American Asteraceae-feeding Astrotischeria species with a highly modified, three-lobed valva in the male genitalia (Lepidoptera, Tischeriidae)
Author
Jonas R. Stonis
Author
Arūnas Diškus
Author
Fernando Carvalho Filho
Author
Owen T. Lewis
text
Zootaxa
2018
2018-09-03
4469
1
1
69
journal article
29181
10.11646/zootaxa.4469.1.1
9a69324f-0dfb-463a-a399-070b030037af
1175-5326
1454525
42680994-585D-4230-B574-8DB398341B23
Astrotischeria trilobata
Diškus & Stonis
,
sp. nov.
(
Figs. 9, 10
,
20–69
,
233
,
245–248
)
Type material
.
Holotype
: ♂,
BOLIVIA
,
Nor Yungas Province
,
Coroico
,
16°11'54"S
,
67°43'13"W
, elevation
1650 m
, mining larva
on
Austroeupatorium inulaefolium
(Kunth) R. M. King & H. Rob. (Asteraceae)
,
26.iv.2014
, ex pupa
v.2014
, field card no. 5166,
A. Diškus
, genitalia slide no.
AD752
♂ (ZMUC)
. Paratypes: 4 ♂, 10 ♀, same label data as holotype, genitalia slide nos AD749 ♂, AD751 ♂, AD912♀, AD914♀, head and forewing venation slide no. AD913♀ (ZMUC); 7♂, 7♀, 16°12'24"S, 67°43'54"W,
1680 m
, on
Austroeupatorium
,
07–16.vi.2018
, card no. 5237, A.Diškus, J.R. Stonis, 5 ♂, ECUADOR, Loja Province, Vilcabamba, 4°16'06"S, 79°10'40"W, elevation
1990 m
,
22.i.2017
, field card no. 5225, A. Diškus, genitalia slide nos AD910♂ (from mature pupa, adult not preserved), AD915♂ (ZMUC).
FIGURES 20–27.
DETAILS OF ADULT MORPHOLOGy OF
Astrotischeria trilobata
DIŠKUS & STONIS
,
sp. nov.
, FEMALE, PARATyPE, SLIDE NO. AD913 (ZMUC). 20–22, DESCALED HEAD; 23, 24, HAUSTELLUM; 25, FRAGMENT OF ANTENNA; 26, 27, FOREWING VENATION.
FIGURES 28–33.
ADULT OF
Astrotischeria trilobata
DIŠKUS & STONIS
,
sp. nov.
, COROICO, BOLIVIA (ZMUC).
FIGURES 34–37.
ADULT OF
Astrotischeria trilobata
DIŠKUS & STONIS
,
sp. nov.
34–36, SPECIMENS FROM VILCAbAMbA, ECUADOR; 37, A SPECIMEN FROM COROICO, BOLIVIA, TO COMPARE WITH THE SPECIMENS FROM THE TyPE LOCALITy IN BOLIVIA (ZMUC).
FIGURES 38–42.
MALE GENITALIA OF
Astrotischeria trilobata
DIŠKUS & STONIS
,
sp. nov.
, COROICO, BOLIVIA (ZMUC). 38, 39, CAPSULE WITH PHALLUS, HOLOTyPE, GENITALIA SLIDE AD752; 40, PHALLUS, PARATyPE, GENITALIA SLIDE AD751; 41, SAME, LObES OF ANELLUS; 42, MEDIAN LObES OF UNCUS, HOLOTyPE, GENITALIA SLIDE NO. AD752.
FIGURES 43–45.
MALE GENITALIA OF
Astrotischeria trilobata
DIŠKUS & STONIS
,
sp. nov.
, COROICO, BOLIVIA (ZMUC). 43, CAPSULE WITH PHALLUS REMOVED, PARATyPE, GENITALIA SLIDE AD751; 44, CAPSULE, LATERAL VIEW, PARATyPE, GENITALIA SLIDE NO. AD749; 45, SAME, FOCUSED ON VALVA.
FIGURES 46–50.
