Revision of the Hawaiian endemic leaf-mining moth genus Philodoria Walsingham (Lepidoptera: Gracillariidae): its conservation status, host plants and descriptions of thirteen new species
Author
Kobayashi, Shigeki
0000-0002-1336-4730
crossroad1994@hotmail.co.jp
Author
Johns, Chris A.
0000-0002-1749-3847
Author
Kawahara, Akito Y.
0000-0002-1749-3847
text
Zootaxa
2021
2021-03-17
4944
1
1
175
journal article
7393
10.11646/zootaxa.4944.1.1
8adfa0f6-06a7-44b5-a3be-351d0bdc7a62
1175-5326
4681813
380D2F75-D4F9-4974-97E2-25E0C62CB3B0
Philodoria hesperomanniella
Kobayashi, Johns & Kawahara
sp. n.
Figs. 18
,
47J
,
48J
,
49J
,
58L, M
,
63A, B
,
75B, C
,
89
.
Parectopa naenaeiella
Swezey, 1940: 462–463
.
Philodoria naenaeiella
(
Swezey, 1940
)
;
Zimmerman 1978a: 685–686
, figs. 449, 457, 458.
Philodoria
sp. 11;
Johns
et al
. 2018
: fig. 2.
Type
locality.
Waihee Valley
(Maui)
Etymology.
The specific epithet,
hesperomanniella
refers to the genus of the moth’s host plant,
Hesperomannia
.
Type material.
Holotype
♂,
Waihee Valley
,
Maui
,
12.viii.2014
(stored),
C.A. Johns
leg.,
30.vii.2014
, host:
Hesperomannia arborescens
, CJ
367, SK831♂ in
BPBM
.
Paratype
6 (
3♀
, 1 sex unknown).
1♀
, Pupukea, Oahu,
17.xii.1933
,
O.H. Swezey Collector
,
Hesperomannia swezeyi
, “
paratype
of
P. naenaeiella
”, Z-V-17-61,
BPBM 34224
(
Fig. 18E
);
Host
H. swezeyi
in
BPBM
;
2♀
, 1 (sex unknown), same locality and data as
holotype
,
C.A. Johns
leg., CJ367 / SK
832♀
, CJ372 / SK
620♀
.
The
holotype
was mounted as a dry pinned specimen (
Fig. 18B, C
) by placing under a coverslip without mountant, two forewings and half of the two hindwings (
Fig. 18A
).
The
three
paratypes
were also mounted as partial dry pinned specimens: CJ
367♀
comprises three wings without mountant under a coverslip, two complete forewings and 3/4 of one hindwing (
Fig. 18D
); CJ367 (sex unknown) hindwings missing; CJ
372♀
left hindwing missing
.
Additional material.
1♂,
1♀
,
Iao Valley
,
Maui
,
11.viii.2014
(stored),
C.A. Johns
leg.,
28.vii.2014
, CJ362/ PHIL0035♂, 0036
♀
, only genitalia slides, deposited in
BPBM
. Two specimens have genitalia and abdomen intact
.
Diagnosis.
Described from a
paratype
of
P. naenaeiella
Swezey
feeding on
Hesperomannia
and new specimens collected during fieldwork for the present study. Distinguished from
P. naenaeiella
by having an outwardly oblique white
ds
1
at near base and blue patch at apical potion in the forewing (
Figs.18
,
75B, C
); the male genitalia have a valva widening from the base to the middle and a short and triangular saccus.
Swezey (1940)
described some
paratypes
of
P. naenaeiella
reared from leaves of
Hesperomannia swezeyi
collected along Pupukea-Kahuku Trail,
April 5, 1925
, and
February 15, 1928
. We could not find these specimens among the material in the BPBM.
