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
Liriomyza trifolii
(Burgess)
(
Figs. 154–155
)
Material
examined.
CALIFORNIA
:
Imperial Co.
,
Algodones Dunes
, along Rte. 78,
7.iii.2017
, em.
19.iii.2017
,
C.S. Eiseman
, ex
Abronia villosa
, #CSE3250,
CNC940076
(
1♂
)
;
FLORIDA
:
Lake Co.
,
Alexander Springs
,
26.iii.2013
, em.
12–20.iv.2013
,
C.S. Eiseman
, ex
Hydrocotyle verticillata
, #CSE275,
CNC358471
(
1♂
)
;
NORTH
CAROLINA
:
Scotland
Co.,
Laurinburg,
St.
Andrews University,
2.vi.2015
, em.
20.vi.2015
,
T.S. Feldman
, ex
Trifolium repens
, #CSE1633,
CNC564626
(
1♂
)
.
Hosts.
Amaranthaceae
:
Amaranthus palmeri
S. Watson (
Chandler & Chandler 1988
)
,
Beta vulgaris
L.,
Chenopodium album
L. (
Smith
& Hardman 1986
),
Spinacia oleracea
L.;
Amaryllidaceae
:
Allium cepa
L.;
Apiaceae
:
Apium graveolens
L.
var.
dulce
(Mill.)
DC.,
Daucus carota
L.
var.
sativus
Hoffm.
,
Hydrocotyle umbellata
L. (
Genung 1981
),
H. verticillata
Thunb.
;
Asteraceae
: “
Aster
” L. (cultivated),
Baccharis
halimifolia
L.,
Bidens alba
(L.) DC. (
Zoebisch
et al
. 1984
),
B. pilosa
L.,
Callistephus chinensis
(L.) Nees,
Chrysanthemum
×morifolium
Ramat. (
Smith
& Hardman 1986
),
Conoclinium coelestinum
(L.) DC.,
Dahlia
Cav.
(cultivated),
Erechtites hieraciifolius
(L.) Raf. ex DC.,
Eupatorium capillifolium
(Lam.) Small (
Genung 1981
)
,
E. serotinum
Michx.
,
Flaveria trinervia
(Spreng.) C. Mohr
,
Gaillardia aristata
Pursh
,
Galinsoga quadriradiata
Cav.
,
Gamochaeta pensylvanica
(Willd.) Cabrera
(as “
Gnaphalium spathalium
Lam.
”),
Gerbera jamesonii
Bolus ex Hook.
f.,
Helianthus annuus
L.
,
Hymenopappus scabiosaeus
L'Hér.
,
Lactuca canadensis
L.,
L. sativa
L.,
Melanthera nivea
(L.) Small,
Mikania scandens
(L.) Willd. (
Genung 1981
),
Packera glabella
(Poir.) C. Jeffrey,
Parthenium
hysterophorus
L. (
Chandler & Chandler 1988
), “
Senecio
” L.,
Sonchus asper
(L.) Hill,
S. oleraceus
L.,
Symphyotrichum
cordifolium
(L.) G.L. Nesom (
Smith
& Hardman 1986
),
Synedrella nodiflora
(L.) Gaertn.,
Tagetes erecta
L.,
T. patula
L.,
Taraxacum officinale
F.H. Wigg.
(
Smith
& Hardman 1986
),
Tridax procumbens
L.,
Xanthium
L.,
Zinnia
L.;
Caryophyllaceae
:
Gypsophila
L.;
Cucurbitaceae
:
Cucumis melo
L.,
C. sativus
L.,
Cucurbita pepo
L.,
Melothria pendula
L. (
Genung 1981
);
Fabaceae
:
Crotalaria incana
L.,
Lathyrus japonicus
Willd.
(female;
Lonsdale 2017
),
Medicago lupulina
L.,
M. sativa
L.,
Phaseolus lunatus
L. (
Spencer 1969
),
P. vulgaris
L. (“string beans”),
Pisum sativum
L. (
Spencer & Steyskal 1986
),
Trifolium repens
L.,
Vicia sativa
L. (
Smith
& Hardman 1986
),
Vigna luteola
(Jacq.) Benth. (
Genung 1981
)
,
V. radiata
(L.) R. Wilczek,
V. unguiculata
(L.) Walp.;
Malvaceae
:
Abelmoschus esculentus
(L.) Moench, “
Hibiscus
” L.,
Malva moschata
L. (
Smith
& Hardman 1986
); *
Nyctaginaceae
:
Abronia villosa
S. Watson
;
Plantaginaceae
:
Plantago major
L. (
Smith
& Hardman 1986
);
Ranunculaceae
:
Ranunculus repens
L. (
Smith
& Hardman 1986
);
Solanaceae
:
Capsicum annuum
L. (
Chandler & Chandler 1988
),
Petunia
Juss.
