• Title/Summary/Keyword: Siricidae

Search Result 2, Processing Time 0.017 seconds

Taxonomy of the Genus Tremex Jurine (Hymenoptera: Siricidae) from Korea, with Descriptions of One New Species rind One Unrecorded Species

  • Lee, Jong-Wook;Ryu, Sung-Man;Chung, Dong-Gi
    • Animal cells and systems
    • /
    • v.2 no.3
    • /
    • pp.297-302
    • /
    • 1998
  • A taxonomic study was made on the genus Tremex (Hymenoptera: Siricidae) in Korea. The study was carried out with specimens collected throughout the country from 1996 to 1998 and preserved in museums and laboratories of Universities in Korea and in other countries. As a result of this study, the genus Tremex found in Korea now consists of 5 species including one newly recorded species, Tremex contractus Maa and one new species, Tremex nigrocephalus n. sp.

  • PDF

A comparative study of the morphology of the ovipositors of wood-boring insects, Tremex fuscicornis and Leucospis japonica (목질을 천공하는 얼룩송곳벌(Tremex fuscicornis)과 밑드리좀벌(Leucospis japonica) 산란관의 형태적 특징 비교)

  • Kim, Ji Yeong;Park, Ji-Hyun;Kwon, Oh Chang;Kim, Jinhee
    • Korean Journal of Environmental Biology
    • /
    • v.38 no.4
    • /
    • pp.554-562
    • /
    • 2020
  • Tremex fuscicornis (Siricidae), known as the xylophagous horntail, and Leucospis japonica (Leucospidae), known as the parasitoid wasp, are wood-boring wasps belonging to the order Hymenoptera. These insects are interesting sources of biological inspiration for the development of drilling mechanisms. To study the biomimicry aspects, the morphological characters of the ovipositor of T. fuscicornis and L. japonica were analyzed using a stereoscopic microscope, a field emission scanning electron microscope, and an optical microscope. There were many differences in the ovipositors between the two species, such as shape, length, surface structure, and arrangement of the teeth. Evenly arranged teeth were developed at the tip of both the dorsal valve and the ventral valve of the ovipositor of T. fuscicornis and looked like a rotating drill bit. In contrast, in L. japonica, the teeth, which looked like a saw, were found only on the ventral valve. Moreover, the tip of the ovipositor of T. fuscicornis was symmetrically divided into four parts, while that of L. japonica was divided into three parts having a 2:1:1 ratio. However, in the case of T. fuscicornis, after the 14th tooth, four parts melded into three parts maintaining a 2:1:1 ratio, and a dovetail joint was found on the horizontal cross-section of the ovipositor that allowed vertical movement for making a hole. These morphological differences of the ovipositor may be due to the insects' lifestyles and phylogenetic distance. Finally, zinc was commonly found at the tip of the ovipositors of both species, a probable result of ecological adaptation created by drilling wood.