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 syngenesiae
(Hardy)
(
Fig. 208
)
Material
examined.
MASSACHUSETTS
:
Nantucket Co.
,
Nantucket
, 2
Milk St.
,
10.vi.2016
, em
.
22–29.vi.2016
, C.S. Eiseman, ex
Tanacetum parthenium
, #CSE2612, CNC634774–634776 (3♂);
same location,
11.vi.2016
, em
.
23.vi.2016
, C.S. Eiseman, ex
Leucanthemum vulgare
, #CSE2619, CNC635235, CNC635236 (2♀);
Liberty St.
(41.283729, -70.103993),
31.vii.2017
, em
.
2–4.viii.2017
, C.S. Eiseman, ex
Sonchus asper
, #CSE4055, CNC939655–939659 (2♂ 3♀).
Hosts.
Apiaceae
:
Daucus carota
L. (
Smulyan 1914
);
Asteraceae
:
Ambrosia artemisiifolia
L. (
Frick 1959
),
A. psilostachya
DC. (
Goeden and Ricker 1976
),
Antennaria plantaginifolia
(L.) Richardson (
Frick 1959
),
Argyranthemum frutescens
(L.) Sch. Bip. (
Frick 1959
),
Artemisia vulgaris
L. (
Frick 1959
),
Bidens frondosa
L. (
Frick 1959
)
,
Carduus pycnocephalus
L. (
Frick 1959
),
Chrysanthemum
L. (cultivated variety),
C. ×morifolium
Ramat. (
Frick 1959
),
Crepis
L.,
Cynara scolymus
L.,
Dahlia
Cav.
,
Delairea odorata
Lem. (
Frick 1959
)
,
Dendranthema indicum
(L.) Des Moulins (
Frick 1959
), “eupatoriums” (
Falconer 1887
),
Gazania
Gaertn. (
Falconer 1887
)
,
Helianthus annuus
L. (
Smulyan 1914
)
,
H. californicus
DC.,
H. ×multiflorus
L. (
Falconer 1887
),
Lactuca
L.,
Leucanthemum vulgare
Lam.
(
Frick 1959; present study
),
Matricaria
L. (cultivated variety),
Packera indecora
(Greene) Á. Löve & D. Löve (
Griffiths 1974c
)
,
Parthenium argentatum
A. Gray (
Frick 1959
),
Pericallis hybrida
B. Nord.,
Petasites
Mill. (
Frick 1959
)
,
Picris echioides
L.,
Senecio jacobaea
L. (
Frick 1972
),
S. vulgaris
L. (
Griffiths 1974c
),
Silybum marianum
(L.) Gaertn.,
Smallanthus uvedalius
(L.) Mack. ex Small (
Spencer & Steyskal 1986
),
Solidago nemoralis
Aiton (
Smulyan 1914
)
,
Sonchus asper
(L.) Hill,
S. oleraceus
L.,
Tanacetum parthenium
(L.) Sch. Bip. (
Falconer 1887; present study
),
T. vulgare
L. (
Lintner 1888
),
Taraxacum officinale
F.H. Wigg. (
Frick 1959
)
,
Zinnia violacea
Cav.
;
Fabaceae
:
Melilotus indicus
(L.) All. (
Frick 1959
),
Pisum sativum
L.;
Lamiaceae
:
Mentha
L. (
Frick 1959
),
Stachys bullata
Benth. (
Frick 1959
)
,
Malvaceae
:
Malva nicaeensis
All. (
Frick 1959
)
.
Except where indicated,
Griffiths (1967)
verified the above records by examination of genitalia of reared males.
Griffiths (1977)
stated that
Sehgal’s (1971)
record from
Crepis gracilis
(D.C. Eat.) Rydb.
(=
C. atribarba
A. Heller
) probably involved a misidentified plant because the only species of
Crepis
confirmed from the Edmonton,
Alberta
area are
C. runcinata
(James) Torr. & A. Gray
and
C. tectorum
L. The
records of
Frick (1959)
all appear to represent reared specimens examined by him.
