Evagetes

Evagetes is a genus of spider wasps from the family Pompilidae. There are 72 described species, of which 58 are found in the Palaearctic region, 11 in the Nearctic region, with a few penetrating to the Afrotropical, Oriental and Neotropic regions.[1] Evagetes wasps are kleptoparasitic on other pompilid wasps, especially the genera Arachnospila, Anoplius, Episyron and Pompilus,[2] digging into their sealed burrows, eating the host egg and replacing it with an egg of its own.[3] Evagetes wasps are characterised by their very short antennae. Most are species are black with the base of the antennae rufous, several Evagetes species are very metallic bluish insects.[4]

Evagetes
Spider Wasp, Evagetes ingenuus caught near the Dead River in Marquette County, Michigan.
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Insecta
Order: Hymenoptera
Family: Pompilidae
Subfamily: Pompilinae
Genus: Evagetes
Lepeletier, 1845
Type species
Evagetes bicolor
Lepeletier, 1845

The type species was named by Lepeletier as Evagetes bicolor in 1845 but this has since been recognised as a synonym for E. dubius which was originally named Aporus dubius.[5]

Species

The following is a list of selected species[1][6][7][8][9][10]

  • Evagetes alamannicus (Bluthgen, 1944)
  • Evagetes anatolicus Van der Smissen, 2003
  • Evagetes baguenae Junco y Reyes, 1960
  • Evagetes cabrerai (Junco y Reyes, 1944)
  • Evagetes calefactus Evans, 1966
  • Evagetes crassicornis (Shuckard, 1837)
  • Evagetes daisetzusanus Ishikawa 1960
  • Evagetes deiranbo Ishikawa 1960
  • Evagetes dubius (Vander Linden, 1827)
  • Evagetes elongatus (Lepeletier, 1845)
  • Evagetes fatimaae Wolf, 1990
  • Evagetes fabrei Van der Smissen, 2003
  • Evagetes fortunatus Wolf, 1970
  • Evagetes fortunatarum Wolf, 1980
  • Evagetes gibbulus (Lepeletier, 1845)
  • Evagetes gusenleitneri Wolf 1988
  • Evagetes hyacinthinus Cresson 1867
  • Evagetes iconionus Wolf, 1970
  • Evagetes ingenuus Cresson 1867
  • Evagetes implicatus Haupt, 1941
  • Evagetes ishikawai Lelei 1995
  • Evagetes juncoi Wolf, 1970
  • Evagetes littoralis (Wesmael, 1851)
  • Evagetes longispinosus Wolf, 1990
  • Evagetes macswaini Evans 1957
  • Evagetes magrettii (Kohl, 1886)
  • Evagetes meriane Van der Smissen, 2003
  • Evagetes mochii Priesner, 1955
  • Evagetes mohave (Banks, 1933)
  • Evagetes nasobema Wolf, 1970
  • Evagetes nitidulus (Guerin, 1838)
  • Evagetes orientalis Lelej & Loktiniov 2009
  • Evagetes orichalceus (Saunders 1901)
  • Evagetes padrinus (Viereck, 1903)
  • Evagetes palmatus (Haupt, 1930)
  • Evagetes parifomarvicus (Sustera, 1924)
  • Evagetes parvus Cresson 1865
  • Evagetes paulinus Wolf 1970
  • Evagetes pectinipes (Linnaeus, 1758)
  • Evagetes piechockii Wolf 1981
  • Evagetes piliferus Van der Smissen, 2003
  • Evagetes pilosellus (Wesmael, 1851)
  • Evagetes pontomoravicus (Sustera, 1938)
  • Evagetes proximus (Dahlbom, 1843)
  • Evagetes pseudoleucopterus Wolf 1970
  • Evagetes sabulosus Tournier, 1889
  • Evagetes sahlbergi (Morawitz, 1893)
  • Evagetes servillei Costa, 1882
  • Evagetes siculus (Lepeletier, 1845)
  • Evagetes subangulatus Banks 1919
  • Evagetes subglaber (Haupt, 1941)
  • Evagetes subnudus (Haupt, 1942)
  • Evagetes taiwanus Tsuneki 1989
  • Evagetes transbaicalicus Lelei 1995
  • Evagetes trispinosus (Kohl, 1886)
  • Evagetes tumidosus (Tournier, 1890)
  • Evagetes tumidinus Wolf, 1970
  • Evagetes yezoensis Ishikawa 1960
  • Evagetes zonatus (Haupt 1930)
gollark: Some of the post-quantum approaches seem at least vaguely related to number theory.
gollark: The Navier-Stokes thing.
gollark: Did you know? 3325581707333960528 is the smallest number that cannot be written as a sum of two primes where one is smaller than 9781.
gollark: ||Surely the communication and seeing other people's hat color thing is irrelevant too! It provides no information about your hat.||
gollark: What? ||That makes no sense, how can it be finite? It's meant to be half of a countably infinite set, so also countably infinite, right?||

References

  1. Lelej, A.S. & Loktiniov, V.M. 2009 Review of the Evagetes crassicornis species-group (Hymenoptera: Pompilidae), with description of new species Zootaxa 2230: 42–50 ISSN 1175-5334.
  2. Bogdan Wiśniowski: Spider-hunting wasps (Hymenoptera: Pompilidae) of Poland. Ojców National Park, Ojców 2009, ISBN 83-60337-15-4.
  3. Early J. Lowland Heathland - Spider-hunting Wasps Nature Conservation Imaging http://www.natureconservationimaging.com/Pages/nature_conservation_imaging_heathland1_sh_wasps_Evagetes.htm
  4. "AR Pompilids". Hr-rna.com. Retrieved 2015-11-06.
  5. Day M.C (1979) Nomenclatural studies on the British Pompilidae (Hymenoptera); Volume 38, Issue 1 of Bulletin of the British Museum (Natural History).: Entomology, British Museum (Natural History),
  6. Ishikawa R. 1960 On the genus Evagetes in Japan (Hymeoptera, Pompilidae) Insecta Matsumurana, 23(1),
  7. Japoshvili, G., Karaca, I. & Wahis, R. 2011 A List of Pompilidae (Hymenoptera) of Gölcük Natural Park Isparta, Turkey Mun. Ent. Zool. 6(1) 386-388
  8. Kirpik, M.A. 2009 Faunistic study on Pompilidae (Insecta: Hymenoptera) family in Ankara, Kirikkale, and Çankiri provinces African Journal of Biotechnology 8(2), pp. 316-318
  9. Ebrahimi, E., Schmid-Egger, C. & Wahis, R, 2008 New records of Pompilidae (Hymenoptera) from Iran, Linzer biol. Beitr. 40(2) 1435-1442
  10. Wolf, H. 1990 Bemerkungen zu einigen Wegwespen-Arten (Hymenoptera, Pompilidae) (5.) Linzer biol. Beitr 22(1) 247-285
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