MALE GENITALIA OF
Astrotischeria trilobata
DIŠKUS & STONIS
,
sp. nov.
, VILCAbAMbA, ECUADOR (ZMUC). 46, 47, CAPSULE WITH PHALLUS REMOVED, PARATyPE, GENITALIA SLIDE AD915; 48, DORSAL LObES OF VALVA, PARATyPE, GENITALIA SLIDE NO. AD910; 49, SAME, PHALLUS; 50, SAME, GENITALIA SLIDE NO. AD915.
FIGURES 51–53.
FEMALE GENITALIA OF
Astrotischeria trilobata
DIŠKUS & STONIS
,
sp. nov.
, COROICO, BOLIVIA, GENITALIA SLIDE NO. AD912, PARATyPE (ZMUC). 51, 52, OVIPOSITOR LObES, APOPHySES AND PRELA; 53, GENERAL VIEW.
FIGURES 54–62.
BIONOMICS OF
Astrotischeria trilobata
DIŠKUS & STONIS
,
sp. nov.
54–56, HOST PLANT
Austroeupatorium inulaefolium
(KUNTH) R. M. KING & H. ROb.
,
ASTERACEAE
; 57–62, LEAF MINES, COROICO, BOLIVIA.
FIGURES 63–69.
LEAF MINES OF
Astrotischeria trilobata
DIŠKUS & STONIS
,
sp. nov.
, VILCAbAMbA, ECUADOR.
Diagnosis.
The combination of two very wide, apically pointed dorsal lobes of valva and the rather slender but pointed apical lobes of phallus in the male genitalia distinguishes
A. trilobata
sp. nov.
from all other
Astrotischeria
, including other members of the
A. trilobata
group. The fact that it feeds on
Austroeupatorium
also makes this species distinctive.
Male
(
Figs. 28, 32
,
34–36
). Forewing length: 2.8–3.5 mm; wingspan: 6.3–7.3 mm. Head: face and palpi pale ochre; frontal tuft comprised of ochre cream and some grey-ochre lamellar scales; antenna with about 42 segments, distinctly longer than half the length of forewing; flagellum metallic grey, annulated with grey-black to black; sensillae very long and fine, cream. Thorax and tegula ochre, speckled with grey-black scales, particularly densely anteriorly. Forewing of the Bolivian specimens (
Figs. 28–33
,
37
) densely speckled with black scales (with metallic grey bases) only laterally; a characteristic, very wide but sinuous longitudinal zone left non-speckled, orangeochre; forewing of the Ecuadorian specimens (
Figs. 34–36
) darker: sometimes black scales irrorate almost whole forewing with no (
Fig. 36
) or very little dark ochre longitudinal zone left (
Figs. 34, 35
); fringe black-grey on costal margin and tornus, distinctly greyish ochre on termen; fringe-line distinct, formed by black scales; forewing underside brown-black to grey-black, without spots or androconia. Hindwing very slender, black-grey to black on both upper and underside, without androconia; fringe blackish grey. Legs densely speckled with grey scales with little purple iridescence, distally ochreous cream on upper side. Abdomen dark metallic grey to black-grey with some blue and purple iridescence on upper side and laterally, ochreous cream on underside; anal tufts rather indistinct, grey on upper side; genital plates ochreous cream.
Female
(
Figs. 20–27
,
29–31, 33
,
37
). Similar to male but forewing pattern usually brighter; sometimes thorax without dark scales, purely ochre. Otherwise as male.
Male genitalia
(
Figs. 9, 10
,
38–50
). Capsule 505–560 µm long, 240–280 µm wide. Uncus (
Figs. 42
,
44–47
) consisting of two long lateral lobes and two short, rounded median lobes (
Figs. 42
). Valva divided (
Figs. 9, 10
,
39
,
45–47
): ventral lobe slender, 50–85 µm wide, 305–340 µm long (excluding basal process); dorsal lobes consisting of two lobes: an inwardly curved, distally pointed, 160 µm long lobe (
Figs. 11, 12
,
38
,
43, 45–47
) and longer, slightly dentate (
Figs. 44
,
48
), distally pointed lobe (
Figs. 9, 10
,
38
,
45
,
48
); transtilla absent; basal process of valva long (
Figs. 38
,
43
,
47
). Anellus thickened, with 3–4 setae laterally (
Figs. 38
,
47
), and two rounded apical lobes (
Figs. 41
,
43
). Phallus 400–435 µm long, distally deeply bifurcated, without spines (
Figs. 40
,
49, 50
).
