Hubbry Logo
search
logo
2222244

Scoliidae

logo
Community Hub0 Subscribers
Read side by side
from Wikipedia

Scoliidae
Megascolia bidens, Tunisia
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Clade: Pancrustacea
Class: Insecta
Order: Hymenoptera
Infraorder: Aculeata
Superfamily: Scolioidea
Family: Scoliidae
Latreille, 1802
Subfamilies

Campsomerinae
Scoliinae
Proscoliinae
Archaeoscoliinae
Palaeoscoliinae

Scoliidae, the scoliid wasps or mammoth wasps,[1][2] is a family of wasps comprising about 300 described species worldwide.[3] They tend to be black, often marked with yellow or orange, and their wing tips are distinctively corrugated. Males are more slender and elongated than females, with significantly longer antennae, but the sexual dimorphism is not as apparent as in many of the Tiphiidae and Thynnidae.

Biology

[edit]

Scoliid wasps are solitary parasitoids of larvae, most frequently those of the scarab beetle. Female scoliids burrow into the ground or into rotting wood, in search of these larvae and then use their sting to paralyze them.[3] When locating hosts, they may burrow through the soil or follow tunnels already created by scarab larvae.[4] The females are often observed flying close to the ground while searching for scarab larvae in the soil and they sometimes excavate a chamber and move the paralyzed beetle larva into it before depositing an egg.[4][5] The female lays a single egg on the paralysed grub, often attached transversely to one of the larva's abdominal segments.[4] Scoliid wasps act as important biocontrol agents, as many of the beetles they parasitize are pests, including the Japanese beetle. Male scoliids patrol territories, ready to mate with females emerging from the ground. Adult wasps may be minor pollinators of some plants and can be found on many wildflowers in the late summer.[5]

Scoliidae has at least one species known to engage in pseudocopulation with an orchid. Flowers of the orchid Bipinnula penicillata in subtropical South America resemble females of Pygodasis bistrimaculata, tricking male wasps into attempting to mate and, in the process, provide pollination.[6] Scoliids include some of the largest wasps in the world, such as Megascolia procer.[7]

Taxonomy

[edit]
Face of a scoliid wasp in coded color, illustrating the main features:
  ocellar pits
  ocellar furrow
  three simple eyes
  two compound eyes
  vertex, above curved carina frontalis
  frons, below curved carina frontalis and bisected by fissura frontalis
  scrobe
  area frontalis
  clypeus
  anterior margin of clypeus
  mandibles
  antennal scapes
  lamina frontalis
  spatium frontale or frontal space
Adapted from K. V. Krombein (1978)[8]
Scolia bicincta female, Pennsylvania
Megascolia procer, Indonesia

Living scoliidae genera are classified as follows into three subfamilies.[9][1][2][10] There are additionally two subfamilies known only from the fossil record.[11][12]

Subfamily Proscoliinae Rasnitsyn, 1977

[edit]

Subfamily Campsomerinae Betrem, 1972

[edit]

Tribe Campsomerini Betrem, 1972

[edit]

Subfamily Scoliinae Latreille, 1802

[edit]

Tribe Scoliini Latreille, 1802

[edit]

Tribe Trielidini Betrem, 1972

[edit]

Subfamily †Archaeoscoliinae Rasnitsyn, 1993

[edit]

The subfamily Archaeoscoliinae is known exclusively from the fossil record, with the largest diversity having lived during the Cretaceous (Barremian) before going extinct by the late Eocene (Priabonian).

