Taxonomic notes on the Ectoedemia suberis and angulifasciella species groups in Japan (Lepidoptera: Nepticulidae)
Author
Yagi, Sadahisa
Author
Hirano, Nagao
Author
Hirowatari, Toshiya
text
Zootaxa
2019
2019-12-09
4706
2
201
230
journal article
24695
10.11646/zootaxa.4706.2.1
fa834b57-4293-45a8-8795-aca8bc7885f9
1175-5326
3567282
A398B735-215D-4C11-8486-A8F78ACC5BB7
5.
Ectoedemia occultella
(
Linnaeus, 1767
)
(
Figs. 40
,
48–50
,
56
,
62
)
For synonymy see
van Nieukerken
et al
. 2016
.
Type
locality:
Hammerby
(
Sweden
)
.
Material examined.
JAPAN
.
Hokkaido
:
3 ♂
,
1♀
, Hanazono, Kutchan-cho,
6.x.2017
, larvae
on
Betula ermanii
, ex. pupa
20.v.2018
,
S. Yagi
, genitalia slide no. SY578, DNA extraction no. SaY150.
Honshu
: [
Nagano Pref.
]
1 ♂
,
Tateshina-kogen
,
2.x.1969
, larva
on
Betula platyphylla
,
9.v.1970
,
H. Kuroko
(
OPU
)
.
Male. Forewing length
2.2–2.3 mm
, wingspan 5.0–
5.3 mm
(n = 4). Female. Forewing length
2.7 mm
, wingspan
6.2 mm
(n = 1).
Diagnosis.
This species and
E. minimella
(Zetterstedt,1839)
can be easily distinguished from others of the
angulifasciella
group by the absence of a cilia line and a long pseuduncus.
Ectoedemia occultella
is similar to
E. minimella
, and it can be distinguished by the frontal tuft in female (male with blackish tuft in
E. minimella
) and vesica without elongated cornuti.
In
East Asia
a morphologically very similar
Sorbus
-feeding
Ectoedemia
occurs sympatrically with
E. occultella
(
Hirano 2013
;
van Nieukerken
et al
. 2016
: Supplementary material 2). However,
E. occultella
can be separated from it by the fuscous forewing (fuscous forewing with stronger purple sheen in the
Sorbus
-feeding
Ectoedemia
), sharper pseuduncus (a little shorter and not so sharp in the
Sorbus
-feeding
Ectoedemia
), and slender sublateral process of transtilla in male genitalia (basally thick in the
Sorbus
-feeding
Ectoedemia
). These two species are very difficult to distinguish and their host plants occur sympatrically. Therefore, records that are not based on reared specimens need to be confirmed.
Barcode data.
A DNA barcode of one specimen (BOLD: ADX7742) was generated and deposited in the Gen- Bank with accession number
LC467971
. The barcode of this species is closest to that of
"
Ectoedemia StephanandraKorea
"
based on BLAST in GenBank, and the similarity between them is 95.29%.
Biology.
The Japanese population utilizes
Betula platyphylla
Sukaczev var.
japonica
(Miq.) H. Hara
and
B. ermanii
Cham. Similar
mines also were found on
B. maximowicziana
Regel
and
B. corylifolia
Regel et Maxim.
Eggs are deposited on the underside of the leaf. The leafmine starts as a blotch, filled with blackish frass, and later becomes a larger blotch and the blackish dense frass is glued to the upper surface at the center of the mine, forming a dark spot under which the larva can hide. Larvae are pale greenish cream; found in October, which indicates univoltinism.
Distribution
(
Fig. 62
). Northern Holarctic: from westernmost Europe to
Japan
and throughout northern North America (
Puplesis 1994
).
Remarks.
A similar shaped mine and larvae are found on
Stephanandra
spp. in
Korea
and
Japan
(
Doorenweerd
et al
. 2015
; Yagi unpubl.).