Family: Tenthredinidae
Family common name: common sawflies
Subfamily: Tenthredininae
Tribe: Macrophyini
Genus: Pachyprotasis Hartig, 1837
Subgenera: none
The Tenthredinidae are the most species-rich family and are found throughout the world, in all continents but Antarctica. They are known as the “common sawflies.” They can generally be recognized by a cylindrical body and long, segmented antennaeantenna:
the sensory organ emerging from the front of the head, usually between the compound eyes and above the clypeus; includes the flagellum, scape and pedicel
. Otherwise, they come in a variety of colors, sizes, and forms (Goulet 1992Goulet 1992:
Goulet H. 1992. The genera and subgenera of the sawflies of Canada and Alaska: Hymenoptera. Symphyta. The insects and arachnids of Canada. Part 20. Agriculture Canada Publication.).
Sawflies in the Tenthredininae subfamily are relatively large compared to others in the family, often with distinct colorful markings. Some are wasp-like with black and yellow stripes (Goulet 1992Goulet 1992:
Goulet H. 1992. The genera and subgenera of the sawflies of Canada and Alaska: Hymenoptera. Symphyta. The insects and arachnids of Canada. Part 20. Agriculture Canada Publication.). Many species’ life histories are not known. Some Tenthredininae species feed uniquely, as adults, on flower pollen and other insects (Smith 1993Smith 1993:
Smith DR. 1993. Systematics, life history, and distribution of sawflies. Pp. 3-32. In: Wagner MR and Raffa KF, eds. Sawfly Life History Adaptations to Woody Plants. University of Minnesota Academic Press. 581 pp.). They can be distinguished from other subfamilies by wing venationvenation:
the network of veins on a wing
(Goulet 1992Goulet 1992:
Goulet H. 1992. The genera and subgenera of the sawflies of Canada and Alaska: Hymenoptera. Symphyta. The insects and arachnids of Canada. Part 20. Agriculture Canada Publication.).
Pachyprotasis is monotypicmonotypic:
describes having only one representative; ex. a genus that includes only one species
in North America. Pachyprotasis rapae is about 7–10 mm in length and black and white with angled facial features (Gibson 1980bGibson 1980b:
Gibson GAP. 1980b. A revision of the genus Macrophya Dahlbom (Hymenoptera: Symphyta, Tenthredinidae) of North America. Memoirs of the Entomological Society of Canada 114: 1-167., BugGuide 2019BugGuide 2019:
BugGuide. Accessed January 2019. https://bugguide.net).
There are 210 described extantextant:
in existence; opposite of extinct
species worldwide. One species occurs in North America (Taeger et al. 2010Taeger et al. 2010:
Taeger A, Blank SM, and Liston AD. 2010. World Catalog of Symphyta (Hymenoptera). Zootaxa 2580: 1-1064.).
Subfamily characters
vein M and 1m-cu parallel (Goulet 1992Goulet 1992:
vein R bent at basebase:
Sc (Goulet 1992Goulet 1992:
separated from metepisternummetepisternum:
by distinct furrowfurrow:
(Goulet 1992Goulet 1992:Genus characters
longer than medial length of the clypeusclypeus:
(Goulet 1992Goulet 1992:
about equal to length of second flagellomereflagellomere:
(Goulet 1992Goulet 1992:
vein 2A+3A complete, connected to 1A by crossveincrossvein:
anal crossveinanal crossvein:
vein 2r present (Goulet 1992Goulet 1992:
vein M intersecting Sc+R basalbasal:
veins 1m-cu and Cu1 120°–150° (Goulet 1992Goulet 1992:
anal crossveinanal crossvein:
; anal veins appearing fused for a short distance (Goulet 1992Goulet 1992:
distinctly angled on lower posterior corner (Goulet 1992Goulet 1992:
(Goulet 1992Goulet 1992:Pachyprotasis can be confused with similar species in the subfamily Tenthredininae. It can be distinguished from most other genera by the expanded metepimeronmetepimeron:
the dorsal portion of the metapleuron
, long labrumlabrum:
a sclerotized structure on the front of the head between the clypeus and mandibles
, and the centered anal crossveinanal crossvein:
a crossvein that goes through the center of the basal anal cell
. Pachyprotasis can be distinguished from closely related Macrophya by the longer fusion of anal veins and by the size of the eye as viewed form the side (Goulet 1992Goulet 1992:
Goulet H. 1992. The genera and subgenera of the sawflies of Canada and Alaska: Hymenoptera. Symphyta. The insects and arachnids of Canada. Part 20. Agriculture Canada Publication.).
none
Pachyprotasis rapae feeds on Scrophularia (figwort), Solidago (goldenrod), Betonica (hedgenettle), Fraxinus (ash), and Anthirrhinum (snapdragons) (Goulet 1992Goulet 1992:
Goulet H. 1992. The genera and subgenera of the sawflies of Canada and Alaska: Hymenoptera. Symphyta. The insects and arachnids of Canada. Part 20. Agriculture Canada Publication.).
unknown
World: The genus is present in North America and is common and species-rich in East Asia (Smith 2003bSmith 2003b:
Smith DR. 2003b. A Synopsis of the sawflies (Hymenoptera: Symphyta) of America south of the United States: Tenthredinidae (Nematinae, Heterarthrinae, Tenthredininae). Transactions of the American Entomological Society 129 (1): 1-45., Taeger et al. 2010Taeger et al. 2010:
Taeger A, Blank SM, and Liston AD. 2010. World Catalog of Symphyta (Hymenoptera). Zootaxa 2580: 1-1064.).
North America: Pachyprotasis rapae occurs throughout Canada and the United States and in Chihuahua, Mexico (Smith 2003bSmith 2003b:
Smith DR. 2003b. A Synopsis of the sawflies (Hymenoptera: Symphyta) of America south of the United States: Tenthredinidae (Nematinae, Heterarthrinae, Tenthredininae). Transactions of the American Entomological Society 129 (1): 1-45.).
Map data from: GBIF.org (29 October 2019) GBIF Occurrence Download Pachyprotasis
Details about data used for maps can be found here.