Ephialtes brevis (Ichneumonid parasitic wasp)
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Ephialtes brevis belongs to the family Ichneumonidae within the subfamily Pimplinae. The geographic range of E. brevis spans across parts of North America, Europe, and Asia.
Ephialtes brevis looks like many other Ephialtes species and it can sometimes be hard to identify specimens to species. They are around 6 to 10mm long. The mandibles are long, with the lower tooth approximately twice the length of the upper one. The face is broad and wider than it is tall, measured from the base of the antennae to the clypeal suture. The tip of the ovipositor has lower valves that extend to partially cover the upper valve, and this feature is clearly visible when viewed from above. The clypeus of this species may be whitish, and the front wings usually have very long hairs restricted to the leading edge. Their bodies are black and slender while their legs and are orange-red or yellow.
We only had one nest that was parasitized by Ephialtes brevis in the Bee Atlas project. The nest host was the Eumenid wasp, Symmorphus cristatus.
No information at this time.
This species appears to be univoltine throughout its range, completing one generation per year in Minnesota.
No information at this time.
Triplehorn, C.A and N.F. Johnson. 2005. Borror and DeLong's introduction to the study of insects, 7th ed. Thomson, Brooks/Cole, Australia.
BugGuide. 2024. "Species Ephialtes brevis - BugGuide.Net." Accessed May 17, 2024. https://bugguide.net/node/view/528929
Discover Life. 2024. "Ichneumonidae." In Proceedings of the Ecological Society of America, vol. 6. Accessed May 17, 2024. https://www.discoverlife.org/proceedings/0000/6/html/Ichneumonidae.html
Fitton, M. G., Shaw, M. R., & Gauld, I. D. 1988. Pimpline ichneumon-flies. Hymenoptera, Ichneumonidae (Pimplinae). 7(1).
Thank you to John Luhman for identifying all of our Ichneumonid specimens.