xyelid sawflies - definição. O que é xyelid sawflies. Significado, conceito
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O que (quem) é xyelid sawflies - definição

SUPERFAMILY OF SAWFLIES
Stem sawfly; Cephoidea (version 2); Stem sawflies; Cephoidae
  • ''[[Calameuta filiformis]]''

Sawfly         
SUBORDER OF INSECTS
Sawflies; Saw-fly; Wood wasp; Wood Wasp; Saw-Fly; Saw Fly; Saw fly; Symphyta
·noun Any one of numerous species of hymenopterous insects belonging to the family Tenthredinidae. The female usually has an ovipositor containing a pair of sawlike organs with which she makes incisions in the leaves or stems of plants in which to lay the eggs. The larvae resemble those of Lepidoptera.
sawfly         
SUBORDER OF INSECTS
Sawflies; Saw-fly; Wood wasp; Wood Wasp; Saw-Fly; Saw Fly; Saw fly; Symphyta
¦ noun (plural sawflies) an insect related to the wasps, with a sawlike tube used in laying eggs in plant tissues. [Suborder Symphyta: many species.]
Diprionidae         
  • ''Gilpinia'' video
  • Sawfly infestation in Scots pines
FAMILY OF SAWFLIES
Conifer sawfly; Pine sawfly
The Diprionidae are a small family of conifer-feeding sawflies (thus the common name conifer sawflies, though other Symphyta also feed on conifers) restricted to the Northern Hemisphere, with some 140 species in 13 genera. Larvae are often gregarious, and sometimes there can be major outbreaks, thus these sawflies can be major forest pests at times.

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Cephoidea

Cephoidea is a small superfamily within the Symphyta, commonly referred to as stem sawflies, containing some 100 species in 10 genera in the living family, Cephidae, plus another 17 genera in the extinct family Sepulcidae. Most species occur in the Northern Hemisphere, especially in Eurasia. The larvae are stem borers in various plants, especially grasses, but sometimes other herbaceous plants, shrubs, or trees. A few are pests of cereal grains (e.g. Cephus cinctus, which attacks wheat). They are exceptionally slender for symphytans, often resembling other types of wasps, and they are the only Symphyta which lack cenchri. They are sometimes postulated to be the sister taxon to the Apocrita, though the Orussidae are more commonly considered such.