Three additional undescribed specimens from the Ypresian Eocene Okanagan Highlands were referred to the subfamily by S. Bruce Archibald et al. (2018). The two fossils from the Klondike Mountain Formation of Northeastern Washington state, and one fossil from the Allenby Formation of South central British Columbia were mentioned briefly but no specific commentary on placement or finer taxonomic detail was presented in the paper.[18]

Subfamily †Palaeoscoliinae Antropov, 2014

[edit]

A second fossil subfamily, Palaeoscoliinae, was described from the Late Eocene to comprise a single species. This species was morphologically closer to the Scoliinae than to the Archaeoscoliinae.[12]

History

[edit]

In 1847 and 1849 Eduard Eversmann published his "Fauna Hymenopterologica Volgo-Uralensis—exhibiting the species of Hymenoptera which he observed and described in the provinces situated between the Volga river and the Ural mountains." He placed the Scoliadae Latreille, 1802 as a subfamily of the Sphegidae Latreille, 1802. He mentioned the genus Scolia Fabricius, 1775 with 13 species, the genus Tiphia Fabricius, 1775 with 3 species, and the genus Meria Illiger, 1807, with only the species Meria sexpunctata.[19]

North American species list

[edit]

There are 36 species of Scoliidae reported to occur in North America. Two additional species, Campsomeriella annulata (Fabricius, 1793) and Micromeriella marginella (Klug, 1810), were introduced to the United States but failed to become established.[20][21]

References

[edit]
[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Scoliidae is a family of solitary wasps in the order Hymenoptera, commonly known as scoliid wasps or scarab hunter wasps, characterized by their large size, hairy bodies, and iridescent coloration, with females actively hunting and parasitizing the larvae of scarabaeid beetles.[1][2] These wasps are distributed worldwide, with approximately 560 species primarily occurring in tropical and subtropical regions, though fewer species inhabit temperate zones like North America, where about 20-22 species are found across five to six genera including Campsomeris, Scolia, and Megascolia.[3][4] Taxonomically, the family is divided into three subfamilies—Scoliinae, Proscoliinae, and Archaeoscoliinae—reflecting their evolutionary history as aculeate insects specialized in parasitoidism.[5] Biologically, scoliid wasps exhibit a solitary lifestyle where females locate and sting scarabaeid beetle grubs in the soil, paralyzing them before laying a single egg on the host; the resulting larva feeds externally on the immobilized grub, consuming it over several weeks until pupation.[1][6] Adults are important pollinators, feeding on nectar from various flowers, and their bright warning coloration serves as aposematism to deter predators due to their potent sting, though they are generally non-aggressive toward humans unless provoked.[7][8][6] Ecologically, scoliids play a key role in natural pest control by targeting destructive beetle larvae, such as those of Japanese beetles or June bugs, making them valuable in agricultural and garden settings without reliance on chemical interventions.[2]

Description and morphology

Adult body structure

Adult Scoliidae wasps exhibit a robust body structure, typically measuring from under 10 mm to over 40 mm in length, with the largest species, such as Megascolia procer, reaching up to 65 mm (females).[9][10] Their bodies are generally black, often adorned with yellow or orange markings in the form of bands or spots, which provide diagnostic coloration patterns across species.[2][9] A dense pubescence covers the body, imparting a velvety or hairy appearance that contributes to their stout, fuzzy look.[9][6] The head and thorax form a sturdy mesosoma, characterized by a robust build adapted for their lifestyle.[11] Antennae are geniculate, or elbowed, with females possessing 12 segments and males 13, though sexual dimorphism in antennal length is more pronounced and detailed elsewhere.[12][9] Most species feature three ocelli on the vertex of the head, aiding in visual orientation.[13] Wings are a key identifying feature, with forewings often displaying corrugated or wrinkled margins, particularly toward the apex, creating longitudinal folds that are visible under magnification.[6][14] Males typically have longer, more slender wings compared to females, enhancing their aerial agility.[9] The abdomen, or metasoma, is elongated in males and more compact in females, consisting of six visible segments in females and seven in males.[9] Females possess a prominent pygidial plate on the apical abdominal segment, a hardened structure used in soil manipulation.[15] This plate, along with the overall abdominal form, underscores the family's morphological adaptations.[2]

