Dictionary Definition
aculeate adj : having or resembling a stinger or
barb; "aculeate insects such as bees and wasps" [syn: aculeated]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Adjective
Italian
Adjective
aculeate- Feminine plural form of aculeato
Extensive Definition
The name Aculeata is used to refer to a monophyletic lineage of
Hymenoptera.
The word "Aculeata" is a reference to the defining feature of the
group, which is the modification of the ovipositor into a stinger
(thus, the group could be called stinging wasps). In other words,
the structure that was originally used to lay eggs is modified
instead to deliver venom.
Not all members of the group can sting; in fact, a great many
cannot, either because the ovipositor is modified in a different
manner (such as for laying eggs in crevices), or because it is lost
altogether. This group includes the bees and ants and all of the eusocial Hymenopterans; it is,
in fact, commonly believed that the possession of a venomous sting
was one of the important features promoting the evolution of social
behavior, as it confers a level of anti-predator defense rarely
approached by other invertebrates.
Classification
The use of the name Aculeata has a long history at the rank of infraorder or division, and it is only with the advent of modern phylogenetics that the higher classifications of insects (and other organisms) have come to reject artificial (paraphyletic) grouping categories. While the Aculeata is a good natural group, containing all the descendants of a single common ancestor, the supposed "other infraorder" of the Apocrita - the "Parasitica" or "Terebrantia" - is not a natural group, just as the sawflies, the presumed sister taxon of the Hymenoptera, aren't.The Aculeata are therefore maintained as a
taxon, either at
infraorder or division rank or as an unranked clade. However, the "Parasitica"
must be considered a paraphyletic assemblage;
the taxon "Parasitica" is discarded and their interrelationships
are subject of further study. Provisionally, they all can be
treated as superfamilies incertae
sedis in the Apocrita, without being placed in an infraorder.
It is highly likely that at least some of these parasitic wasps -
for example the Stephanoidea -
are as closely related to the Aculeata as to other
"Parasitica".
On the other hand, among the parasitic wasps the
Ichneumonoidea
seem particularly closely related to the Aculeata. If taxonomic
ranks are used, it may therefore be best to treat the latter as a
division and divide the Apocrita into some 6 infraorders
representing lineages of about equal standing, one of which would
unite the Aculeata and the Ichneumonoidea.
Note that having the same taxonomic rank does not
imply equal evolutionary standing, whereas placement in the same
higher-ranked taxon ideally does, or at least implies that
regardless of what specific rank they have, the lower-ranked taxa
are all part of the same evolutionary
radiation. Therefore, would the Aculeata and the Ichneumonoidea
be placed in an infraorder, the former would still be considered a
division and the latter a superfamily. Despite having different
ranks, they would be members of the same taxon and sister
lineages.
External links
- Tree of Life Web Project: Aculeata
aculeate in Catalan: Aculeat
aculeate in German: Stechimmen
aculeate in French: Aculeata
aculeate in Italian: Aculeata
aculeate in Norwegian: Broddvepser
aculeate in Polish: Żądłówki
aculeate in Swedish:
Gaddsteklar