Abstract

Several records of associated fauna, including parasitoids, inquilines, predators, and successors, have been reported by insect gall inventories in Brazilian restingas. Although most guilds are well established, inquilines have frequently been misinterpreted. In this paper, the inquilinous fauna of insect galls is revised based on five criteria: food habit; coexistence with the inducer; modification of gall tissues or production of new tissues; phylogenetic relationship with the inducer; and mobility. Gall inventories dated from 1988 to 2019 were examined, totaling 16 publications, eight of them with inquiline records. This guild was reported in 53 gall morphotypes in 44 plant species and four morphospecies distributed among 36 genera of 24 host families for a total of 65 records. Most inquilines were repositioned into the cecidophage guild and others into the kleptoparasite guild, resulting in a large reduction in the frequency of inquilines (from 65 to five records), and in first reports of cecidophages and kleptoparasites, with 46 and 13 records, respectively. Cecidophage was the most diverse guild with insects of five orders (Diptera, Coleoptera, Lepidoptera, Hemiptera, and Thysanoptera) while kleptoparasites were represented only by two orders (Diptera and Hymenoptera) and inquiline solely by Hymenoptera. Other results indicate that Leptothorax sp. (Formicidae) could be a successor and not an inquiline.

Highlights

  • Other guilds are known, such as cecidophages, symbionts and kleptoparasites, but they were not been cited in these publications, probably due to terminological problems

  • This paper aims to answer the following questions: (1) Which are the most frequent and richest taxa of inquilines, cecidophages, and kleptoparasites? (2) Which gall-inducing taxa host the richest fauna of inquilines, cecidophages, and kleptoparasites? (3) In how many gall morphotypes and plant species, genera and families have these guilds been recorded? (4) Which plant families, genera and species shelter the richest guilds of inquilines, cecidophages, and kleptoparasites? (5) What are the most frequent features of host galls? (6) What is known about the taxonomy of the inquilines, cecidophages, and kleptoparasites of gall? and (7) What is necessary for the correct positioning of the associated fauna in the different guilds?

  • The new positioning of associated fauna among guilds was based on literature data, as well as on unpublished biological information obtained from laboratory works, including gall arthropod rearing, gall dissection and observation of gall tissues and gall dweller behavior

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Summary

Introduction

Several gall inventories of Atlantic Forest areas were carried out in restingas, mainly in the state of Rio de Janeiro (Maia, 2001; Rodrigues et al, 2014; Carvalho-Fernandes et al, 2016), and in Espírito Santo (Bregonci et al, 2010), and São Paulo (Maia et al, 2008). This fauna has been classified as parasitoids, inquilines, gall modifiers, successors, and predators. Other guilds are known, such as cecidophages, symbionts and kleptoparasites, but they were not been cited in these publications, probably due to terminological problems

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