Sexual dimorphism and identification

Sexual dimorphism in Scoliidae is pronounced, particularly in tribes like Campsomerini, where males and females often exhibit significant morphological differences in body form, coloration, and antennal structure. Males are typically more slender and elongated than females, with noticeably longer antennae that aid in aerial patrolling behaviors for mate location. Their abdomens are narrower, and they possess fully developed wings with distinct venation patterns. In contrast, females have shorter antennae, a stouter and more robust build suited for ground burrowing, and in some species, reduced wing venation; they also feature a powerful sting apparatus, though both sexes are fully winged. Coloration differences are common, with males often displaying more vivid yellow or white markings on a black or blue-black body, while females may show subtler variations.[1][16][2][17] Identification of Scoliidae relies on key wing venation traits, such as the presence of two or three submarginal cells in the forewing, which varies by genus (e.g., two in Scolia and three in Triscolia). Unlike Mutillidae, where females are wingless and resemble "velvet ants," both sexes in Scoliidae are fully winged, with corrugated wing membranes featuring longitudinal wrinkles. Comparisons to related families aid differentiation: Tiphiidae exhibit more extreme sexual dimorphism and a thinner waist, while Pompilidae have smoother, less wrinkled wings without the characteristic spiny legs of many Scoliidae. These traits, combined with the overall hairy, stout body, distinguish Scoliidae from other vespoid wasps.[17][14][2][9] Polymorphism occurs in several Scoliidae species, notably within the genus Campsomeris, where individuals show variations in color patterns, such as differing extents of yellow bands or spots on the abdomen and head. Males in particular display extremes, from minimal markings on tergites 2–3 to broader yellow coverage on tergites 1–4, complicating species identification without molecular aids like DNA barcoding. Such intraspecific variation underscores the need for integrative approaches in taxonomy.[2][1][18]

Distribution and habitats

Global range

The Scoliidae family is cosmopolitan in distribution, encompassing approximately 560 described species worldwide, with the highest levels of diversity occurring in pantropical regions.[19] In the New World, 64 species are recognized, with concentrations in Mexico (23 species across nine genera) and South America, reflecting a pattern of regional endemism and overlap between Nearctic and Neotropical zones.[19] The Old World harbors the majority of species, particularly in the Afrotropical and Oriental realms, where tropical and subtropical conditions support greater richness compared to temperate areas with fewer representatives.[17] In North America north of Mexico, Scoliidae diversity is relatively low, with about 20 species distributed across five genera: Campsomeris, Crioscolia, Scolia, Trielis, and Triscolia.[2] Human-mediated introductions have altered local ranges in some areas; for instance, Campsomeris dorsata from Asia was successfully introduced to Florida in the mid-20th century for biological control of scarab beetle larvae and has since established populations.[20] Biogeographic patterns indicate radiations and diversification primarily in subtropical zones, contributing to current global asymmetries in species distribution.[17] These patterns are linked to preferences for tropical soils rich in scarab hosts, though detailed habitat associations vary regionally.[17]

Preferred environments

Scoliidae wasps are predominantly found in tropical and subtropical regions worldwide, where warm climates support their lifecycle and activity patterns. These environments provide the necessary conditions for adult foraging and larval parasitism, with species diversity peaking in areas of consistent warmth and sunlight. In temperate zones, such as parts of North America, activity is largely confined to late summer months when temperatures rise sufficiently to enable flight and reproduction.[17][21] Preferred habitats for Scoliidae emphasize soil-based substrates suitable for burrowing, including sandy or loose soils that allow females to dig in search of hosts. These wasps favor open areas such as grasslands, prairies, lawns, and meadows, often near decaying vegetation where soil conditions remain friable. Dense forests are generally avoided, with species showing a clear preference for sunny, exposed sites that facilitate ground-level navigation and nesting. Adults associate closely with flowering plants in these habitats; males patrol low vegetation and flowers to locate mates, while females frequent similar open, floral-rich zones adjacent to suitable oviposition sites like disturbed lawns or forest edges.[22][6] The altitudinal distribution of Scoliidae spans from sea level to mid-elevations, with some Asian species recorded up to approximately 2,000 meters in open, hilly terrains. Activity is highly sensitive to climate, peaking in the mornings under warm, sunny conditions, and ceasing during cool temperatures, rain, or high winds that hinder flight and foraging. This diurnal pattern underscores their reliance on stable, arid-to-semiarid microclimates within broader tropical and subtropical landscapes.[17][23][24]

