identifier	taxonID	type	CVterm	format	language	title	description	additionalInformationURL	UsageTerms	rights	Owner	contributor	creator	bibliographicCitation
5F5DF91E88018F0AFF34DF494CD37430.text	5F5DF91E88018F0AFF34DF494CD37430.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Xiphydria ogasawarai Matsumura 1927	<div><p>Xiphydria ogasawarai Matsumura, 1927</p><p>(Figs 1 A–C; 2A, B; 3A, B; 4A)</p><p>Xiphydria ogasawarai Matsumura, 1927: 205; Takeuchi, 1938: 181 (part); Abe &amp; Togashi, 1989: 559; Togashi, 1991: 172; Kajimura, 2000: 312; Naito et al., 2004: 69; Taeger et al., 2010: 120; Sundukov &amp; Lelej, 2012: 115 (part); Takahashi &amp; Sakurai, 2015: 31.</p><p>Xiphydria alnivora Matsumura, 1927: 206; Takeuchi, 1938: 181; Kono &amp; Sugihara, 1939: 109; Watanabe, 1956: 7 (lectotype designation); Abe &amp; Togashi, 1989: 559; Togashi, 1991: 172; Nagase, 2007: 291 (part); Taeger et al., 2010: 119; Katayama, 2017: 156. Syn. nov.</p><p>Xiphydria palaeanarctica: Watanabe, 1956: 8 (part); Kojima et al., 1962: 9. Not Semenov-Tian-Shanskij (1921).</p><p>Summary of taxonomic characters. Head capsule black, with large elongate spot on lateral vertex, spot on inner orbit lateral to torulus, and elongate mark along genal carina creamy white; lateral part of clypeus often dark amber or brown. Female: Length without ovipositor 10.5–18.0 mm. Antenna (Fig. 3A) black, with flagellum creamy white; usually flagellomeres 1 mostly, flagellomere 2 partly and terminal flagellomere black; sometimes flagellomere 3 and 4 also marked with black; with 13–16 (usually 14 or 15) antennomeres (n=42); pedicel 1.1–1.4 × length of flagellomere 2 (n=24). Thorax black. Legs black, sometimes partly very dark reddish brown. Abdomen black with creamy white lateral spots usually on terga 4–6, sometimes obscure spot also on tergum 3 or 7. Sawsheath length about 0.9–1.0 × basal plate length (n=23). Male: Length 6.5–12.0 mm.Antenna dark brown to black, without creamy white areas, with 13–15 antennomeres (n=21). Thorax often with yellowish spots on pronotum, cervical sclerite and mesepisternum. Leg coloration variable, pale brown to blackish brown. Abdomen black with small whitish lateral spots usually on terga 4–6, sometimes additional obscure spot on tergum 2, 3 or 8, sometimes whitish spots entirely missing; tergum 9 convex, with median longitudinal keel, triangular, nearly pointed at apex (Fig. 3B).</p><p>Primary types examined. ♀ (Holotype of Xiphydria ogasawarai Matsumura, 1927, Fig. 1A), “ Iwate, Ogasawara ” “ Type Matsumura ” “ Xiphydria ogasawarai Matsumura, Type ” “0000051226 Syst. Ent. Hokkaido Univ. Japan [SEHU]” (HU) . ♀ (Lectotype of Xiphydria alnivora Matsumura, 1927, Figs 1B, 2A), “ Sahoro, 6/15” “ X. alnivora n. sp. ” “ Type Matsumura ” “0000051224 Syst. Ent. Hokkaido Univ. Japan [SEHU]” “ Xiphydria alnivora Matsumura, Type ” (HU) .</p><p>Other material examined. 129♀ 36³ from Japan (56♀ 12³ from Hokkaido, 70♀ 23³ from Honshu, 2♀ 1³ from Shikoku and 1♀ from unknown locality). See Appendix for collection data .</p><p>Distribution. Japan (Hokkaido, Honshu, Shikoku). Outside Japan, Gussakovskij (1935) included Ussurijskij kraj (Primorskij kraj) in the distribution of this species without giving collection data and Stroganova (1968) noted its occurrence in Sikhote-Alin. For the distribution of X. alnivora, Stroganova (1968) wrote “ Gussakovskij (1935) noted its presence in Primorskij kraj (Shkotovo)”, whereas Gussakovskij (1935) never mentioned this. I was not able to confirm these Russian records of X. ogasawarai by examining the specimens.