Griffiths (1967)
considered Frick’s list generally to be attributable to
Phytomyza syngenesiae
, but he noted that the series Frick reared from
Pseudognaphalium leucocephalum
(A. Gray) Anderb. (Asteraceae)
in
California
“does not represent a species of the
syngenesiae
group, but a species related to the European
Phytomyza ciliata
Hendel
and
P. farfarae
Hendel.
”
Spencer (1981)
made no reference to these flies, and the species apparently remains undescribed.
Griffiths (1972b)
also cautioned that the record of
Petasites
requires confirmation due to possible confusion with other species found on this host.
Griffiths (1967)
further stated that “confirmation from the dissection of males bred from [the non-Asteraceae] hosts seems desirable before they can be finally accepted.” He did verify a
California
specimen reared from
Pisum sativum
as well as one reared from
Daucus carota
in
Denmark
. The records of
Falconer (1887)
,
Lintner (1888)
, and
Smulyan (1914)
are from greenhouses in
New York
and
Massachusetts
. The origin of the
Smallanthus uvedalius
record is unclear, as
Spencer & Steyskal (1986)
do not mention having examined any specimens of
P. syngenesiae
, and the only distribution records they cite are those listed by
Frick (1959)
, none of which are within the known range of this plant.
Leaf mine.
(
Fig. 208
) White, entirely linear, with frass mostly in discrete black grains along the margins; largely on the upper surface, but with the final stretch on the lower surface.
Puparium.
White to yellow; formed within the mine, its anterior spiracles projecting ventrally through the lower (or sometimes the upper) epidermis.
Distribution.
USA
: CA, MA, OR (
Frick 1959
), RI, WA;
Canada
: AB, BC (
Frick 1959
);
Colombia
? (
Spencer 1984
); Europe;
Sri Lanka
(
Wijesekara 2002
);
Japan
;
Kenya
(
Černý & Tschirnhaus 2014
);
Australia
;
New
Zealand
. The preceding North American records were all verified by
Griffiths (1967)
except where indicated. See further notes on distribution below.
Comments.
This species is apparently native to Europe and introduced elsewhere with horticultural plants. The earliest North American records, as summarized by
Smulyan (1914)
, are all from greenhouses in the northern
USA
: NY (1886, Glen Cove), PA (1887, Germantown), MA (1889, Boston area), CT (1890, Danbury), NH (1907), MT (1912, Helena), WI (1912, Milwaukee), and IL (1912, Chicago). The RI specimens cited by
Griffiths (1967)
were reared in
1910 and 1916
.
Studying an infestation near Boston, MA,
Smulyan (1914)
found no evidence of the flies spreading to outdoor plants beyond the immediate vicinity of the greenhouse. The only recent (post 1916) evidence of
Phytomyza syngenesiae
we have found in the northeastern
USA
are our own observations on Nantucket Island, MA. Mines are reliably found on
Tanacetum
and
Leucanthemum
in a garden next to the Maria Mitchell Natural Science Museum, which is a sheltered area in a heavily human-altered environment but there is no greenhouse nearby. We have surveyed the island extensively for leafminers, and the only other apparent mines of
P. syngenesiae
we have found are a few on
Arctium
L. and
Sonchus asper
, likewise near roads and human structures, along with a single example on
Erechtites hieraciifolius
(L.) Raf. ex DC., collected
4 August 2012
at Almanac Pond, a natural area far from any human structures. Mines on all three hosts contained puparia, but adults were only reared from
Sonchus
.
Phytomyza syngenesiae
does appear to be established along the Pacific
Coast
. We have found mines on
Sonchus oleraceus
on a beach in
Washington
, and mines have been photographed on this host in an urban alley in San Francisco (
Pearson 2011
) and on a weedy plant resembling
Sonchus
on a beach in Los Angeles (
Mallory 2011
).