Ecology and life history

Parasitism and host interactions

Scoliid wasps (family Scoliidae) are solitary ectoparasitoids that primarily target the larvae of scarab beetles (Coleoptera: Scarabaeidae), such as those of the Japanese beetle (Popillia japonica) and June bugs (Phyllophaga spp.).[2] Females locate these soil-dwelling grubs by probing the ground with their antennae, responding to chemical cues like host odors, feces, or cuticular residues that persist in the soil.[25] This host-searching behavior relies on the female's robust morphology, including strong mandibles and spined legs adapted for burrowing.[2] During an attack, the female scoliid digs a burrow to reach the host larva, stings it to induce temporary paralysis without immediate death, and then lays a single egg externally on the grub's body, often on the ventral side or within a prepared chamber.[20] Upon hatching, the scoliid larva attaches to the paralyzed host and feeds ectoparasitically, consuming non-vital tissues first before entering the body to complete development, eventually killing the host.[9] This process ensures the parasitoid larva's survival while minimizing host mobility. Host specificity in Scoliidae often occurs at the genus or subfamily level within Scarabaeidae; for instance, species in the genus Scolia preferentially parasitize larvae of the Rutelinae subfamily, such as Anomala spp., while Campsomeris species target Dynastinae larvae like those of Oryctes spp.[25][9] Parasitism rates can reach up to 50% in heavily infested populations of certain scarab pests, contributing to natural population regulation.[22] Due to their effectiveness against soil pests, scoliid wasps play a key role in biological control programs, particularly against invasive species like the Japanese beetle (Popillia japonica), where species such as Campsomeris annulata and Campsomeris marginella modesta have been introduced to suppress grub populations.[2] Their solitary, non-social parasitism allows for targeted impacts on host densities without broad ecological disruption.[20] Scoliids possess defensive adaptations that enhance their survival during host interactions, including a potent sting capable of causing intense pain to vertebrates, which deters potential predators.[26] Their black-and-yellow or orange warning coloration serves as aposematic signaling, often resembling that of bees or other stinging hymenopterans, and participates in Müllerian mimicry complexes to reinforce predator aversion.[27]

Reproduction, mating, and development

Scoliid wasps exhibit solitary reproduction, with females requiring nectar or honeydew feeding to mature eggs prior to oviposition.[28] Without such feeding, no eggs are produced, as maturation depends on nutritional intake from floral sources.[28] Females typically produce dozens of eggs over their lifetime, with closely related tiphiid wasps laying up to around 40 eggs, suggesting a similar reproductive output for scoliids.[29] Mating in Scoliidae is characterized by males emerging earlier than females and patrolling flowers or vegetation, particularly in the mornings, to locate receptive mates.[28] These patrols often involve site fidelity, where males return to specific areas, and they demonstrate long-distance homing abilities up to 1 km using visual and possibly pheromonal cues.[30] Copulation is brief, lasting 1-4 seconds, and occurs immediately upon female emergence from the pupal cocoon, with activity ceasing by midday or in cooler temperatures below 20°C.[28] In some species, such as those in the genus Campsomeris, males may defend patrol territories for extended periods.[30] Following mating, females lay eggs externally on paralyzed scarab beetle grubs in the soil.[6] The eggs hatch within 1-6 days under optimal summer conditions, with the larva emerging to feed externally on the host over 1-4 weeks, depending on species and temperature.[29] For instance, in Scolia japonica, larval development completes in as little as 4 days in warm conditions, while other species like Campsomeris annulata take about 5 days.[29] Larval development concludes with pupation, typically within a silken cocoon formed inside the host remains or in the surrounding soil.[6] In temperate regions, scoliids overwinter as mature larvae or prepupae in these cocoons, emerging as adults in late summer (August-September) by cutting an exit hole.[29][6] Adult emergence aligns with peak host grub availability, with males appearing first.[28] Scoliidae exhibit no parental care beyond provisioning the host for the larva; females depart after oviposition.[6] However, in certain South American species, such as Campsomeris bistrimacula, males engage in pseudocopulation with orchid flowers (e.g., Geoblasta penicillata or Bipinnula penicillata) during mate-searching patrols, inadvertently effecting pollination through visual and chemical mimicry.[31][9] Adult scoliids have a lifespan of 4-5 months in some species like Scolia dubia, during which they feed on nectar.[21] The full life cycle, including overwintering, spans 1-2 years in cooler climates, with a single generation per year.[29]

