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The Red Pine Web-spinning Sawfly, Cephalcia marginata Middlekauff (Hymenoptera, Pamphiliidae)1

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  31 May 2012

Lionel Daviault
Affiliation:
Forest Biology Laboratory, Quebec, P.Q.

Extract

This insect was first noticed during the summer of 1939 in a young red pine plantation in the vicinity of Berthierville, Que. A large number of mature larvae were collected at the end of the same season and placed on the foliage of small red pine trees enclosed in wire cages in the field. The larvae soon left the trees to enter the soil for overwintering. The following spring, numerous adults emerged in the cages, and in order to obtain an identification, several specimens were sent to Dr. O. Peck, Entomology Division, Ottawa, who considered that this was apparently a new species of the genus Cephalcia. Later, many specimens were sent to Dr. W. W. Middlekauff, of the University of California, who described the species under the name C. marginata (1953).

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Entomological Society of Canada 1956

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References

Middlekauff, W. W. 1953. A New Species of Web-spinning Sawfly Feeding Upon Pines (Hymenoptera, Pamphiliidae). Pan Pacific Entomologist, 29: 133134.Google Scholar
Rivard, I. 1955. Contribution to the Morphology of a Pine Web-spinning Sawfly, Cephalcia marginata Middlekauff (Hymenoptera: Pamphiliidae). Can. Ent. 87: 382400.CrossRefGoogle Scholar