Female genitalia
(
Figs. 51–53
). Total length
1135–1200
mm
. Ovipositor small, clothed with short, stout and darker, modified setae (‘peg setae’) (
Figs. 51, 53
); area between ovipositor lobes triangularly shaped (
Fig. 51
), with tiny papillae and some setae. Second pair of lobes, lateral and anterior to the ovipositor lobes, significantly smaller, bearing very long slender setae. Anterior and posterior apophyses very long and stout, particularly the posterior ones (
Figs. 51, 53
); remaining three apophysis pairs (
Figs. 51, 52
) formed as slender rod-like and wide lobe-like projections (prela,
Fig. 53
). Tips of one pair of rod-like prela articulating with anterior apophyses in a groove in half of their length (
Fig. 51
). Vestibulum without antrum, however vestibulum may look thickened laterally because of prela (
Fig. 52
). Ductus bursae widened posteriorly, with pectinations (numerous indistict, blunt spines). Corpus bursae round (
Fig. 53
), without spines or signum. Ductus spermathaecae very narrow, with about 4.5 coils (
Fig. 53
), utriculus very small, oval-shaped (
Fig. 53
).
Bionomics
(
Figs. 54–69
). Host plant:
Austroeupatorium inulaefolium
(Kunth) R. M. King & H. Rob.
,
Asteraceae
, a plant species native to South America, from
Panama
to
Argentina
and possessing some antimicrobial activity against intracellular and extracellular organisms (Bua
et al
. 2017). Mining larvae recorded from January (in southern
Ecuador
) and April, June (in
Bolivia
). Blotch mine (at early stage triangular, afterwards irregular,
Figs. 57–69
) either without frass or usually with little black or brown-black loose or compact granules of frass irregularly deposited predominantly in the narrow corner of the mine (
Figs. 58, 60, 61
,
69
); the initial, slender part of leaf mine sometimes looks pale green because the unconsumed upper tissue of plant (
Figs. 57–61
,
69
); old leaf mine usually looks pale brown or whitish brown. Silk-lined nidus inside of the mine usually rather indistinct. Larva pale yellowish green, with dark green intestine and blackish brown head (
Figs. 62–65
). Mining larva better visible from underside of the leaf than upper side; sometimes larva can hardly be seen, particularly in early stages of development because the larva can hide itself in the narrow part of the leaf. Pupation inside of leaf mine, in a silklined nidus, without cocoon; pupa brown. Exit slit on usually on upper side, only sometimes on underside of the leaf. Adults known from February and May, July.
Distribution
(
Fig. 233
). Known from the south Ecuadorian (
Figs. 245–247
) and Bolivian (
Fig. 248
) Andes at the elevation of about
1600–2000 m
.
FIGURES 70–78.
Astrotischeria amazonica
DIŠKUS & STONIS
,
sp. nov.
, HOLOTyPE, ECUADOR (ZMUC). 70, MALE ADULT; 71, 72, MALE GENITALIA, PHALLUS, GENITALIA SLIDE NO. AD929; 73–75, CAPSULE WITH PHALLUS REMOVED; 76, SAME, LATERAL VIEW OF ANELLUS; 77; SAME, VENTRAL LObES OF VALVA; 78, SAME, APICAL PART OF PHALLUS.
FIGURES 79–82.
Astrotischeria amazonica
DIŠKUS & STONIS
,
sp. nov.
, HOLOTyPE, GENITALIA SLIDE NO. AD929, LATERAL VIEW (ZMUC).
Etymology.
The species name is derived from Latin
tris
(three) and
lobatus
(lobed) in reference to the threelobed valva in the male genitalia.