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Biodiversity Journal, 2015, 6 (2): 529–592                               MONOGRAPH



                 Worldwide checklist of the island mutillid wasps (Hymenop-

                 tera Mutillidae)



                 Pietro Lo Cascio

                 Nesos, via Vittorio Emanuele 24, 98055 Lipari, Messina, Italy; e-mail: plocascio@nesos.org




                 ABSTRACT          The family of Mutillidae includes 776 taxa among species and subspecies recorded for 311
                                   islands worldwide, whose distribution is provided in the present checklist. A brief review of
                                   some traits that characterize the insular faunas of these hymenopteran parasitoids is given.
                                   The main constraints to the dispersal on islands are due to the apterogyny and the occurrence
                                   of suitable hosts. Species richness is generally correlated with island size. Although probably
                                   still underestimated, the greatest number of species is found on Sri Lanka (82), Borneo (77),
                                   Madagascar (70) and Taiwan (61). Endemics are more than half (55%) of the whole insular
                                   mutillids and are found mostly in the oceanic islands and in those that have undergone to
                                   a long-time isolation. On the contrary, endemic genera are represented only on few islands
                                   (Madagascar, Sri Lanka and, secondarily, New Guinea, Sulawesi and Canary).


                 KEY WORDS         Hymenoptera; Mutillidae; islands of the world; checklist; biogeography.
                 Received 26.04.2015; accepted 21.06.2015; printed 30.06.2015







                 INTRODUCTION                                 conspecific males (Manley, 1999) and molecular
                                                              analysis (Pilgrim & Pitts, 2006).
                   The  family  Mutillidae  includes  210  genera  Despite the uncertainty that still persists about
                 (Lelej & Brothers, 2008; see also Williams & Pitts,  the amount of true species belonging to this fam-
                 2009; Williams et al., 2011; Brothers, 2012; Tu et  ily, 428 (about 10% of those actually described),
                 al.,  2014)  and  more  than  4,300  species  so  far  as well as 13 genera, are known to be exclusively
                 described. These latter are estimated to be about  distributed on islands. That confirms once again
                 6,000 (according to Lelej & Brothers, 2008), but  as the islands contribute disproportionately to the
                 their number is rather uncertain pending for further  global biodiversity (Whittaker & Fernández-Pala-
                 investigations that could lead to establish several  cios, 2006).
                 new synonymies, because many species, and even  The occurrence of mutillids wasps on islands is
                 a few genera, are still known only for one sex.  however  constrained  by  two  morphological  and
                   The strong sexual dimorphism typical of the  biological traits: i) the low dispersal ability of the
                 members  of  this  hymenopteran  family  makes  wingless  females,  and  ii)  their  dependence  on
                 indeed  difficult  the  association  between  males  finding of suitable hosts, because Mutillidae are
                 (mostly winged) and females (all apterous), that is  parasitoids that develop mainly on immature stages
                 generally  based  on  the  direct  observations  of  of other Hymenoptera (Brothers, 1989).
                 mating, although have been also used alternative  Consequently,  the  number  of  species  on  the
                 methods  such  as  live-caught  females  to  attract  islands presumably decrease with increase of their
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