</p><p>Host plants. Juglandaceae: Juglans mandshurica Maxim. var. sachalinensis (Komatsu) Kitam., Pterocarya rhoifolia Siebold et Zucc. Sapindaceae: Acer sieboldianum Miq., Acer palmatum Thunb., Aesculus turbinata Blume. These hosts have been confirmed chiefly by the examined specimens (see Appendix). A long series of specimens from Sapporo are labeled “Itaya”, a Japanese name for Acer pictum Thunb. or some species of maples closely related to it. Part of these specimens was referred to by Kono &amp; Sugihara (1939), who recorded Acer palmatum as a host plant of this woodwasp. Xiphydria ogasawarai apparently feeds on several species of Acer .</p><p>Remarks. This species can be recognized by the black malar space and legs (Figs 1A, B, 2A, B), small number of the antennomeres (13–16 [usually 14 or 15]) (Fig. 3A), and the creamy white lateral spots usually only on the terga 4–6 of the abdomen (Fig. 1A, B) in the female, and by the mostly black malar space and antennae (Fig. 1C) and the triangular, medially keeled tergum 9 of the abdomen (Fig. 3B) in the male.</p><p>Matsumura (1927) described Xiphydria alnivora on the basis of one female and one male from Sapporo, Hokkaido, without designating types. Watanabe (1956) designated the female with “a determination label in Matsumura’s own handwriting” (p. 6) as a lectotype and the male as an “ allolectotype ”. Although Watanabe (1956) did not mention it, the lectotype female does not agree with the original description in the number of antennomeres; the lectotype has 16 antennomeres, whereas the original description reads “Antenna 19 jointed” (p. 206). This discrepancy caused confusion, as the character was used in the key by Gussakovskij (1935) to separate X. alnivora from X. ogasawarai . According to Matsumura’s original description, X. alnivora has black legs and 19 antennomeres and occurs in Sapporo, Hokkaido. I have not found any specimens agreeing with these features in Matsumura’s collection or elsewhere. Xiphydria ogasawarai has black legs and occurs in Sapporo but has only 13–16 (usually 14 or 15) antennomeres, whereas X. nagasei has black legs and 16–20 (usually 17) antennomeres but it has been found only in central and western Honshu. Matsumura’s statement, “Antenna 19 jointed”, is most probably a lapsus. I would agree with Watanabe (1956) in treating the specimen having 16 antennomeres as the lectotype of X. alnivora and treat X. alnivora as a synonym of X. ogasawarai . The male “ allolectotype ” of X. alnivora actually belongs to X. palaeanarctica .</p><p>I have studied the female specimen from Mt. Kanmuri, Hiroshima Prefecture, Japan, which was recorded as X. ogasawarai by Takeuchi (1938, 1955), and found it to be X. nagasei .</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/5F5DF91E88018F0AFF34DF494CD37430	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Shinohara, Akihiko	Shinohara, Akihiko (2019): The Xiphydria palaeanarctica group from Japan (Hymenoptera, Xiphydriidae). Zootaxa 4608 (3): 531-542, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4608.3.7
5F5DF91E88008F0DFF34DE8F4A057454.text	5F5DF91E88008F0DFF34DE8F4A057454.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Xiphydria palaeanarctica : Watanabe 1956	<div><p>Xiphydria palaeanarctica Semenov-Tian-Shanskij, 1921</p><p>(Figs 1 D–G; 2C, D; 3C, D; 4B)</p><p>Xiphydria palaeanarctica Semenov-Tian-Shanskij, 1921: 81; Semenov Tian-Shanskij &amp; Gussakovskij, 1935: 121; Takeuchi, 1938: 181; Maa, 1949: 47; Watanabe, 1956: 8 (part); Verzhutskij, 1981: 54; Abe &amp; Togashi, 1989: 559; Taeger et al., 2010: 120; Smith et al., 2011: 69; Sundukov &amp; Lelej, 2012: 115 (part).</p><p>Xiphydria jezoensis Matsumura, 1927: 205; Matsumura, 1931: 80; Semenov Tian-Shanskij &amp; Gussakovskij, 1935: 121;? Conde, 1935: 70; Watanabe, 1956: 7 (lectotype designation).