Kaszab Zoltán (szerk.): A Magyar Természettudományi Múzeum évkönyve 68. (Budapest 1976)
Zombori, L.: New sawfly species in the Hungarian fauna (Hymenoptera, Symphyta), II
9. Hypargyricus nodicornis (KONOW, 1886) — MOCSÁRY first recorded it from the region of the Adriatic Sea (Fiume, today known as Rijeka, Yugoslavia). Then in 1930 PILLICH mentioned it from Simontornya (Hungary), however, the whereabouts of this specimen cannot be traced. Therefore, I feel it justified to record the species anew from specimens housed in the Hungarian Natural History Museum, Budapest. Apparently systematists easily confuse this species with Monophadnus longicornis HTG., most of our specimens have been identified as such, but the bifurcating stub of A'i in the fore wing alongside with some other features, unequivocally indicate Hypargyricus MACGILL. The Hungarian localities are : "Pilis-Marót, CSÍKI" (1 O); "Irottkő, Visnya, 1939. VI. 2, 834 m" (1 $); "Ócsa, Nagyerdő, 1953. IV. 16, leg. BAJÁRI, Polygonatum" (1 9); "Ócsa, Nagyerdő, 1953. IV. 23, leg. MÓCZÁR M., Polygonatum" (1 9)î "Dobogókő, 1957. IV. 29, leg. Soós A." (1 O). (HNHM). 10. Pseudodineura parvula (KLUG, 1814) — Three female specimens of this species were collected hv PAVEL in Budapest as early as on the 29th of April, 1898, but were never published in the literature. This, of cdlirse, might have been due to the fact that they were mixed up with a closely allied species, P. fuscula KL., though the two species obviously differ from each other. A good differentiating character was found by HERING (1929) when he noticed the significant variation of the sawsheaths. Another female specimen of this species was found in the Bakonv Mts. quite recently: "Lesenceistvánd, láprét, patakpart, 1973. V. 4, leg. TÓTH". (HNHM, BTMZ). In MOCSÁRY'S time, mostly at the end of the 19th century, the species of Pseudodineura were rather inadequately understood. Only two species were described, since a third (hepaticae BRISCHKE) later proved to be only a colour variation. MOCSÁR Y was aware of this circumstance when he came across a Pseudodineura specimen from the Karst (today Yugoslavia), belonging to the fauna! districts of the Carpathian Basin. The female specimen found by MOCSÁRY Avas nothing like the other two valid species, still he deferred from describing it as new to science. He simply pinned a label under the locality label with the following words: "Pseudodineura n. sp. ?" Today the European Pseiidodineura species are more exactly known, though a species or two may yet be described, especially from the southern parts of Europe. Female, black and brown. — Head: black, mouth parts, mandibles and labrum light yellow, clypeus light brown, antennae also brown. Labrum somewhat pointed in front, triangularly shaped. Clypeus almost truncate on frontal margin, only very weakly emarginate, shining with dense pubescence. Supraclypeal area between antennae raised. Triangular area below frons adjacent with supraclypeal area with a depression at height of antennái sockets in lower third, clearly surrounded with blunt keels on both sides (Fig. 1). Frons flat, without any sharp keels or surface sculjîture, though semicircularly faintly delimited from rest of Figs. 1-2. Pseudodineura mocsaryi sp. n. 1 = triangular area below frons, 2 = sawsheath in superior view. — Fig. 3. P. clematidis HER.: sawsheath in superior view. 11. Pseudodineura mocsaryi sp. n. (Figs. 1—2)