Taxonomy and evolution

Modern classification

The family Scoliidae, established by Latreille in 1802, encompasses approximately 560 species across more than 40 genera worldwide.[32][33] The modern taxonomic framework recognizes three extant subfamilies: Proscoliinae, Campsomerinae, and Scoliinae, based on morphological and distributional characteristics.[34][35] The subfamily Proscoliinae, proposed by Rasnitsyn in 1977, represents the most primitive lineage within Scoliidae and includes only a few species, primarily in the genus Proscolia, which is restricted to Eurasia.[36][33] This subfamily is characterized by basal traits such as reduced wing venation and is known from limited localities in Armenia and Greece. Campsomerinae, erected by Betrem in 1972, is a diverse subfamily predominantly found in the Americas and Asia, encompassing tribes such as Campsomerini (including genera like Campsomeris and Colpa) and others defined by robust body structures and tropical distributions.[37][32] It features over 200 species adapted to varied habitats, with key genera exhibiting metallic coloration and strong sexual dimorphism.[35] The largest subfamily, Scoliinae (Latreille, 1802), is cosmopolitan and accounts for the majority of Scoliidae diversity, organized into tribes including Scoliini (e.g., Scolia and Megascolia, known for large body sizes up to 40 mm) and Trielidini (e.g., Trielis).[34][32] This subfamily includes around 300 species with broad host ranges and is prominent in both temperate and tropical regions.[38] In North America north of Mexico, Scoliidae are represented by five genera: Campsomeris, Crioscolia, Scolia, Trielis, and Triscolia, comprising about 20 species and numerous subspecies.[2] Recent taxonomic studies from 2021 to 2024 have incorporated synonymies, such as revisions in Dielis and new species descriptions in Neotropical taxa, refining genus boundaries.[32][39] A comprehensive 2024 checklist documents 32 family-group names and 161 genus-group names for Scoliidae, reflecting ongoing nomenclatural stability amid synonymies and fossil integrations.[32] This framework aligns with phylogenetic analyses supporting the monophyly of these subfamilies.[34]

Phylogenetic relationships

Scoliidae belongs to the superfamily Scolioidea within the suborder Apocrita of Hymenoptera, a placement supported by both morphological and molecular phylogenetic analyses that recognize it as a distinct lineage among the stinging wasps (Aculeata).[40] In some molecular studies, Scoliidae is positioned as sister to a clade comprising Tiphiidae and Thynnidae, highlighting its close evolutionary ties to these parasitoid wasp families within broader aculeate relationships.[41] Intra-family phylogenetic relationships have been elucidated through recent mitogenomic studies, which affirm the monophyly of the tribes Campsomerini and Scoliini within the subfamily Scoliinae.[42] Phylogenetic trees derived from 10 mitochondrial genomes representing eight genera from China place Campsomerini as the basal tribe relative to Scoliini, with the Colpa group resolved as part of Scoliini rather than Campsomerini, challenging prior morphological classifications based on shared traits like wing venation.[42] Additionally, a morphological phylogeny of the genus Scolia supports the monophyly of New World species, indicating a single colonization event from a Palaearctic ancestor. A 2025 morphological and biogeographical analysis of Scolia confirmed these findings and provided implications for the classification and origin of Scoliini.[43] Molecular data from mitochondrial genomes reveal characteristic features that aid in understanding scoliid evolution, including gene rearrangements such as the presence of an extra trnM gene and translocations or inversions in tRNA genes (e.g., inverse transpositions in Campsomeriella annulata).[42] These genomes exhibit an AT-biased base composition, typically ranging from 78% to 82%, with variations between tribes that correlate with phylogenetic positions—lower in Campsomerini (around 76%) and higher in Scoliini (up to 86%).[42] Despite these advances, Scoliidae remains taxonomically neglected due to historical understudying and challenges like sexual dimorphism and cryptic species diversity.[44] An integrative taxonomic study in southern China combined morphology with COI DNA barcoding to resolve 22 species across nine genera, uncovering one cryptic species and five new records, underscoring the need for broader molecular sampling to refine phylogenetic hypotheses.[44]