</p><p>Summary of taxonomic characters. Head capsule black, with large elongate spot on lateral vertex, spot on inner orbit lateral to torulus and large elongate spot on gena along genal carina creamy white; lateral part of clypeus often dark amber; thorax black. Female: Length without ovipositor 11.5–19.0 mm. Antenna (Fig. 3C) black, with flagellum creamy white; most of flagellomere 1 and most of terminal flagellomere blackish; flagellomeres 2 and 3 sometimes partly blackish; with (?15)16–20 (usually 17 or 18) antennomeres (n=24); pedicel 1.3–1.7 (usually 1.4 or 1.5) × length of flagellomere 2 (n=20). Legs reddish brown, usually with coxae, trochanters, trochantelli black and tarsi blackish. Abdomen black with creamy white lateral spots usually on terga 3–8, spot on tergum 3 sometimes missing. Sawsheath length about 0.9–1.2 × basal plate length (n=18). Male: Length 8.5–12.5 mm. Antenna blackish brown, with 16 antennomeres (n=1); basal half of flagellum creamy white dorsally. Legs black, with apices of femora, tibiae and tarsi brown. Abdomen black with small whitish lateral spots on terga 4–7, those on 4 or 7 often missing; tergum 9 apically roundly produced, dorsally rounded, without median longitudinal keel (Fig. 3D).</p><p>Primary types examined. ♀ (holotype of Xiphydria palaeanarctica Semenov-Tian-Shanskij, 1921), not directly examined, photographs only (Taeger 2019). ♀ (lectotype of Xiphydria jezoensis Matsumura, 1927, Figs 1D, 2C, D), “Sahoro, 6/15” “8” “Type Matsumura” “ X. jezoensis n. sp. det. Matsumura” “ Xiphydria jezoensis Mats., Type” “ Xiphydria palaeanarctica Semenov, ♀, Det. C. Watanabe, 1946” “0000051222 Syst. Ent. Hokkaido Univ. Japan [SEHU]” (HU).</p><p>Other material examined. 21♀ 3³ (1♀ from North Korea, 3♀ 1³ from South Korea and 17♀ 2³ from Japan [Hokkaido]). See Appendix for collection data .</p><p>Distribution. Russia (Primorskij kraj, Baikal region, Sakhalin), China (Jilin), North and South Korea, Japan (Hokkaido).</p><p>Host plant. Unknown. Matsumura’s (1927) material of this species from Sapporo, identified as X. jezoensis or X. alnivora, was collected on Alnus trees, which may be a host plant. Kojima et al. (1962), Okutani (1967) and others recorded several species of plants as hosts of X. palaeanarctica, but their concept of X. palaeanarctica actually referred to X. ogasawarai or a mixture of X. ogasawarai and X. palaeanarctica . There is no reliable host record of X. palaeanarctica based on the reared (emerged) adults or observations of the oviposition.</p><p>Remarks. This species can be recognized by the black malar space (Fig. 2D), large number of the antennomeres (16–20 [usually 17 or 18]) (Fig. 3C), mainly reddish brown legs (Fig. 1D, E), and the creamy white lateral spots usually on the terga 3–8 of the abdomen (Fig. 1D, E) in the female, and by the black malar space, partly creamy white antennae (Fig. 1F) and the apically roundly produced, dorsally rounded tergum 9 of the abdomen (Fig. 3D) in the male.</p><p>In Japan, X. palaeanarctica is very rare and has been found only in Hokkaido. Beside a series collected in Sapporo about a century ago (type series of X. jezoensis), I have examined only three specimens, one each collected in 1926, 1958 and 2016 (see Appendix). I was not able to examine the specimen recorded by Togashi (1991).</p><p>Conde’s (1935) female specimen from Primorskij kraj was identified as X. jezoensis and apparently fits X. palaeanarctica, although it has only 15 antennomeres. The 24 female antennae of X. palaeanarctica I have examined have 16 to 19 antennomeres. More material is needed for full understanding of the range of actual variation. I have examined a female specimen from Hakugan (=Baekam), North Korea, on which Takeuchi (1938) based his first record of X. palaeanarctica from Korean Peninsula. The species treated as X. palaeanarctica by Esaki et al. (1939) is a misidentification of X. eborata Konow, 1899 (Shinohara &amp; Kameda 2019). From the type material of X. alnivora, Watanabe (1956) designated a female specimen as a lectotype and a male specimen as an “ allolectotype ”. Actually the lectotype female belongs to X. ogasawarai while the “ allolectotype ” male belongs to X. palaeanarctica .</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/5F5DF91E88008F0DFF34DE8F4A057454	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Shinohara, Akihiko	Shinohara, Akihiko (2019): The Xiphydria palaeanarctica group from Japan (Hymenoptera, Xiphydriidae). Zootaxa 4608 (3): 531-542, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4608.3.7
