Leaf-mining Nepticulidae (Lepidoptera) from record high altitudes: documenting an entire new fauna in the Andean páramo and puna
Author
Stonis, Jonas R.
Author
Diškus, Arūnas
Author
Remeikis, Andrius
Author
Gerulaitis, Virginijus
Author
Karsholt, Ole
text
Zootaxa
2016
4181
1
1
94
journal article
37923
10.11646/zootaxa.4181.1.1
7f55813e-d9fb-47d1-ae70-4207ea726e64
1175-5326
164243
639B9F0E-4E0C-4859-9A32-093511BEEFB8
Stigmella gynoxyphaga
Diškus & Stonis
,
sp. nov.
(
Figs 1
,
17
,
27
,
67–76
)
Type
material.
Holotype
: Ƌ,
ECUADOR
,
Chimborazo Province
,
25 km
NW
Riobamba
,
1°31'19"S
,
78°50'32"W
,
elevation
3990 m
, mining larvae
on
Gynoxys buxifolia
(Kunth) Cass.
11.xi.2007
, field card no. 4918,
A. Diškus
, genitalia slide no. AD662Ƌ (
ZMUC
)
. Paratypes: 2 Ƌ, 6♀, same label data as holotype, genitalia slides nos AD627Ƌ, AD628Ƌ, AD629♀, AD630♀, AD631♀, AD648♀, AD656♀, AD659♀ (all from mature pupae) (ZMUC).
FIGURES 55–60.
Stigmella lachemillae
Diškus & Stonis
,
sp. nov.
55, adult, male holotype; 56, same, male paratype; 57, same, female paratype; 58, male genitalia, phallus, holotype, genitalia slide no. AD637; 59, 60, same, capsule without phallus, holotype, genitalia slide no. AD637 (ZMUC).
FIGURES 61–66.
Bionomics and female genitalia of
Stigmella lachemillae
Diškus & Stonis
,
sp. nov.
61, habitat, grass páramo (predominantly along streams in sheltered damp ravines); 62, 63, host-plant
Lachemilla orbiculata
(Ruiz & Pav.) Rydb. (Rosaceae)
; 64, 65, leaf-mines; 66, female genitalia, slide no. AD664 (ZMUC).
FIGURES 67–71.
Male genitalia of
Stigmella gynoxyphaga
Diškus & Stonis
,
sp. nov.
, genitalia slide no. AD662 (ZMUC). 67, uncus, 68, apical part of valva; 69, capsule without phallus, ventral view; 70, same, dorsal view; 71, phallus.
FIGURES 72–76.
Bionomics and female genitalia of
Stigmella gynoxyphaga
Diškus & Stonis
,
sp. nov.
72–74, host-plant
Gynoxys buxifolia
(Kunth) Cass. (Asteraceae)
; 75, leaf-mine; 76, female genitalia, paratype, slide no. AD629 (ZMUC).
Diagnosis.
The combination of an apically wide valva, distally wide vinculum, and strongly thickened uncus with four papillae distinguishes
S. gynoxyphaga
sp. nov.
from all other
Stigmella
species possessing two apical processes of the valva and many large cornuti on the vesica; the host-plant
Gynoxys buxifolia
(Asteraceae)
also makes this species distinctive.
Male
. Forewing length about
2.5 mm
; wingspan about
5.6 mm
. Head: palpi pale grey to cream grey; frontal tuft beige; scape cream; antenna distinctly longer than half the length of forewing; flagellum with 43–44 segments, pale grey-brown. Thorax, tegula and forewing fuscous Hindwing grey. Legs brownish cream, darkened with dark grey on upper side. Abdomen dark grey.
Female
. Similar to male.
Male genitalia
(
Figs 67–71
). Capsule longer (450 µm) than wide (medially 270 µm, anteriorly 300 µm). Vinculum with short but very wide ventral plate and wide lateral lobes. Uncus strongly thickened, with four large distal papillae. Gnathos with two caudal processes and slender central plate. Valva 265–270 µm long, 90–95 µm wide, with two distinctive apical processes; inner lobe slightly bulged apically but concave medially; transtilla with very small triangular processes. Juxta membranous, indistinctive. Phallus (
Fig. 71
) 330–340 µm long, 115–135 µm wide; vesica with five large horn-like cornuti.
Female genitalia
(
Fig. 76
). Total length 995–1050 µm. Posterior apophyses significantly longer than anterior ones. Vestibulum narrow, without sclerites. Corpus bursae with a very long, heavily folded part and round, 285 µm long, 290 µm wide basal body with numerous comb-like pectinations; signa absent. Accessory sac very large; ductus spermathecae narrow, without distinctive convolutions but with sinuous chitinized part. Abdominal apex narrowed, distally almost pointed.
Bionomics.
(
Figs 72–75
). Larva mines in leaves. Host-plant:
Gynoxys buxifolia
(Kunth) Cass. (Asteraceae)
(
Figs 72–74
). Larva pale green; mines in November. Leaf-mine starts as a slender sinuous gallery partially filled with dark brown to black-brown frass; later it develops into a blotch (
Fig. 75
). Cocoon brown.
Distribution
(
Figs 17
,
27
). This species occurs high in the equatorial Andes (
Ecuador
:
Chimborazo Province
) at altitudes about
3990 m
(
Fig. 1
).
Etymology.
The species is derived from the name of the host-plant genus
Gynoxys
and Latin
phaga
(an eater).