2015
DOI: 10.3897/dez.62.4737
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The Sawflies of Crete (Hymenoptera, Symphyta)

Abstract: Forty-two sawfly species are now known from Crete, including twelve species here recorded for the first time, and excluding earlier published records of Allantus didymus

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Cited by 13 publications
(9 citation statements)
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“…Adults are indeed often swept from flowering Prunus spinosa, but also from flowers of other Rosaceae, and in several countries have been found on Crataegus, at localities where P. spinosa was absent (e.g. Miles (1936), Liston et al (2015), and Moroccan records, below). In our opinion, Crataegus could be the (only) host, but if this is so, then oviposition must be into flowers which are at an early stage of development, many days before they open.…”
Section: Hoplocampa Chrysorrhoea (Klug 1816)mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Adults are indeed often swept from flowering Prunus spinosa, but also from flowers of other Rosaceae, and in several countries have been found on Crataegus, at localities where P. spinosa was absent (e.g. Miles (1936), Liston et al (2015), and Moroccan records, below). In our opinion, Crataegus could be the (only) host, but if this is so, then oviposition must be into flowers which are at an early stage of development, many days before they open.…”
Section: Hoplocampa Chrysorrhoea (Klug 1816)mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…All these clusters form a monophyletic group (Fig. 3) and we treat them as one species, because there is a continuous variation in external morphological characters used to separate P. nievesi from P. tetrica, and no clear differences in penis valves and lancets (see Liston et al 2015). Based on nuclear data (two specimens and both genes combined), within species divergence is 0.2% and the nearest neighbour is 1.7% different (P. cretica Schedl, 1981, a species not treated here).…”
Section: Similar Speciesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The Spanish specimen was swept from Acer monspessulanum. As the known hosts of other species in the Pristiphora depressa group are all Acer species (Liston et al 2015, it is likely that the larva of P. melagonia also feeds on Acer. Hosts other than A. monspessulanum must be used, because this maple species does not occur in the region of Germany where one of the paratypes was collected.…”
Section: Pristiphora Angulata Lindqvist 1974mentioning
confidence: 99%