5F5DF91E88078F0EFF34DEB34B2A7574.text	5F5DF91E88078F0EFF34DEB34B2A7574.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Xiphydria nagasei Shinohara 2019	<div><p>Xiphydria nagasei Shinohara, sp. nov.</p><p>(Figs 1H, I; 2E, F; 3E, F; 4C, D)</p><p>Xiphydria ogasawarai: Takeuchi, 1938: 181; Takeuchi, 1955: 116 (fig. 773 in pl. 53). Not Matsumura (1927).</p><p>Xiphydria alnivora: Nagase, 2007: 291 (part). Not Matsumura (1927).</p><p>Description. Female (holotype, Figs 1I, 2E, F, 3E). Length without ovipositor about 14.0 mm. Head capsule black, with large spot on lateral vertex and large mark covering lower inner orbit through malar space, gena along outer genal carina up to level of top of eye creamy white. Mandible black, medially with creamy white spot; palpi black, partly whitish. Antenna (Fig. 3E) black, with flagellum creamy white; most of flagellomere 1, dorsal and lateral surface of flagellomeres 2 and 3 and narrow tip of terminal flagellomere black; outer surface of flagellomeres 4–6 weakly darkened. Thorax black; tegula partly brownish. Legs black, with anterior tibia and base of tarsomere 1 pale brown. Wings slightly infuscated; veins and stigma blackish brown. Abdomen black, with lateral creamy white spots on terga 4–8, that on tergum 6 largest and those on terga 4 and 7 smallest.</p><p>Malar space broad (measured from ventral edge of head capsule to eye margin about 0.7 × length of distance between toruli), with shallow ventral pit; occipital carina (crassa) distinct, entire; genal carina (arrowed in Fig. 2F) developed nearly to vertex but their dorsal ends widely separated from each other; inner orbits slightly divergent below, interocular distance at level of toruli about 1.3 × eye height. Labial palpus with 3 palpomeres; maxillary palpus with 5 palpomeres. Both antennae with 17 antennomeres; scape (incl. radicula): pedicel: flagellomere 1: flagellomere 2 as 2.0:1.0:1.7:0.9. Hind tarsomere 1 about 0.8 × length of remaining tarsomeres combined; tarsal claws with large inner tooth. Sawsheath length about 0.9 × basal plate length.</p><p>Frons and interantennal area coarsely reticulate; lower inner orbit to lateral part of clypeus, malar space and gena shallowly finely striate; vertex and upper part of gena smooth, shiny, with few indistinct punctures. Pronotum with rough longitudinal or oblique rugae, anterior vertical margin broadly smooth; propleuron finely punctate and pilose. Mesoscutal median lobe coarsely reticulate on dorsal surface; lateral lobes reticulate with large elongate patch impunctate but dull and mat; mesoscutellum densely reticulate-punctate, large posterolateral parts rather smooth, with sparse rough punctures; mesepisternum rather shallowly, finely reticulate-punctate, with shiny interspaces, pilose all over; mesepimeron nearly impunctate and glabrous, coarsely and obliquely striate; metepisternum coarsely reticulate-punctate; metepimeron coarsely obliquely striate. Abdomen with tergum 1 coarsely finely punctate, each half with broad inner margin sparsely punctate with shiny interspaces; all other terga weakly shiny with very fine surface microsculpture.