A new genus and species of gall midge (Diptera: Cecidomyiidae) associated with Waltheria indica L. (Sterculiaceae)
Author
Maia, Valéria Cid
Author
Fernandes, G. Wilson
text
Zootaxa
2005
1060
27
36
journal article
10.5281/zenodo.170167
4dd79072-82ae-4135-ac98-e5873f9bbde6
11755326
170167
Anisodiplosis
Maia
, gen. nov.
Adult.
Occipital process absent. Palpus 3segmented. Male flagellomeres binodal and tricircumfilar, second circumfilum of each flagellomere with shorter loops than on first and third; female flagellomeres cylindrical, necks bare; 12th flagellomere with apical narrowed elongation. Wing: R5 joining C beyond wing apex; Rs basally as strong as R1 but weak anteriorly, situated beyond midlength of R1; M3 fold present; first tarsomeres without spur; tarsal claws simple and bent beyond midlength; empodia shorter than bend in claws; male tergites 7 and 8 and female tergite 8 with irregular margins; ovipositor protrusible; female cerci separate.
Pupa.
Antennal bases rounded apically, not projecting anteriorly; face smooth, without projections; lower and lateral facial papillae present. Prothoracic spiracle setiform. Abdominal segments 2–8 each with single row of few dorsal spines.
Larva.
Spatula with 2 anterior teeth and reduced stalk; thoracic segments with 6 lateral papillae in 2 groups of 3 on each side; terminal segment with 3 pairs of longsetose papillae. Pupation in gall.
Type
species.
Anisodiplosis waltheriae
Maia
,
sp. nov.
Etymology.
Anisodiplosis
is a name composed of
aniso
(“different”, from Greek) +
diplosis
(a common suffix in Cecidomyiidi), referring to the unequal length of the circumfila.
Comments.
Anisodiplosis
is included among the Cecidomyiidi by the number and shape of flagellomeres (12, binodal in male and cylindrical in female) and the absence of parameres, but it does not fit in any known tribe.
Anisodiplosis
keys to
Contodiplosis
Gagné
1994
in couplet 86 of
Gagné (1994)
, if one ignores the host plant. Both genera have the palpus threesegmented, male flagellomeres with two nodes and three separate circumfila, R5 joining C beyond the wing apex, Rs partially as strong as R1 but weak anteriorly, M3 fold present, Rs stub beyond midlength of R1, first tarsomere without a spur, tarsal claws simple and bent beyond midlength, empodia shorter than bend in claws, ovipositor somewhat elongated, and female cerci separate.
Anisodiplosis
differs mainly in the shape of male tergites 7 and 8 and female tergite 8 (all with irregular margins), second circumfilum of each flagellomere reduced, and pupa without antennal horns. Moreover, the new genus does not have an occipital process (present in
Contodiplosis
) and is associated with
Sterculiaceae
, whereas the three known species of
Contodiplosis
are associated with
Styracaceae
.
This is the second record of a cecidomyiid gall on
Waltheria indica
. Möhn (1959) described a stem gall induced by
Asphondylia waltheriae
. Other
Cecidomyiidae
galls have been recorded on
Sterculiaceae
in the Neotropical Region, but on other plant genera (
Ayenia
,
Guazuma
,
Helicteres
,
Melochia
,
Sterculia
, and
Theobroma
), all induced by species of
Asphondylia
, except the galls on
Sterculia
and
Theobroma
.