New state and host records for Agromyzidae (Diptera) in the United States, with the description of thirty new species
Author
Eiseman, Charles S.
Author
Lonsdale, Owen
text
Zootaxa
2018
2018-09-14
4479
1
1
156
journal article
29197
10.11646/zootaxa.4479.1.1
73cc6f7d-b3ec-40c5-adc7-52b9e0cbf236
1175-5326
1452913
93C84828-6EEF-4758-BEA1-97EEEF115245
Phytomyza tarnwoodensis
spec. nov.
(
Figs. 53, 56
,
209
,
366–371
)
Holotype
.
MASSACHUSETTS
:
Hampshire Co.
,
Pelham
, 88
Arnold Rd.
,
4.vii.2013
, em.
5–12.vii.2013
,
C.S. Eiseman
, ex
Diervilla lonicera
, #CSE654,
CNC392674
(
1♂
)
.
Paratypes
.
MASSACHUSETTS
:
same collection as
holotype
,
CNC
392673,
CNC
392675,
CNC
392676 (
3♀
).
Etymology.
Tarnwood is the name CSE’s parents gave to their property (at 88 Arnold Rd., Pelham, MA), where the
type
series was collected.
Host.
Caprifoliaceae
:
Diervilla lonicera
Mill.
Leaf mine.
(
Fig. 209
) An upper surface, yellowish-green, elongate, more or less digitate blotch mine based on the midrib, containing several larvae.
Puparium.
(
Fig. 56
) Brown; formed within the leaf, with the anterior end protruding from the lower epidermis; anterior spiracles on well separated, long, diverging stalks.
Distribution.
USA
: MA; we have seen similar mines in IA, ME, and NY.
Adult description.
Wing length
1.9mm
(
♂
), 1.9–2.0mm (
♀
). Eye height divided by gena height: 4.0–5.9. First flagellomere rounded. Notum lightly pruinose. Vein dm-cu absent.
Chaetotaxy
: Two ors, two ori (anterior ori thin, setula-like, 1/3–½ length). Four dorsocentral setae, decreasing in length anteriorly. Acrostichal setulae in five irregular rows.
Coloration
: (
Fig. 53
) Setae dark brown. Body dark brown with beige tint, covered with light brown pruinosity that is denser medial to intra-alar rows on scutum where it is slightly greenish with faint bluish tint; orbital plate beige to base of inner vertical seta (one female with only slightly pale tint); gena and postgena brown to beige excluding dark ventral line on gena; palpus and margin of vertex paler brown; scutum paler lateral to intra-alar row; fore femur with light yellow spot at apex that is ill-defined and as long as wide. Calypter margin yellow, hairs brown. Haltere yellow.
Genitalia
: (
Figs. 366–371
) Surstylus small, rounded, fused to epandrium, inner-distal margin setose. Hypandrium rounded, two small setae on inner lobe. Postgonite simple, one medial seta. Phallophorus flanked by one pair of dark narrow bands. Basiphallus divided into two sclerites with tapered, upturned apices that shallowly interlock near base; left sclerite with basal arm wrapping around shaft; right sclerite with shallow dorsal subbasal lobe, dorsally fused to phallophorus. Hypophallus with one pair of lateral sclerites that are subrectangular basally, pointed and somewhat ventrally angled distally, width 1/3 length at widest point; otherwise membranous with long anteromedial flagellum. Mesophallus indistinct, incorporated into distiphallus as shallow stem. Distiphallus flattened, dark, angled upwards; in ventral view, medially divided into one pair of long, narrow lobes with rounded ends, darker base and medial fossa; with dark medial “V” imposed on lobes.
Comments.
Phytomyza tarnwoodensis
is similar to other Caprifoliaceae-miners—especially
P. gregaria
Frick
and
P. symphoricarpi
Griffiths
to which it keys in
Griffiths (1974a)
, the best revision of these species—in being dark with a light brownish pruinosity, and having five rows of dorsocentral setulae, an unenlarged first flagellomere, a simple wedge-shaped hypophallus sclerite (
Fig. 371
) and a short, dorsally angled distiphallus that is flat in profile. It differs from these, however, in that the sclerite of the hypophallus is narrowly pointed on the distal half, the distiphallus is similarly split and lobate basally and distally (paler distally), and there is a dark “V” imposed medially (
Fig. 370
).
The only prior record of a leafminer using
Diervilla
(apart from
Frost’s (1924)
questionable report of
Phytomyza persicae
from
D. lonicera
) is the irregular greenish blotch mine
Spencer (1969)
reported on
D. lonicera
in
Quebec
, made by an unidentified agromyzid. It is conceivable that he was describing the same mine. We have also reared
Aulagromyza orbitalis
from this host.