</p><p>Male (specimen from Futamata, Figs 1H, 3F). Length about 12.5 mm. Color pattern and structure similar to female holotype. Legs black, with tibiae and tarsi mostly pale brown; abdomen with creamy white lateral spots on terga 4–7. Both antennae with 18 antennomeres; tergum 9 apically roundly produced, dorsally rounded, without median longitudinal keel (Fig. 3F).</p><p>Variation. In both sexes: The large creamy white mark extending from inner orbit through malar space and gena up nearly to the lateral vertex is sometimes narrowly interrupted at the posterior part of the malar space. The lateral part of clypeus is often marked with dark amber or creamy white. Female: The length without ovipositor varies from 12.5 to 19.0 mm (partly estimated from damaged specimens without tip of abdomen). The antennal flagellomeres 4 and 5 are sometimes also partly black. There are 16–20 (usually 17) antennomeres (n=11), with the pedicel 1.1–1.3 (usually 1.2) × length of the flagellomere 2 (n=6). The abdomen has the creamy white lateral spots usually on the terga 3–8, the spot on the tergum 3 sometimes missing. The sawsheath length is about 0.9–1.0 × the basal plate length (n=4). Male: The length ranges from 10.0 to 14.0 mm. The antenna is black, with most of the flagellum (flagellomeres 3–5 to 12–14) largely creamy white, with 16–18 antennomeres (n=8). The abdomen sometimes has an additional obscure spot on the tergum 3 or 8.</p><p>Type material. Holotype (Figs 1I, 2E, F, 3E): ♀, <a href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=139.05&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=35.28" title="Search Plazi for locations around (long 139.05/lat 35.28)">Mt. Hinokiboramaru</a>, 1200–1500 m, N35.28 / E139.05, Tan- zawa Mts., Kanagawa Pref., Honshu, Japan, 16. VI. 2015, K. Watanabe (NSMT) . Paratypes: 5♀ 5³ from Japan [Honshu]. See Appendix for collection data .</p><p>Etymology. This new species is named in honor of Mr. Hirohiko Nagase, Kamakura, who has created a huge collection of all Hymenopteran groups and contributed to the clarification of Japanese fauna of these insects.</p><p>Distribution. Japan (Honshu).</p><p>Host plant. Unknown.</p><p>Remarks. This new species can be recognized by the creamy white malar space (Fig. 2F), large number of the antennomeres (16–20 [usually 17]) (Fig. 3E), mainly black legs (Fig. 1I), and the creamy white lateral spots usually on the terga 3–8 of the abdomen (Fig. 1I) in the female, and by the creamy white malar space, largely creamy white antennae (Fig. 1H) and the apically roundly produced, dorsally rounded tergum 9 of the abdomen (Fig. 3F) in the male.</p><p>In the keys to Xiphydria species of East Asia or Japan (Gussakovskij 1935; Takeuchi 1938; Togashi 1991), X. nagasei may run to X. alnivora . However, as discussed under X. ogasawarai, the characters given for X. alnivora in those keys are erroneous and X. ogasawarai and X. alnivora are synonymous. Xiphydria ogasawarai and X. nagasei are similar in having black legs but are distinguished by the characters given above. Xiphydria nagasei has been collected only on the mountains in central Honshu (Saitama and Kanagawa Prefectures) and western Honshu (Hiroshima Prefecture). This is now the only species of Xiphydria endemic to Honshu.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/5F5DF91E88078F0EFF34DEB34B2A7574	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Shinohara, Akihiko	Shinohara, Akihiko (2019): The Xiphydria palaeanarctica group from Japan (Hymenoptera, Xiphydriidae). Zootaxa 4608 (3): 531-542, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4608.3.7