Description: Adult
(
Figs.18
,
75B, C
). Wingspan
7–8 mm
in
paratype
; forewing length
4.1–4.2 mm
in
holotype
,
3.2–4.1 mm
in
paratype
. Head pale ocherous, with some ocherous scales posteriorly; frons white; maxillary palpus white at basal part, mixed with dark brown scales at apex; labial palpus white, second segment broadly infuscated apically, third segment with slight infuscation near base and near apex. Antenna pale brown, basal segment paler and white beneath, about 1.3x length of forewing. Thorax pale brown. Forewing dark brown, with three outwardly oblique white dorsal streaks, all wide at dorsum and narrowing to a point about midway across the wing:
ds
1
at near base,
ds
2
about at dorsal 2/5,
ds
3
at dorsal 2/3; a slender outwardly oblique white
cs
3
from 3/5 terminating a little distad from apex of third dorsal streak, an interrupted blue patch from there to apex; all of the white streaks margined with a few black scales; three white costal spots (
a, b, c
) between
cs
3
and apex, separated by fuscous scales; cilia fuscous with distinct darker fuscous
bl
1
, with white spots at the costal white spots, dorsal cilia pale gray, very long. Hindwing and cilia uniformly grayish fuscous. Abdomen grayish brown. Legs grayish brown, tarsi white banded.
Male genitalia
(
Figs. 47J
,
48J
,
49J
) (n=2). Capsule
940 µm
. Tegumen 0.9 x length of valva; valva
660 µm
long, widened at basal half and tapering along costal margin from 2/5 to apex, becoming very narrow and slightly curved toward ventral side (
Fig. 47J
). Saccus short and triangular in ventral view (
Fig. 48J
). Phallus about
700 µm
long and straight with developed coecum; cornuti in vesica indistinct (
Fig. 49J
).
Female genitalia
(
Figs. 58L, M
,
63A
) (n=4). Similar to
P. naenaeiella
.
1230 µm
long. Ostium bursae large; antrum cup-shaped with a pair of lateral lobes; lamella antevaginalis
180 µm
, weakly sclerotized, indented near the posterior margin, widening toward anterior margin of A7. Ductus bursae short, and middle region weakly sclerotized, round and flat; terminus of ductus bursae tubular, biforked. Corpus bursae
720 µm
, nearly pyriform, signa a pair of longitudinal, partly sclerotized wrinkles.
Distribution.
Oahu and Maui.
Host plants.
Asteraceae
:
Hesperomannia arborescens
A.Gray
and
H. swezeyi
O.Deg.
H. arborescens
and
H. swezeyi
are two of Hawaii’s most critically endangered plants (
Morden & Harbin 2013
).
Biology.
(
Fig. 89
). Larvae at first form sinuous-linear mine along the leaf margin on the adaxial leaf surface (
Fig. 89A
), which expands as larvae grow (
Fig. 89C, E
). One or two mines per leaf. The late instar larva is pale yellow. The final instar larva folds the leaf tissue lined with silk threads and creates a cocoon on the adaxial leaf surface. The cocoon fold is white (
Fig. 89F
).
Remarks.
We collected leaf mines from populations of
H. arborescens
in the Iao and Waihee valley (West Maui). We were unable to visit the Honokohau valley population of
H. arborescens
. We also visited the Molokai population of
H. arborescens
below Olokui summit at the Waiehu Sea Cliffs in July of 2015. No leaf mine activity was observed then. Herbarium specimens from the now extirpated population of
H. arborescens
on Lana’i (
Morden & Harbin 2013
) revealed leaf-miner damage from an undescribed, extinct
Philodoria
species (
Johns
et al
. 2014
). We visited two populations of
H. swezeyi
in June/July of 2015. Neither population exhibited any signs of leaf mine damage. However, one collaborator (N. Tangalin) said she had seen leaf mines on these populations in previous years. Herbarium specimens of this plant species also show leaf miner activity. We have not surveyed
H. oahuensis
(Hillebr.) O.Deg
for leaf mine damage. This should be a priority of future surveys of
Philodoria
, since
H. oahuensis
is a highly endangered plant (
Morden & Harbin 2013
).