| File: <siricoid.htm>                            [For educational purposes only]        Glossary       <Principal Natural Enemy Groups >         <Citations>             <Home> | 
 
 
| HYMENOPTERA,
  Siricoidea            The superfamily Siricoidea is an ancient group of
  Hymenoptera, with three families (one extinct) of xylophagous sawflies. The
  group is prominent in early Tertiary and Mesozoic times, but a number of living
  taxa remain, including the family Anaxyelidae, which has recently been linked
  to this group (it was previously placed in the Xyeloidea). The female
  ovipositor is very long and projects posteriorly, and is used to bore into
  wood.             Some species
  in the Orussidae are parasitoids.  The
  family is rare in North America with only 11 species known as of 2010.  The adults look a lot like horntails, but
  they are a much smaller 8-14 mm.  The
  larvae are parasitoids of wood-boring beetles larvae (Buprestidae) and
  probably other wood-boring beetles and Hymenoptera.  They may be related to the Apocrita and sometimes they are
  classified in that group, or in a separate suborder Idiogastra.  The adults take wing in spring to early
  summer, and may be found on the trunks of dead trees.   References:   Please
  refer to  <biology.ref.htm>, [Additional references may be found at:  MELVYL
  Library]   Riek, E. F.  1955. 
  The Australian sawflies of the family Orussidae (Hymenoptera:
  Symphyta).  Austr. J. Zool. a3:  99-105.   |