Documenting new and little known leaf-mining Nepticulidae from middle and southwestern areas of the Asian continent
Author
Stonis, Jonas R.
Institute of Ecology, Nature Research Centre, Akademijos St. 2, Vilnius 08412, Lithuania.
Author
Remeikis, Andrius
Institute of Ecology, Nature Research Centre, Akademijos St. 2, Vilnius 08412, Lithuania. & remeikis. andrew @ gmail. com; https: // orcid. org / 0000 - 0002 - 9310 - 1112
Author
Diškus, Arūnas
Institute of Ecology, Nature Research Centre, Akademijos St. 2, Vilnius 08412, Lithuania. & diskus. biotaxonomy @ gmail. com; https: // orcid. org / 0000 - 0003 - 0106 - 5546
Author
Navickaitė, Asta
Institute of Ecology, Nature Research Centre, Akademijos St. 2, Vilnius 08412, Lithuania. & anavickaite @ gmail. com, https: // orcid. org / 0000 - 0003 - 3689 - 0503
text
Zootaxa
2020
2020-11-20
4881
3
401
452
journal article
9536
10.11646/zootaxa.4881.3.1
8236cdde-2a32-4af1-bb69-404fec3f27c3
1175-5326
4283789
7AAE442F-779B-40C6-ABD9-04BCB3B4777B
Stigmella ziziphifolia
Rocienė & Stonis
,
sp. nov.
(
Figs 7, 8
,
33, 34
,
94–102
)
urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act:
5D6AD8F5-D9A8-45DF-9972-028312298598
Type material
.
3 ♂
(
holotype
&
paratypes
):
India
,
Uttarakhand
,
Dehradun Distr.
,
Dhanaulti
,
30°25’17”N
,
78°15’05’’E
,
16.viii.2010
,
A. Šimkevičiūtė
, genitalia slide nos AD130 (
holotype
), AG131, AG132 (
ZIN
)
.
Diagnosis.
Stigmella ziziphifolia
sp. nov.
belongs to the
Stigmella lapponica
group. Externally, and in the male genitalia, this new species is the most similar and obviously related to
S. maloidica
(see above). However,
S. ziziphi-folia
sp. nov.
differs from
S maloidica
in the long, slender lateral lobes of the vinculum (
Fig. 100
), unsplit, usually slender, caudal process of the gnathos (
Figs 94, 96
), and the presence of some large, spine-like cornuti in the male genitalia (
Figs 99, 102
). This species also differs from
S. maloidica
and all other species of the group in its biology: larvae of
S. ziziphifolia
feed on
Ziziphus
Mill.
,
Rhamnaceae
(
S. maloidica
feeds on
Cotoneaster
Medik.
and
Malus
Mill.
,
Rosaceae
), produce slender leaf mines with an uninterrupted frass line (
S. maloidica
produces gradually widening, often contorted leaf mines with an interrupted frass line). Additionally,
S. ziziphifolia
occurs in the humid subtropical habitats of the Himalaya, and
S. maloidica
occurs in temperate, semi-arid areas in Central Asia.
Male
(
Figs 33, 34
). Known from three adults in pupal skin. Forewing length about
1.5–1.7 mm
; wingspan
3.3–3.7 mm
(n = 3).
Head.
Palpi golden cream; frontal tuft ochreous orange; collar and scape golden cream; flagellum grey.
Thorax.
Tegula, thorax and forewing covered with grey-black scales with some purple iridescence; fascia of forewing cream, median, sometimes interrupted in the middle; fringe dark grey; forewing underside black. Hindwing and fringe dark grey with some green and purple iridescence. Legs glossy golden cream with dark grey scales on upper side.
Abdomen.
Colour of scaling unknown. Genitalia (
Figs 94–102
) with capsule
275 µm
long,
150 µm
wide. Vin-culum with long and slender lateral lobes (
Fig. 100
). Uncus with two small triangular lobes (
Figs 94, 96
). Gnathos with one long, distinctly slender, apically pointed caudal process (
Figs 94, 96
); occasionally caudal process can be split. Valva (
Figs 98, 101
) about
155 µm
long, with a slender and curved apical process; inner lobe of valva heavily papillated. Transtilla (
Fig. 95
) with short, triangular corners, without sublateral processes. Phallus (
Figs 99, 102
) about
185 µm
long; vesica with numerous tiny cornuti and some large, spine-like cornuti (
Fig. 99
).
Female
. Unknown.
Bionomics
(
Figs 7, 8
). Host plant is
Zizyphus
Mill.
,
Rhamnaceae
(
Fig. 7
). Larvae mine in leaves in August. Leaf mine is a long, slender gallery with an interrupted central line of black frass. Cocoon ochre-beige,
2.5–2.8 mm
long,
1.5 mm
wide. Adults fly in late August and possibly over a much longer period.
Distribution
. Known only from a single locality in the western Himalaya (
Uttarakhand
: Dhanaulti), at the elevation of ca.
2200 m
(
Fig. 1
:
wHi
)
Etymology
. The species name is derived from Latin name of the host plant
Ziziphus
in combination with Latin
folium
(a leaf), in reference to the feeding habit of the new species. Acording to E. J. van Nieukerken (pers. comm.), “there are many names ending in -foliae, but linguistically it is wrong. The Latin
folium
is neuter and has no
form ending
in
ae
”. Therefore we chose
ziziphifolia
, a noun in apposition.