The New World species of Cerodontha (Xenophytomyza) Frey (Diptera: Agromyzidae)
Author
Boucher, Stéphanie
text
Zootaxa
2003
178
1
8
journal article
10.5281/zenodo.157066
bddce942-feff-4dfb-be09-c1e682bcc4e9
11755326
157066
Subgenus
Xenophytomyza
Frey
Cerodonta (Xenophytomyza
)
Frey, 1946
: 51
(
Type
species:
Haplomyza atronitens
Hendel, 1920
, orig. des.)
Diagnosis. Members of the subgenus
Xenophytomyza
can be distinguished from other subgenera of
Cerodontha
by their angulate first flagellomere, the presence of only one pair of scutellar bristles, mostly or entirely brownishblack body and by the distal tubules of the phallus which are fused or partly fused (
Figs. 2
, 6). The closely related subgenus
Cerodontha
s.s.
also has only one pair of scutellar bristles, the first flagellomere is angulate (or with a spine at the anterodorsal corner) and some species have the distal tubules of the phallus fused or partly fused, but they always have more extensive yellow on the body (
Boucher 2002
).
Distribution.
Xenophytomyza
is almost exclusively Holarctic. The Palearctic species have a borealmontane distribution. Most European species occur in the nemoral zone, broadleaved transitional forest between boreal forest and steppe. The eastern Palearctic species are more often associated with boreal forest, while the middle Asian species are exclusively found at high elevations (V.V. Zlobin, pers. comm.). In the Nearctic, however,
Xenophytomyza
species occur mainly in lowland areas, often in mesic grasslands and disturbed habitats, including forest paths, public parks and roadsides.
Host plants. As far as is known, all
Cerodontha
species are miners on Monocotyledoneae. Only three species of
Xenophytomyza
have known host plants, all in the family
Poaceae
(
Tschirnhaus 1991
,
Zlobin 1993
).
Remarks. All species in the subgenera
Xenophytomyza
and
Cerodontha
lack the basal scutellar bristles present in other
Agromyzidae
; the absence of these bristles is an apomorphy that supports a sister group relationship between these two subgenera. However, so far there are no wellsupported apomorphic characters defining each of these subgenera. The absence of the funnel (“Trichter”) at the tip of the phallus used by
Nowakowski (1973)
to characterize
Xenophytomyza
(in addition to the form of the first flagellomere and the dark colour) is not a valid character, since the structure is present in
C.
(
X.) biseta
(
Zlobin 1993
)
.
Dempewolf (2001)
found no apomorphies to separate exemplar species of
Cerodontha
s. str.
(
C. hennigi
Nowakowski
and
C. denticornis
(Panzer))
and
Xenophytomyza venturii
. Specieslevel relationships within this monophyletic group are not wellresolved and it is not yet known whether each of the two subgenera is monophyletic. A final decision on the status of these two subgenera will require a phylogenetic analysis of all included species. Published records of
Xenophytomyza
species with weak basal scutellars refer to a species now assigned to the subgenus
Poemyza
Hendel (
Zlobin 2001
).