Monsoma

Taxonomy

Family: Tenthredinidae
Family common name: common sawflies
Subfamily: Allantinae
Tribe: Empriini
Genus: Monsoma MacGillivray, 1908
Subgenera: none

Background

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 Allantinae subfamily are mostly black and shining, sometimes with other colors. They have agricultural importance as some species are pests on cultivated and ornamental plants (Smith 1979aSmith 1979a:
Smith DR. 1979a. Nearctic sawflies. IV. Allantinae: Adults and larvae (Hymenoptera: Tenthredinidae). Technical Bulletin, U.S. Department of Agriculture 1595: 1-172.
). They can be distinguished from other subfamilies by wing venationvenation:
the network of veins on a wing
(Smith 2003aSmith 2003a:
Smith DR. 2003a. A Synopsis of the sawflies (Hymenoptera: Symphyta) of America south of the United States: Tenthredinidae (Allantinae). Journal of Hymenoptera Research 12 (1): 148-192.
).

Monsoma are medium-sized, about 6–8 mm in length. The two North American species are distinct, one mostly orange/yellow, the other mainly black (Smith 1979aSmith 1979a:
Smith DR. 1979a. Nearctic sawflies. IV. Allantinae: Adults and larvae (Hymenoptera: Tenthredinidae). Technical Bulletin, U.S. Department of Agriculture 1595: 1-172.
, Smith and Goulet 2000Smith and Goulet 2000:
Smith DR and Goulet H. 2000. Monosoma pulverata (Hymenoptera: Tenthredinidae), an alder-feeding sawfly new to North America. Entomological News 111: 238-242.
, Kruse et al. 2010Kruse et al. 2010:
Kruse JJ, Smith DR, and Schiff NM. 2010. Monsoma pulveratum (Retzius) (Hymenoptera: Tenthredinidae: Allantinae), a Palaearctic [sic] sawfly defoliator of alder in Alaska and new to the United States. Proceedings of the Entomological Society of Washington 112 (2): 332-335.
).

Diversity

There are three described extantextant:
in existence; opposite of extinct
species worldwide. Two occur 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.
).

A NearcticNearctic:
describing the region of the Northern Hemisphere that includes North America south through northern Mexico
key to species is included in Smith 1979aSmith 1979a:
Smith DR. 1979a. Nearctic sawflies. IV. Allantinae: Adults and larvae (Hymenoptera: Tenthredinidae). Technical Bulletin, U.S. Department of Agriculture 1595: 1-172.
.

Diagnostic characteristics

Subfamily characters

  • fore wing fore wing:
    the anterior wing of each pair of wings; usually the largest wing of the pair
    vein M and 1m-cu parallel (Smith 1979aSmith 1979a:
    Smith DR. 1979a. Nearctic sawflies. IV. Allantinae: Adults and larvae (Hymenoptera: Tenthredinidae). Technical Bulletin, U.S. Department of Agriculture 1595: 1-172.
    )
  • fore wing fore wing:
    the anterior wing of each pair of wings; usually the largest wing of the pair
    vein 2A+3A complete, connected to 1A by crossveincrossvein:
    short section of wing vein that connects two larger veins
    (Smith 1979aSmith 1979a:
    Smith DR. 1979a. Nearctic sawflies. IV. Allantinae: Adults and larvae (Hymenoptera: Tenthredinidae). Technical Bulletin, U.S. Department of Agriculture 1595: 1-172.
    )
  • anal crossvein anal crossvein:
    a crossvein that goes through the center of the basal anal cell
    angled (Smith and Schiefer 1997Smith and Schiefer 1997:
    Smith DR and Schiefer TL. 1997. A new genus and species of Allantinae (Hymenoptera: Tenthredinidae) from southeastern United States. Proceedings of the Entomological Society of Washington 99 (3): 472-476.
    )

