ashmead, William H. (1900). "Classification of the Ichneumon Flies, or the Superfamily Ichneumonoidea". Proceedings of the United States National Museum. 23 (1206): 14. doi:10.5479/si.00963801.23-1206.1.
  11. Wahl, David B.; Mason, W. R. M. (1995). "The Family-Group Names of the Ichneumoninae (Hymenoptera: Ichneumonidae)". Journal of Hymenoptera Research. 4: 289.
  12. Westwood, J. O. (1840). "Synopsis of the Genera of British Insects". An Introduction to the Modern Classification of Insects. Vol. 2. London: Longman, Orme, Brown, Green, and Longmans. p. 58.
  13. Viereck, Henry L. (1914). "Type Species of the Genera of Ichneumon Flies". Bulletin of the United States National Museum (83): 46, 150. doi:10.5479/si.03629236.83.1. hdl:2027/osu.32435072543069.
  14. Heinrich, Gerd H. (1962). "Synopsis of Nearctic Ichneumoninae Stenopneusticae with Particular Reference to the Northeastern Region (Hymenoptera): Part VII Synopsis of the Trogini Addenda and Corrigenda". Memoirs of the Entomological Society of Canada. 94 (S29): 807–886. doi:10.4039/entm9429fv.
  15. Carlson, Robert W. (1979). "Family Ichneumonidae". In Krombein, Karl V.; Hurd, Paul D. Jr.; Smith, David R.; Burks, B. D. (eds.). Symphyta and Apocrita (Parasitica). Catalog of Hymenoptera in America North of Mexico. Vol. 1. Washington, DC: Smithsonian Institution. pp. 538–539.
  16. Roman, A. (1910). "Notizen zur Schlupfwespensammlug des Schwedischen Reichsmuseums". Entomologisk Tidskrift. 31 (2–3): 189.
  17. Schmiedeknecht, Otto (1902). Allgemeine Eintheilung. Die Gattungen der Joppinen, Ichneumoninen, Listrodrominen, Heresiarchinen, Gyrodontinen und Alomyinen. Bestimmungstabelle der paläarktischen Arten der Gattung Ichneumon. Opuscula Ichneumonologica. Vol. 1. Blankenburg i. Thür. pp. 199–200.{{citation}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  18. Townes, Henry; Townes, Marjorie; Gupta, Virendra K. (1961). A Catalogue and Reclassification of the Indo-Australian Ichneumonidae. Memoirs, American Entomological Institute. Vol. 1. Ann Arbor, MI: American Entomological Institute. pp. 387–399.
  19. Hopper, H. Pearson (1939). "A Synoptical Revision of the Tribe Trogini Ashmead of the United States and Canada (Hymenoptera: Ichneumonidae)". Transactions of the American Entomological Society. 65 (4): 307–346. JSTOR 25077444.
  20. Sime, Karen R.; Wahl, David B. (2002). "The cladistics and biology of the Callajoppa genus-group (Hymenoptera: Ichneumonidae, Ichneumoninae)". Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society. 134 (1): 11, 46–47. doi:10.1046/j.1096-3642.2002.00006.x.
  21. Ashmead, William H. (1895). "Lysiognatha, a New and Remarkable Genus in the Ichneumonidæ". Proceedings of the Entomological Society of Washington. 3 (4): 278.
  22. Mitchell, Robert T. (1979). "A Review of Swallowtail Butterfly (Papilionidae) Parasites of the Genus Trogus (Hymenoptera — Ichneumonidae)" (PDF). Maryland Entomologist. 1 (3): 6–7. Archived (PDF) from the original on 19 March 2018.
  23. Behrensmeyer, A. K.; Turner, A. "Trogus Panzer 1806 (ichneumon wasp)". Fossilworks. Retrieved 17 December 2021.
  24. Brues, Charles T. (1910). "The Parasitic Hymenoptera of the Tertiary of Florissant, Colorado". Bulletin of the Museum of Comparative Zoölogy at Harvard College. 54 (1): 31–32, 112.
  25. Dupuis, Julian R.; Mori, Boyd A.; Sperling, Felix A. H. (2016). "Trogus parasitoids of Papilio butterflies undergo extended diapause in western Canada (Hymenoptera, Ichneumonidae)". Journal of Hymenoptera Research. 50: 179–190. doi:10.3897/JHR.50.9158.

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