Fossil record

The fossil record of Scoliidae begins in the Early Cretaceous, with the earliest known specimens recovered from the Yixian Formation in western Liaoning Province, China, dating to approximately 125 million years ago. These include three species of the genus Protoscolia (P. sinensis, P. normalis, and P. imperialis), assigned to the extinct subfamily Archaeoscoliinae, representing some of the most primitive known scoliid wasps. These fossils, preserved as compressions in lacustrine sediments of the Jehol Biota, provide the initial evidence for the family's early diversification among aculeate Hymenoptera.[45] Several extinct subfamilies highlight the family's Cretaceous dominance. Archaeoscoliinae, established from Barremian-aged (approximately 130–125 Ma) deposits, is diverse and includes genera such as Cretoscolia and Archaeoscolia, with specimens notably preserved in amber from sites like the Crato Formation in Brazil and La Huérguina Formation in Spain, showcasing early morphological variation in wing venation and body structure.[46][47] In contrast, Palaeoscoliinae, described from a single species in the Late Eocene (Priabonian, approximately 37–34 Ma) Insect Limestone of the Isle of Wight, United Kingdom, exhibits traits closer to extant Scoliinae, such as refined antennal and metasomal features.[46][47] Scoliid diversity appears to have peaked in the mid-Cretaceous, with multiple genera documented across Laurasian and Gondwanan localities, reflecting an initial burst of speciation tied to the radiation of scarab beetle hosts. By the late Eocene, records indicate a decline, with sparser occurrences and undescribed compression fossils from European Eocene sites suggesting reduced abundance before the Neogene. As of 2024, eight fossil genera are recognized, including Protoscolia, Araripescolia, Carinoscolia, and Megacampsomeris. Fossil wings often display venation patterns akin to modern forms, including crossveins that facilitate folding, though preservation limits details on coloration and pubescence.[48] Fossil evidence integrates with molecular data to confirm an Early Cretaceous crown-group origin for Scoliidae, estimated at around 125 Ma via Bayesian analyses calibrated with key specimens like Protoscolia normalis and Araripescolia magnifica. These chronograms reveal a pantropical radiation, with early divergences between major lineages (e.g., Scoliini and Campsomerini) coinciding with continental configurations that facilitated host-parasite co-speciation across hemispheres.[49]