,
Physalis angulata
L. (
Schuster
et al
. 1982
),
P. pubescens
L. (
Zoebisch
et al
. 1984
),
Solanum americanum
Mill. (
Zoebisch
et al
. 1984
)
,
S. dulcamara
L. (
Smith
& Hardman 1986
),
S. lycopersicum
L.,
S. melongena
L.,
S. nigrum
L.,
S. tuberosum
L.;
Verbenaceae
:
Verbena
L. (
Genung 1981
)
;
Zygophyllaceae
:
Tribulus terrestris
L.,
Kallstroemia maxima
(L.) Hook. & Arn. (
Spencer 1965
;
Stegmaier 1966a
). Numerous other hosts are recorded outside of
North
America (Lonsdale 2011). The records of
Smith
& Hardman (1986)
are from a no-choice greenhouse experiment in which adult flies were caged with each potential host plant; adults were reared from each species listed. In a free-choice experiment, oviposition and larval mines occurred on these and every other plant tested:
Asteraceae
:
Ambrosia artemisiifolia
L.,
Cosmos bipinnatus
Cav.
,
Leucanthemum vulgare
Lam.
;
Lamiaceae
:
Glechoma hederacea
L.;
Polygonaceae
:
Fallopia convolvulus
(L.)
A
. Löve,
Persicaria maculosa
S.F. Gray.
Glechoma hederacea
was the least mined species in this experiment and no mines were found on it in the no-choice experiment.
No
attempt was made to determine whether adults could be reared from the rest of the plants just named.
Spencer & Stegmaier (1973)
listed a single female specimen reared from
Avena sativa
L. (
Poaceae
) among the specimens of
Liriomyza trifolii
they examined. Although this is listed as “
Liriomyza
sp.” in their host plant summary,
Spencer & Steyskal (1986)
cite it as the sole record of
L. trifolii
from a grass. The following records are based on leaf mines only and have not been confirmed by rearing:
Asteraceae
:
Vernonia gigantea
(Walter) Trel. ssp.
gigantea
;
Turneraceae
:
Piriqueta cistoides
(L.)
Griseb. ssp.
caroliniana
(Walter) Arbo (
Spencer & Stegmaier 1973
)
.
Spencer & Steyskal (1986)
listed
Liriomyza trifolii
as feeding on
Capsella
bursa-pastoris
(L.) Medik. (
Brassicaceae
), but the origin of this record is unclear, and we have found no other
North
American records of this fly from
Brassicaceae
. Their record of
Solanum erianthum
D. Don (Solanaceae)
is traceable to the host plant list of
Spencer & Stegmaier (1973)
but does not seem to have been supported by any reared specimens. Their record of
Cestrum diurnum
L. (
Solanaceae
) as a host for
L. trifolii
apparently derives from
Stegmaier’s (1966b)
rearing of
L. sativae
from this host.
Leaf mine.
(
Figs. 154–155
) On
Hydrocotyle
(
Fig. 154
), a whitish, entirely linear, upper surface mine; initially very narrow, gradually widening; frass in black, alternating strips or closely spaced grains, or in one case forming a finely squiggly, more or less central line in the terminal portion. Exit slit in the upper epidermis. Seemingly indistinguishable from the mines of
L. sativae
on
Hydrocotyle
figured by
Stegmaier (1966b)
; generally longer than those of
L. sativae
according to
Spencer & Stegmaier (1973)
. Our single mine on
Trifolium
(
Fig. 155
) was largely greenish and the frass was dark green, rather irregularly deposited in closely spaced particles.
Puparium.
Yellowish; formed outside the mine.
Distribution.
Widespread in
North
,
Central
and
South
America; introduced in the Old World. Largely restricted to greenhouses in colder temperate regions (Lonsdale 2011).