Genus characters​

  • mandibles bidentatebidentate:
    having two teeth; often used in descrbing mandibles or tarsal claws
    (Smith 1979aSmith 1979a:
    Smith DR. 1979a. Nearctic sawflies. IV. Allantinae: Adults and larvae (Hymenoptera: Tenthredinidae). Technical Bulletin, U.S. Department of Agriculture 1595: 1-172.
    )
  • clypeus clypeus:
    sclerotized area on the front of the head located between the antennal insertions and labrum
    shallowly notched (Smith 1979aSmith 1979a:
    Smith DR. 1979a. Nearctic sawflies. IV. Allantinae: Adults and larvae (Hymenoptera: Tenthredinidae). Technical Bulletin, U.S. Department of Agriculture 1595: 1-172.
    )
  • genal ridge present to top of compound eye (Smith 1979aSmith 1979a:
    Smith DR. 1979a. Nearctic sawflies. IV. Allantinae: Adults and larvae (Hymenoptera: Tenthredinidae). Technical Bulletin, U.S. Department of Agriculture 1595: 1-172.
    )
  • second antennal segment as long as wide (Smith 1979aSmith 1979a:
    Smith DR. 1979a. Nearctic sawflies. IV. Allantinae: Adults and larvae (Hymenoptera: Tenthredinidae). Technical Bulletin, U.S. Department of Agriculture 1595: 1-172.
    )
  • fore wing fore wing:
    the anterior wing of each pair of wings; usually the largest wing of the pair
    vein 2r present (Smith 1979aSmith 1979a:
    Smith DR. 1979a. Nearctic sawflies. IV. Allantinae: Adults and larvae (Hymenoptera: Tenthredinidae). Technical Bulletin, U.S. Department of Agriculture 1595: 1-172.
    )
  • fore wing fore wing:
    the anterior wing of each pair of wings; usually the largest wing of the pair
    vein M intersecting Sc+R at the intersection of Sc+R and Rs+M (Smith 1979aSmith 1979a:
    Smith DR. 1979a. Nearctic sawflies. IV. Allantinae: Adults and larvae (Hymenoptera: Tenthredinidae). Technical Bulletin, U.S. Department of Agriculture 1595: 1-172.
    )
  • tarsal claw tarsal claw:
    sharpened appendage emerging from the apex of the tarsus
    without basalbasal:
    towards the base; closest to the body
    lobe, with small inner tooth (Smith 1979aSmith 1979a:
    Smith DR. 1979a. Nearctic sawflies. IV. Allantinae: Adults and larvae (Hymenoptera: Tenthredinidae). Technical Bulletin, U.S. Department of Agriculture 1595: 1-172.
    )

May be confused with

Monsoma can be confused with similar species in the subfamily Allantinae or tribe Empriini. It can be distinguished from most other genera by the complete genal ridge and the tarsal clawtarsal claw:
sharpened appendage emerging from the apex of the tarsus
basalbasal:
towards the base; closest to the body
lobe. It is especially similar to Empria, which can be recognized by paired white spots on the abdomenabdomen:
the third and last segment of an insect's body; in sawflies this is usually made up of 11 segments (segments 9 and 10 often fused)
(Smith 1979aSmith 1979a:
Smith DR. 1979a. Nearctic sawflies. IV. Allantinae: Adults and larvae (Hymenoptera: Tenthredinidae). Technical Bulletin, U.S. Department of Agriculture 1595: 1-172.
).

Exotic pest species of concern

none

Native or introduced pest species

Monsoma pulveratum is native to the Eastern Hemisphere, but was discovered in North America in Newfoundland in 1991 (Smith and Goulet 2000Smith and Goulet 2000:
Smith DR and Goulet H. 2000. Monosoma pulverata (Hymenoptera: Tenthredinidae), an alder-feeding sawfly new to North America. Entomological News 111: 238-242.
). It became established in Alaska by 2007, where it caused significant defoliation of alder stands in the south-central area of the state (Kruse et al. 2010Kruse et al. 2010:
Kruse JJ, Smith DR, and Schiff NM. 2010. Monsoma pulveratum (Retzius) (Hymenoptera: Tenthredinidae: Allantinae), a Palaearctic [sic] sawfly defoliator of alder in Alaska and new to the United States. Proceedings of the Entomological Society of Washington 112 (2): 332-335.
). In 2012, the species was detected in several sites in Idaho, Washington, and Oregon, but has not caused the severe defoliation observed in Alaska (Looney et al. 2012Looney et al. 2012:
Looney C, Sheehan K, Bai B, Flowers R, Kohler G, LaGasa E, McKorney AE, and Smith DR. 2012. The distribution of a potential new forest pest, Monsoma pulveratum (Hymenoptera: Tenthredinidae), in the Pacific Northwest states. Northwest Science 86 (4): 342-345.
).

Host associations

In North America, Monsoma feeds on Alnus (alder). One collection of M. inferentium in British Columbia was made on Salix (willow) (Smith 1979aSmith 1979a:
Smith DR. 1979a. Nearctic sawflies. IV. Allantinae: Adults and larvae (Hymenoptera: Tenthredinidae). Technical Bulletin, U.S. Department of Agriculture 1595: 1-172.
).

Life history

The young larvaelarva:
the immature stage of holometabolous insects
feed singly on foliage. Adults emerge in the spring. Described species of Monsoma are univoltineunivoltine:
describing an insect with a life cycle of one generation per year
(Smith 1979aSmith 1979a:
Smith DR. 1979a. Nearctic sawflies. IV. Allantinae: Adults and larvae (Hymenoptera: Tenthredinidae). Technical Bulletin, U.S. Department of Agriculture 1595: 1-172.
, Kruse et al. 2010Kruse et al. 2010:
Kruse JJ, Smith DR, and Schiff NM. 2010. Monsoma pulveratum (Retzius) (Hymenoptera: Tenthredinidae: Allantinae), a Palaearctic [sic] sawfly defoliator of alder in Alaska and new to the United States. Proceedings of the Entomological Society of Washington 112 (2): 332-335.
).

