Fungus gnats (Diptera: Sciaroidea) associated with dead wood and wood growing fungi: new rearing data from Finland and Russian Karelia and general analysis of known larval microhabitats in Europe

In this contribution new rearing records of fungus gnats from poorly studied larval microhabitats are presented. From 61 species of wood growing Basidiomycete fungi, 6 species of Ascomycete fungi and slime moulds most of which had not previously been the subject of rearing studies, and from dead woo...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Published in:Entomologica Fennica
Main Author: Jakovlev, Jevgeni
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: This journal is published jointly by the Entomological Society of Finland, the Lepidopterological Society of Finland, the Societas Entomologica Helsingforsiensis and the Entomological Club of the Zoological and Botanical Society of Turku. 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journal.fi/entomolfennica/article/view/4693
https://doi.org/10.33338/ef.4693
id fttsvojs:oai:journal.fi:article/4693
record_format openpolar
spelling fttsvojs:oai:journal.fi:article/4693 2023-05-15T17:00:07+02:00 Fungus gnats (Diptera: Sciaroidea) associated with dead wood and wood growing fungi: new rearing data from Finland and Russian Karelia and general analysis of known larval microhabitats in Europe Jakovlev, Jevgeni 2011-12-20 application/pdf https://journal.fi/entomolfennica/article/view/4693 https://doi.org/10.33338/ef.4693 eng eng This journal is published jointly by the Entomological Society of Finland, the Lepidopterological Society of Finland, the Societas Entomologica Helsingforsiensis and the Entomological Club of the Zoological and Botanical Society of Turku. https://journal.fi/entomolfennica/article/view/4693/4407 https://journal.fi/entomolfennica/article/view/4693 doi:10.33338/ef.4693 Copyright (c) 2014 Entomologica Fennica Entomologica Fennica; Vol 22 No 3 (2011); 157–189 Entomologica Fennica; Vol 22 Nro 3 (2011); 157–189 2489-4966 0785-8760 info:eu-repo/semantics/article info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion Peer-reviewed article 2011 fttsvojs https://doi.org/10.33338/ef.4693 2020-05-29T21:24:32Z In this contribution new rearing records of fungus gnats from poorly studied larval microhabitats are presented. From 61 species of wood growing Basidiomycete fungi, 6 species of Ascomycete fungi and slime moulds most of which had not previously been the subject of rearing studies, and from dead wood samples with fungalmyceliamade over a period of 1994–2009 in Finland and Russian Karelia, 110 species of fungus gnats were obtained, 98 of them from identified fungi. Of these for 12 species fungal hosts were formerly unknown and for 30 species larval microhabitats have been discovered for the first time. Numbers of fungus gnat species with known larval microhabitats (a total of 498 species that comprises 45.4% of the European fauna) and numbers of known fungal hosts (some 650 species of macrofungi) are calculated and categorized based on this study and previous records from Europe and East Palaearctic. Article in Journal/Newspaper karelia* Federation of Finnish Learned Societies: Scientific Journals Online Entomologica Fennica 22 3
institution Open Polar
collection Federation of Finnish Learned Societies: Scientific Journals Online
op_collection_id fttsvojs
language English
description In this contribution new rearing records of fungus gnats from poorly studied larval microhabitats are presented. From 61 species of wood growing Basidiomycete fungi, 6 species of Ascomycete fungi and slime moulds most of which had not previously been the subject of rearing studies, and from dead wood samples with fungalmyceliamade over a period of 1994–2009 in Finland and Russian Karelia, 110 species of fungus gnats were obtained, 98 of them from identified fungi. Of these for 12 species fungal hosts were formerly unknown and for 30 species larval microhabitats have been discovered for the first time. Numbers of fungus gnat species with known larval microhabitats (a total of 498 species that comprises 45.4% of the European fauna) and numbers of known fungal hosts (some 650 species of macrofungi) are calculated and categorized based on this study and previous records from Europe and East Palaearctic.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Jakovlev, Jevgeni
spellingShingle Jakovlev, Jevgeni
Fungus gnats (Diptera: Sciaroidea) associated with dead wood and wood growing fungi: new rearing data from Finland and Russian Karelia and general analysis of known larval microhabitats in Europe
author_facet Jakovlev, Jevgeni
author_sort Jakovlev, Jevgeni
title Fungus gnats (Diptera: Sciaroidea) associated with dead wood and wood growing fungi: new rearing data from Finland and Russian Karelia and general analysis of known larval microhabitats in Europe
title_short Fungus gnats (Diptera: Sciaroidea) associated with dead wood and wood growing fungi: new rearing data from Finland and Russian Karelia and general analysis of known larval microhabitats in Europe
title_full Fungus gnats (Diptera: Sciaroidea) associated with dead wood and wood growing fungi: new rearing data from Finland and Russian Karelia and general analysis of known larval microhabitats in Europe
title_fullStr Fungus gnats (Diptera: Sciaroidea) associated with dead wood and wood growing fungi: new rearing data from Finland and Russian Karelia and general analysis of known larval microhabitats in Europe
title_full_unstemmed Fungus gnats (Diptera: Sciaroidea) associated with dead wood and wood growing fungi: new rearing data from Finland and Russian Karelia and general analysis of known larval microhabitats in Europe
title_sort fungus gnats (diptera: sciaroidea) associated with dead wood and wood growing fungi: new rearing data from finland and russian karelia and general analysis of known larval microhabitats in europe
publisher This journal is published jointly by the Entomological Society of Finland, the Lepidopterological Society of Finland, the Societas Entomologica Helsingforsiensis and the Entomological Club of the Zoological and Botanical Society of Turku.
publishDate 2011
url https://journal.fi/entomolfennica/article/view/4693
https://doi.org/10.33338/ef.4693
genre karelia*
genre_facet karelia*
op_source Entomologica Fennica; Vol 22 No 3 (2011); 157–189
Entomologica Fennica; Vol 22 Nro 3 (2011); 157–189
2489-4966
0785-8760
op_relation https://journal.fi/entomolfennica/article/view/4693/4407
https://journal.fi/entomolfennica/article/view/4693
doi:10.33338/ef.4693
op_rights Copyright (c) 2014 Entomologica Fennica
op_doi https://doi.org/10.33338/ef.4693
container_title Entomologica Fennica
container_volume 22
container_issue 3
_version_ 1766052752936402944