Exploring species diversity and host plant associations of leaf-mining micromoths (Lepidoptera: Gracillariidae) in the Russian Far East using DNA barcoding
Author
Kirichenko, Natalia
Author
Triberti, Paolo
Author
Akulov, Evgeniy
Author
Ponomarenko, Margarita
Author
Gorokhova, Svetlana
Author
Sheiko, Viktor
Author
Ohshima, Issei
Author
Lopez-Vaamonde, Carlos
text
Zootaxa
2019
2019-08-07
4652
1
1
55
journal article
26071
10.11646/zootaxa.4652.1.1
6a9d1e6c-413c-4d86-a0ed-25794f202b06
1175-5326
3363475
6A7D6858-A43D-4FD5-8B76-FE3C1EB8DAB3
Callisto
sp.
(
Figs 11
B–C)
Material examined.
Russia
:
PK
,
Gornotaezhnoe
, MTS,
43.69N
,
132.15E
,
152 m
alt.,
Malus
sp.,
24.VII.2016
, 1 larva, NK548
,
MK
403677
, deposited in
INRA.
Leaf mine.
Blotch mine between two secondary veins in parenchyma, with a preceding short (not always visible) epidermal tunnel, with a central frass line, on the lower or upper side of the leaf (
Fig. 11B
). The blotch is flat but soon gets tentiform-like (similar to
Phyllonorycter
) due to silk deposited by the larva in the mine that dries and shrinks the mine causing 1–2 wrinkles on the epidermis covering mine. The larva vacates the mine through the hole in the lower epidermis, in the corner of the mine (
Fig. 11B
), and continues living in a shelter, under the leaf margin folded downwards, on the same or neighboring leaf (
Fig. 11C
). When about one third of a half parenchyma layer is eaten out in the shelter, the larva creates a new shelter (
Fig. 11C
).
Trophic specialization.
Monophagous on
Malus
sp. (
Rosaceae
).
Distribution.
Russia
: RFE—PK.
Remarks.
BIN of unknown species—BOLD: ADF4428.
Callisto
sp. does not match any known
Callisto
species in BOLD or NCBI. Overall, in the Palearctic, three
Callisto
species are known on
Rosaceae
:
C. albicinctella
Kuznetzov
(RFE; host:
Prunus
),
C. denticulella
(Thunberg)
(Europe;
Rosaceae
, including
Malus
), and
C. insperatella
(Nickerl)
(Europe, RFE; host:
Rosaceae
, including
Prunus
) (
De Prins & De Prins 2018
).
C. denticulella
(DNA barcodes from
Canada
and
France
) is the closest relative to our
Callisto
sp., with minimum interspecific divergence 2.2% (
Table 2
). The distance from
C. insperatella
sampled for the fist time in RFE reaches 3.7% and from
C. insperatella
collected in Poland—4.3% (
Table 2
). There are no DNA barcode sequences of
C. albicinctella
in the genetic databases.
C. albicinctella
is known to develop on
Prunus
(
Kuznetzov 1979b
)
; no record of this species from
Malus
is known. If the latter species remains trophically linked only to
Prunus
, our
Callisto
sp. may represent a new species.