New species and new records of leaf-miner flies (Diptera, Agromyzidae) from rainforest and inselberg at Mitaraka (French Guiana)
Author
Marc, Stéphanie Boucher
Department of Natural Resource Sciences, McGill University, Macdonald Campus, Ste-Anne-de-Bellevue, Quebec, H 9 X 3 V 9 (Canada)
stephanie.boucher@mcgill.ca
Author
Pollet, Marc
Research Institute for Nature and Forest (INBO), Herman Teirlinckgebouw, Havenlaan 88 bus 73, B- 1000 Brussels (Belgium) and Operational Directory Taxonomy and Phylogeny, Entomology, Royal Belgian Institute for Natural Sciences (RBINS), Vautierstraat 29, B- 1000 Brussels (Belgium)
text
Zoosystema
2025
2025-01-14
47
2
13
42
https://sciencepress.mnhn.fr/sites/default/files/articles/pdf/zoosystema2025v47a2.pdf
journal article
10.5252/zoosystema2025v47a2
1638-9387
14670952
44C62D57-8949-492A-82C6-54EB2E52FB26
Genus
Nemorimyza
Frey, 1946
Nemorimyza
Frey, 1946: 42
.
TYPE
OF
GENUS
. —
Agromyza posticata
Meigen, 1830
.
REMARKS
Nemorimyza
, a small genus consisting of five species (excluding the new species described below and excluding
N. xizangensis
Chen & Wang, 2008
from
China
, which was transferred to
Phytobia
(
von Tschirnhaus 2023
)
, is predominantly found in the Neotropical region, although it is not exclusively limited to this area. The genus is characterized by a small, often silvery, or greyish dusted lunule; body almost completely black with halter at least partially black (except for male
N. posticata
(Meigen, 1830)
with abdomen conspicuously yellow posteriorly, halter white and fore knee narrowly yellow). Most species have 3+ 1 dc, except
N. posticata
with 3 +0 dc (sometimes with an additional smaller pair close to suture). Some species have a well-developed posterolateral seta on the fore tibia. The male genitalia are characterized by a subepandrial sclerite that is broadly fused with each other, with numerous microscopic spines centrally and a pair of strong spine-like processes, directed ventrally (
Zlobin 1996b
). However, these features are located within the epandrium and can be difficult to observe without damaging surrounding structures. One
Nemorimyza
species
,
N. maculosa
(Malloch, 1913)
, has previously been reported from
French Guiana
(
Anonymous 2018
;
Martinez & Étienne 2002
;
Ryckewaert 2003
). A total of
five specimens
were collected on the Mitaraka massif, representing at least two species (
Boucher & Pollet 2021
;
Boucher & Savage 2022
). One of them (identified as morphospecies
Nemorimyza
Mit-
2 in
Boucher & Pollet 2021
) is known from
two female
specimens only.
Nemorimyza
Mit-1 and
Nemorimyza
Mit-2 can only be differentiated by subtle external differences, but DNA barcoding of
two female
specimens supported the assignment to two different species (
Boucher & Savage 2022
). In
Boucher & Savage 2022
(Table 5),
Nemorimyza
Mit-2 and an extra specimen from
Guanacaste
,
Costa Rica
, gathered by D. Janzen and W.Hallwachs, were initially grouped together under the same BIN (Barcode Index Number) (BOLD:ADB9391). However, due to the discovery of a new sequence from
Costa Rica
(PLGCS231-20) that exhibited closer similarity to sequence JCCCY4402-16,
Nemorimyza
Mit-2 has now been relocated to a different BIN (BOLD:AEN9883), and the formal description will be delayed until a male becomes available (possibly from the BioAlfa project at
Guanacaste
,
Costa Rica
(
Janzen & Hallwachs 2019
).
Nemorimyza
Mit-1 is described below based on a single male specimen. The status of
two female
specimens identified as
Nemorimyza
Mit-1, in
Boucher & Pollet 2021
(including one barcoded specimen (
Boucher & Savage 2022
) is currently uncertain and may represent a third species. Additional studies will be necessary to confirm their status.