5F5DF91E880A8F03FF34D8DA4D5B70B2.text	5F5DF91E880A8F03FF34D8DA4D5B70B2.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Xiphydria ogasawarai Matsumura 1927	<div><p>Xiphydria ogasawarai Matsumura, 1927</p><p>JAPAN: HOKKAIDO: 1♀, Sounkyo, 6. VIII. 1960, K. Kamijo (HU) ; 1³, Sounkyo, 18. VII. 1971, A. Shinohara (NSMT) ; 1♀, Sounkyo, 650 m, Daisetsuzan Mts., 12. VII. 1998, A. Shinohara (NSMT) ; 1♀, Nitto, Kamikawa-shi, 3. VII. 2003, H. Fukutomi (NSMT) ; 1♀, Mitsumata, Kamishihoro, 43.5205N/143.0992E, 2. VIII. 2013, R. Matsumoto (OMNH) ; 1♀, Yamada-onsen, Daisetsuzan Mts., Tokachi, 2. VIII. 2012, H. Hara (NSMT) ; 1♀, Takusei-cho, Obihiro, 24. VI. 2017, Y. Kato (NSMT) ; 1♀, Bibai, 22. VI. 1978, K. Kamijo (NSMT) ; 1³, Bibai, Koshunai, 12–22. VII. 2002, Malaise trap, H. Hara (NSMT, 74903) ; 1³, Minamishokan, Uryu-cho, 11. VII. 1997, Y. Nishijima (HU) ; 1³, Aoyama, Tohbetsu, 20. VII. 1987, Y. Nishijima (HU) ; 1♀, Sapporo, 12. VII. 1917, S. Matsumura (HU) ; 1♀, Sapporo, 20. VIII. 1927, K. Sato (NSMT) ; 1³, Sapporo, 16. VII. 1932, H. Yaku (HU) ; 1♀, Sapporo, 1. VIII. 1937, S. Asahina (NSMT) ; 8♀ 1³, Sapporo, “Itaya” [=? Acer mono], 12. VI. 1938, Y. Sugihara (HU, cited by Kono &amp; Sugihara 1939) ; 1♀, Sapporo, “Itaya”, 25. VI. 1938, Y. Sugihara (HU, cited by Kono &amp; Sugihara 1939) ; 1♀, Sapporo, “Itaya”, 29. VI. 1938, Y. Sugihara (HU) ; 2♀ 1³, Sapporo, “Itaya”, 3. VII. 1938, Y. Sugihara (HU) ; 1♀, Sapporo, “Itaya”, 4. VII. 1938, Y. Sugihara (HU) ; 1♀ 1³, Sapporo, “Itaya”, 5. VII. 1938, Y. Sugihara (NSMT) ; 3♀, Sapporo, “Itaya”, 6. VII. 1938, Y. Sugihara (HU) ; 1♀, Sapporo, “Itaya”, 9. VII. 1938, Y. Sugihara (HU) ; 4♀ 1³, Sapporo, “Itaya”, 10. VII. 1938, Y. Sugihara (HU) ; 1♀, Sapporo, “Itaya”, 15. VII. 1938, Y. Sugihara (HU) ; 1♀ 1³, Sapporo, “Itaya”, 20. VII. 1938, Y. Sugihara (HU) ; 2♀, Sapporo, “Itaya”, 21. VII. 1938, Y. Sugihara (HU) ; 3♀, Sapporo, “Itaya”, 24. VII. 1938, Y. Sugihara (HU) ; 1♀, Sapporo, “Itaya”, 25. VII. 1938, Y. Sugihara (HU) ; 1♀, Sapporo, “Itaya”, 27. VII. 1938, Y. Sugihara (NSMT) ; 3♀, Sapporo, “Itaya”, 28. VII. 1938, Y. Sugihara (HU) ; 1♀, Sapporo, “Itaya”, 29. VII. 1938, Y. Sugihara (HU) ; 1♀, Sapporo, “Itaya”, 30. VII. 1938, Y. Sugihara (HU) ; 1♀, Sapporo, “Itaya”, 30. VII. 1938, Y. Sugihara (NSMT) ; 1³, Sapporo, 2. VIII. 1938, Y. Sugihara (HU) ; 1♀, Sapporo, 8. IX. 1964, K. Kusigemati (HU) ; 1♀, Mt. Muine, 13. VII. 1974, A. Watanabe (KURA-JI) ; 1³, Raiden, Rankoshi, 11. VII. 1990, Y. Nishijima (HU) ; 1♀, Shimonke, Date-shi, 1. VIII. 1989, Y. Nishijima (HU) ; 1♀, Shimonke, Dateshi, 2. VIII. 1989, Y. Nishijima (HU) ; 1♀, Izumisawa, Chitose, 8. VII. 1993, Y. Nishijima (HU) ; 1♀, Ootakisyoen, 17. VII. 1990, Y. Nishijima (HU) ; 1♀, Onuma, 18. VII. 1954, T. Nakane (NSMT) ; 2♀, Iwabe, Fukushima-cho, Matsumae, 24. VII. 1995, Y. Nishijima (HU) . HONSHU: Iwate Pref.: 1♀, Kuzube-sawa, 25. VII. 1979, T. Kinoshita (NSMT) ; 7♀, Kawai-mura, Kuzubeza- wa, 2. VIII. 1980, K. Emoto (NSMT) . Akita Pref.: 1♀, Tamagawa, Akita Pref., 18. VI. 1951, T. Takeuchi (NSMT) . Yamagata Pref.: 3♀, Goshiki-onsen, Itaya, Yonezawa, 29. VII. 1966, S. Asahina (NSMT) ; 1♀, Takisawa, Azuma, Yamagata, 28. VI. 1970 (NSMT) . Fukushima Pref.: 2♀, Yunohana, 20. VI. 1971, T. Kondo (KURA-JI) ; 2♀, Yunohana, 29. VII. 1977, K. Mizuno (NSMT) ; 1♀, Hinoemata, 27–29. VII. 1975, K. Mizuno (NSMT) ; 6³, Hinoemata, Minami-Aizu, em. 23. VI. 1981, T. Kinoshita (NSMT, 74928–74933) ; 1³, Funamata-rindo, Hinoemata, Minami-Aizu, 10. VIII. 1991, em. 13. VIII. 1991, from branch of Juglans mandschurica, M. Yoshida (NSMT, 74817) ; 1³, Akane Forest Road, Haranomachi, 24. VI. 1984, S. Ohmomo (NSMT) . Tochigi pref.: 1♀, Kamishiobara, Nasushiobara-shi, 16. VII. 2013, E. Katayama (EK) ; 1³, Ohkawa-rindo (Malaise trap), Nasushiobara-shi, 11–25. VIII. 2010, T. Nakayama (EK) ; 1♀, Okukinu Spa, 30. VII. 1963, N. Fukuda (NSMT) ; 1♀, Dorobu, Kuriyama-mura, 10. VI. 1979, T. Saito (NSMT) ; 1♀, Tashiroyama-rindo, Kuriyama-mura, 6. VIII. 1983, K. Emoto (NSMT) . Gunma Pref.: 5♀, Mt. Hotaka, 14. VIII. 1978, M . Toyama (NSMT); 1♀, Mt. Hotaka, 15. VIII. 1978, M . Toyama (NSMT) . Chiba Pref.: 