Monsoma pulveratum is native to the Eastern Hemisphere, but was discovered in North America in Newfoundland in 1991 (Smith and Goulet 2000Smith and Goulet 2000:
Smith DR and Goulet H. 2000. Monosoma pulverata (Hymenoptera: Tenthredinidae), an alder-feeding sawfly new to North America. Entomological News 111: 238-242.
). The larvaelarva:
the immature stage of holometabolous insects
of M. pulveratum are bright green with green and white stripes and white spots surrounding the spiracles (Kruse et al. 2010Kruse et al. 2010:
Kruse JJ, Smith DR, and Schiff NM. 2010. Monsoma pulveratum (Retzius) (Hymenoptera: Tenthredinidae: Allantinae), a Palaearctic [sic] sawfly defoliator of alder in Alaska and new to the United States. Proceedings of the Entomological Society of Washington 112 (2): 332-335.
). Feeding behavior is characterized by complete defoliation when populations are high; at lower densities feeding damage appears as a series of small holes in leaves (Looney et al. 2012Looney et al. 2012:
Looney C, Sheehan K, Bai B, Flowers R, Kohler G, LaGasa E, McKorney AE, and Smith DR. 2012. The distribution of a potential new forest pest, Monsoma pulveratum (Hymenoptera: Tenthredinidae), in the Pacific Northwest states. Northwest Science 86 (4): 342-345.
). Males have not been collected in North America, suggesting that this species may reproduce parthenogeneticallyparthenogenesis:
a type of sexual reproduction where embryos are produced from unfertilized eggs
(Smith and Goulet 2000Smith and Goulet 2000:
Smith DR and Goulet H. 2000. Monosoma pulverata (Hymenoptera: Tenthredinidae), an alder-feeding sawfly new to North America. Entomological News 111: 238-242.
).

Distribution

World: This genus is known from North America, Europe, northern Africa, western Asia, western China (Smith 1979aSmith 1979a:
Smith DR. 1979a. Nearctic sawflies. IV. Allantinae: Adults and larvae (Hymenoptera: Tenthredinidae). Technical Bulletin, U.S. Department of Agriculture 1595: 1-172.
, 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: Monsoma pulveratum is recorded in Newfoundland, Alaska, Washington, Idaho, Oregon, and Montana (Kruse et al. 2010Kruse et al. 2010:
Kruse JJ, Smith DR, and Schiff NM. 2010. Monsoma pulveratum (Retzius) (Hymenoptera: Tenthredinidae: Allantinae), a Palaearctic [sic] sawfly defoliator of alder in Alaska and new to the United States. Proceedings of the Entomological Society of Washington 112 (2): 332-335.
, Looney et al. 2012Looney et al. 2012:
Looney C, Sheehan K, Bai B, Flowers R, Kohler G, LaGasa E, McKorney AE, and Smith DR. 2012. The distribution of a potential new forest pest, Monsoma pulveratum (Hymenoptera: Tenthredinidae), in the Pacific Northwest states. Northwest Science 86 (4): 342-345.
). Monsoma inferentium is recorded throughout the northeastern United States and eastern Canada, with some collections farther west in Alberta and British Columbia (Smith 1979aSmith 1979a:
Smith DR. 1979a. Nearctic sawflies. IV. Allantinae: Adults and larvae (Hymenoptera: Tenthredinidae). Technical Bulletin, U.S. Department of Agriculture 1595: 1-172.
).

Map data from: GBIF.org (29 October 2019) GBIF Occurrence Download Monsoma

Details about data used for maps can be found here.

  Monsoma pulveratumnbsp; fe?male lateral habitus; photo by J. Orr, WSDA

Monsoma pulveratum fe?male lateral habitus; photo by J. Orr, WSDA

  Monsoma pulveratumnbsp; fe?male dorsal habitus; photo by J. Orr, WSDA

Monsoma pulveratum fe?male dorsal habitus; photo by J. Orr, WSDA

  Monsoma pulveratumnbsp; fe?male face; photo by Q. Baine, WSDA

Monsoma pulveratum fe?male face; photo by Q. Baine, WSDA

  Monsoma inferentiumnbsp; ?male lateral habitus; photo by J. Orr, WSDA

Monsoma inferentium ?male lateral habitus; photo by J. Orr, WSDA

  Monsoma inferentiumnbsp; male face; photo by Q. Baine, WSDA

Monsoma inferentium male face; photo by Q. Baine, WSDA

  Monsoma pulveratumnbsp; wings; photo by P. Jones, WSDA

Monsoma pulveratum wings; photo by P. Jones, WSDA