Diversity and conservation

Global and regional species counts

The family Scoliidae encompasses approximately 560 described species distributed across more than 140 genera worldwide.[19][9] This total is likely an underestimate, given the family's concentration in tropical and subtropical regions where taxonomic sampling remains incomplete and many areas are understudied.[17][50] Species diversity exhibits a pantropical pattern, with the highest concentrations in the Afrotropical and Oriental realms, reflecting the family's preference for warm climates; in contrast, temperate zones support far fewer taxa. In the New World, 64 species are documented overall, including about 22 in the Nearctic region north of Mexico and a higher number in the Neotropical region, where recent surveys in Mexico have identified 23 morphospecies across nine genera from extensive specimen collections.[19][4][19] The Palearctic region harbors at least 50 species in the genus Scolia alone, contributing to moderate diversity in more temperate Eurasian areas. In the Oriental region, a 2021 checklist resolved 52 species across 11 genera in China, highlighting ongoing taxonomic progress in this hotspot.[51] Endemism is particularly elevated on tropical islands, such as Madagascar, which supports around 41 species across three subfamilies, many of which are restricted to the island.[52] Temperate limitations are evident north of Mexico, where only about 20 species occur, underscoring the family's reduced presence outside tropical convergence zones.[2] Few Scoliidae species are formally listed as threatened, owing to their generalist parasitoid habits and wide distributions, though habitat destruction in tropical forests indirectly affects undescribed diversity; certain species, like Campsomeris dorsata, have been introduced as biological control agents against scarab beetle larvae, aiding pest management without notable conservation conflicts.[50][20]

Notable species and lists

Among the notable species in the Scoliidae family, Scolia dubia, commonly known as the blue-winged wasp, is widespread in eastern North America and serves as a natural biocontrol agent against the Japanese beetle (Popillia japonica) by parasitizing its soil-dwelling larvae.[2] This species is valued for its role in reducing scarab beetle populations without requiring human intervention, though its impact is localized due to its solitary habits.[53] Megascolia procer, one of the largest wasps in the world, reaches body lengths of up to 50 mm and wingspans of 116 mm, and is distributed across Southeast Asia, including Indonesia and Singapore. It acts as a parasitoid of large scarab beetle larvae, such as those in the genus Chalcosoma, contributing to pest regulation in tropical ecosystems.[54] In the Neotropics, species like those in the genus Campsomeris, such as Dielis tolteca (formerly classified under Campsomeris), are prominent aggressive parasitoids targeting scarab beetle grubs in soil, with females actively digging to locate and oviposit on hosts.[55] These wasps exhibit bold foraging behavior, enhancing their effectiveness against agricultural pests in regions from Mexico to South America.[50] North America hosts approximately 20 species of Scoliidae north of Mexico, distributed across five genera: Campsomeris, Crioscolia, Scolia, Trielis, and Triscolia, with examples including Campsomeris aurora, Crioscolia furcata, and Trielis octomaculata.[2] Efforts to introduce exotic species for biocontrol, such as Scolia manilensis from Asia in the 1920s, failed to establish populations against the Japanese beetle due to climatic mismatches and low survival rates.[56] In other regions, China records 52 species across 11 genera, as detailed in illustrated identification keys published in 2021, facilitating regional taxonomy and monitoring.[17] A 2022 revision identified 23 species in Mexico, representing significant New World diversity, according to a comprehensive catalog that highlights their pantropical concentration and ecological roles.[50] Ecologically, species in the genus Elis (now often reclassified under Dielis) contribute as minor pollinators by visiting wildflowers for nectar in late summer, aiding plant reproduction while provisioning their larvae with scarab hosts.[1] Regarding conservation, Scoliidae species lack formal IUCN Red List assessments globally, though populations are indirectly monitored in relation to invasive scarab hosts like the Japanese beetle that could disrupt native dynamics.[16] For identification in North America, pictorial keys to the Nearctic genera and select species are available through resources like the University of Florida's EDIS publication, which provides diagnostic features such as abdominal banding patterns and wing venation for field use.[2]
RegionKey GeneraRepresentative SpeciesNotes
North America (north of Mexico)Campsomeris, Crioscolia, Scolia, Trielis, TriscoliaCampsomeris aurora, Crioscolia furcata, Trielis octomaculata~20 species; focus on scarab parasitoids; failed introductions of exotics like Scolia manilensis.[2]
China11 genera (e.g., Scolia, Megascolia)Not specified in keys52 species; illustrated keys for taxonomy.[17]
MexicoCampsomeris, Scolia, DielisVarious, e.g., Dielis tolteca23 species; high Neotropical diversity.[50]

References

User Avatar
No comments yet.