1³, Uchiurayama, Kamogawa, 1. V. 1983, T. Itoh (YS) . Tokyo Met.: 1♀, Hikawa, Musashi, 20. VI. 1937, K. Takeuchi (NSMT) . Kanagawa Pref.: 1♀, Osawa, Nanasawa, Atsugi-shi, 19. V. 1997, I. Aihara (NSMT) ; 1♀, Nanasawa, Atsugi, 21. V. 2016, S. Shimamoto (NSMT) ; 1♀, Mt. Hinatayama, Nanasawa, Atsugi-shi, 18. VI. 2001, I. Waki (NSMT) ; 1♀, Higashi-Tanzawa-rindo, Hinokiboramaru, 25. VI. 2005, H. Miyatani, “ Xiphydria alnivora Matsumura, det. Nagase ” “Tanzawa Oyama Sogo-chosa 2007” (KPMNH, cited by Nagase 2007) ; 1♀, Mt. Kintokiyama, Hakone, 6. VIII. 2010, R. Kaga (KPMNH) ; 1♀, Nakagawa, 540–730 m, N35.28 / E139.03, <a href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=139.03&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=35.28" title="Search Plazi for locations around (long 139.03/lat 35.28)">Yamakita</a>, 3. VII. 2013, R. Kaga (KPMNH) ; 1♀, Ten’nouji-one (FIT), alt. 1320–1340 m, Tanzawa Mts., 19–26. VI. 2014, T. Taniwaki &amp; Y. Kato (NSMT) ; 1♀, Mt. Komotsurushi-yama, 1310–1370 m (FIT) , 13–20. VI. 2014, T. Taniwaki &amp; Y. Kato (NSMT); 1♀, Mt. Ohmuro-san, 1540–1570 m (FIT) , 27. VI.–3. VII. 2014, T. Taniwaki &amp; M. Takeuchi (NSMT); 1♀, Sakaizawa Path, Kiyokawa Vill., 29. V. 1993, H. Miyatani (NSMT) . Niigata Pref.: 1♀, Kurokawa, Tainai, 16. VI. 1963, K. Baba (NSMT) ; 1♀, Ookura, Sado, 31. V. 1962, K. Baba (NSMT) . Yamanashi pref.: 1♀ 1³, Kanayama-daira, Hokuto-shi, em. 10. II. 2014, from dead wood of Pterocarya rhoifolia, M. Nonaka (HT, cited by Takahashi &amp; Sakurai 2015) ; 2♀, Mt. Daibosatsu, 27. VI. 1976, K. Mizuno (NSMT) ; 1♀ 1³, Hikawa-rindo, Daibosatsu Mts., 23. VII. 1983, K. Emoto (NSMT) ; 2♀, Mt. Daibosatsu, Hagiwara, Enzan, 1400–1700 m, 13. VIII. 2005, T. Kurihara (EU) ; 1♀, Hikawa-rindo, 1400 m, Daibosatsu, 21. VII. 2008, Y. Nakamura (NSMT) ; 2³, Hikawa-rindo, Daibosatsu, 19. VI. 1982, S. Tsuyuki (NSMT) ; 1♀, Koganezawa-rindo, 14. VIII. 1979, K. Emoto (NSMT) ; 1♀ 1³, Hishiyama, Katsunuma-cho, Koshu-shi, 2. V. 2015, Y. Kato (NSMT) ; 1♀, Gozaishi-kosen, Mt. Hoozan, 27. VIII. 1989, K. Hosoda (NSMT) ; 1♀, Nikengoya, S. Alps, 23–28. VII. 1971, K. Mizuno (NSMT) ; 1♀, Narada, Hayakawa Town, Minamikoma, 12. VIII. 1977, H., Y. &amp; Y. Suda (HS) ; 1♀, Lakeside of Shoji, 7. VII. 1959, S. Hisamatsu (EU) . Shizuoka Pref.: 1♀, Misakubo, Hamamatsu, 16. VII. 1954, K. Kojima (NSMT, cited by Kojima et al. 1962) ; 1♀, Keta, Hamamatsu, em. 7. VII. 1951, Juglans mandshurica var. sachalinensis (NSMT, cited by Kojima et al. 1962) ; 1♀, Keta, Hamamatsu, em. 22. VII. 1951, Juglans mandshurica var. sachalinensis (NSMT, cited by Kojima et al. 1962) ; 1³, Keta, Hamamatsu, em. 31. V. 1952, Juglans mandshurica var. sachalinensis (NSMT, cited by Kojima et al. 1962) ; 1♀, Fuji-rindo, Shizuoka, 21. VIII. 1982, S. Tsuyuki (NSMT) . Nagano Pref.: 1♀, Yokokawakyo, Tatsuno, 27. VII. 1985, K. Mizuno (NSMT) ; 1♀, Kurokawa, Kiso, 7. VII. 1984, T. Kinoshita (NSMT) . Aichi Pref.: 2♀ 2³, Inabu, Toyota, em. from wood of Acer sieboldianum, 2. VII. 2018, H. Kajimura (NSMT, DNA sample no. 779–782) . Shiga Pref.: 1♀, Mt. Hira, 9. VIII. 1939, K. Takeuchi (NSMT) . Kyoto Pref.: 1♀, Mt. Yorozan, Maizuru-shi, 6. VI. 1993, K. Mizuno (NSMT) ; 1♀, Kuta, 9. VII. 1972, K. Mizuno (NSMT) ; 1♀, Ashiu, on Aesculus turbinata, 27. VII. 1940, M. Tokunaga (NSMT) . Nara Pref.: 1³, Dorogawa, Tenkawa, 1. VIII. 1972, S. Ueda (NSMT) ; 1♀, Mt. Wasamata-yama, Kamikitayama-mura, 23. VIII. 1999, K. Mizuno (NSMT) . Hyogo Pref.: 1♀ 1³, Akazai, 25. VI. 1978, M . Toyama (NSMT, cited by Naito et al. 2004). Tottori pref.: 1♀, Mt. Daisen, 9. VI. 1974, A. Watanabe (KURA-JI) ; 1♀, Mt. Takabachi-yama, 20. VI. 1976, A. Watanabe (KURA-JI) ; 2³, Mt. Takabachi-yama, 4. VII. 1976, A. Watanabe (KURA-JI) ; 1³, Mt. Takabachi-yama, 4. VII. 1976, O. Yamaji (KURA-JI) . SHIKOKU: Ehime Pref.: 1♀, Koyayama, Odamiyama, 23. IX. 1997, E. Yamamoto (EU) ; 1³, Iuchi Pass, Touon city, 16. III. 2007, em. VI. 2007, Y. Sato (EU) . Kochi Pref.: 1♀, Hongawa, 11. VII. 1956, K. Kojima (NSMT) . LOCALITY UNKNOWN: 1♀, Ichinose, 24. VII. 1952 (NSMT) .</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/5F5DF91E880A8F03FF34D8DA4D5B70B2	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Shinohara, Akihiko	Shinohara, Akihiko (2019): The Xiphydria palaeanarctica group from Japan (Hymenoptera, Xiphydriidae). Zootaxa 4608 (3): 531-542, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4608.3.7
5F5DF91E88088F02FF34DF524A2C7483.text	5F5DF91E88088F02FF34DF524A2C7483.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Xiphydria nagasei Shinohara 2019	<div><p>Xiphydria nagasei n. sp.</p><p>Paratypes. JAPAN: HONSHU: Saitama Pref.: 1♀ 1³, Mt. Futagoyama, Higashidake, Ogano-machi, 15. V. 2018, Y. Tamadera (NSMT) . Kanagawa Pref.: 1³, Oyama, Sancho, 1251 m, Tanzawa Mts., Atsugi, 16. VI. 2000, I. Waki (NSMT) ; 1♀ 1³, Futamata, Shijuhasse-gawa, Hadano, 21. VI. 2005, M. Takakuwa, “ X. alnivora Matsumura, det. Nagase” “Tanzawa Oyama Sogo-chosa 2007” (KPMNH, cited by Nagase 2007, as 2³) ; 1♀, Dodaira–Taireinokashira, Tanzawa Mts., 17. VII. 2005, M. Takakuwa, “ X. alnivora Matsumura, det. Nagase” “Tanzawa Oyama Sogo-chosa 2007” (KPMNH, cited by Nagase 2007) ; 1♀, Dodaira–Nishimine–Tanzawa-yama, 5–6. VIII. 2006, M. Takakuwa, “ X. alnivora Matsumura, det. Nagase” “Tanzawa Oyama Sogo-chosa 2007” (KPMNH, cited by Nagase 2007) ; 1³, Ten’nouji-one (FIT), alt. 1320–1340 m, Tanzawa Mts., 13–19. VI. 2014, T. Taniwaki &amp; Y. Kato (NSMT) . Hiroshima Pref.: 1♀, Mt. Kanmuri, 18. VI. 1937, T. Nakanishi, “ Xiphydria ogasawarai Matsum., det. Takeuchi” (NSMT, cited by Takeuchi 1938, 1955) ; 1³, Mt. Garyu, 14. V. 1973, A. Watanabe (KURA-JI)</p><p>.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/5F5DF91E88088F02FF34DF524A2C7483	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Shinohara, Akihiko	Shinohara, Akihiko (2019): The Xiphydria palaeanarctica group from Japan (Hymenoptera, Xiphydriidae). Zootaxa 4608 (3): 531-542, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4608.3.7
5F5DF91E88088F02FF34DDA64E457553.text	5F5DF91E88088F02FF34DDA64E457553.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Xiphydria palaeanarctica	<div><p>Xiphydria palaeanarctica Semenov-Tian-Shanskij, 1921</p><p>NORTH KOREA: 1♀, Hakugan [=Baekam], 24. VII. 1935, K. Takeuchi (NSMT, cited by Takeuchi 1938) . SOUTH KOREA: Gangwon-do: 1♀, Mirugam (Pukdaesa), 1300 m, Odaesan Mts., 2. VI . 1991, A. Shinohara (NSMT, cited by Smith et al. 2011); 1♀, Mirugam (Pukdaesa), 1300 m, Odaesan Mts., 1. VI . 1998, A. Shinohara (NSMT, cited by Smith et al. 2011); 1♀, Mirugam (Pukdaesa), 1300 m, Odaesan Mts., 5. VI . 2009, A. Shinohara (NSMT, cited by Smith et al. 2011); 1³, Mirugam (Pukdaesa), 1300 m, Odaesan Mts., 16. VI . 2010, A. Shinohara (NSMT) . JAPAN: HOKKAIDO: 1♀, Teshio, 11. VII. 1926, S. Matsumura (HU); 1³, Meakan Spa, Akan, N. Park, 6. VII. 1958, M. Miyatake (EU); 1³ (“ Allolectotype ” of Xiphydria alnivora Matsumura, 1927), “Hannoki [alder], 6/12, Sahoro” “16” “ X. alnivora n. sp. ³ det. Matsumura ” “ Xiphydria alnivora Matsumura ³ Type ” “0000051225 Syst. Ent. Hokkaido Univ. Japan [SEHU]” (HU); 1♀, Sahoro, 6/12, “ X. buyssoni ” (HU) ; 1♀, Sahoro, 6/10 (HU) ; 6♀, Sahoro, 6/15 (HU) ; 1♀, Sapporo-shi, Chuo-ku, Mt. Maruyama, 1. VIII. 2016, K. Kuroda (NSMT) ; 7♀, Moiwa, 11. VI . 1904 (HU).</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/5F5DF91E88088F02FF34DDA64E457553	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Shinohara, Akihiko	Shinohara, Akihiko (2019): The Xiphydria palaeanarctica group from Japan (Hymenoptera, Xiphydriidae). Zootaxa 4608 (3): 531-542, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4608.3.7
