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
Ophiomyia coniceps
(Malloch)
(
Fig. 86
)
Material
examined.
MASSACHUSETTS
:
Hampshire Co.
,
Granby
,
Mt. Norwottuck
,
27.iii.2012
, em
.
11.iv– 24.iv.2012
, C.S. Eiseman, ex
Antennaria plantaginifolia
(5♂ 3♀);
OKLAHOMA
:
Payne Co.
,
Mehan
,
36.014339° N
,
96.996744° W
,
10.xii.2015
, em
.
15.i.2016
, M.W. Palmer, ex
Antennaria plantaginifolia
, mines radiating from petiole, #CSE2214, CNC653970–653972 (2♂ 1♀);
12.xii.2015
, em. by
12.i.2016
, M.W. Palmer, ex
Antennaria plantaginifolia
, mines not radiating from petiole, #CSE2216, CNC653988 (1♂);
14.i.2016
, em. by
10–16.ii.2016
, M.W. Palmer, ex
Antennaria plantaginifolia
, #CSE2237, CNC654000–654002 (3♂);
27.ii.2017
, em.
18.iii– 15.vi.2017
, C.S. Eiseman, ex
Antennaria plantaginifolia
, puparia at/near base of leaf blade or in petiole, #CSE3229, CNC939913–939917 (3♂ 2♀).
Tentatively
identified material.
ALABAMA
:
Colbert Co.
,
Tuscumbia
,
Cane Creek
Canyon Nature Preserve
,
7.iv.2013
, em.
18.iv.2013
,
C.S. Eiseman
, ex
Antennaria plantaginifolia
, puparium in petiole, #CSE311,
CNC384809
(
1♀
)
.
Hosts.
Asteraceae
: *
Antennaria plantaginifolia
(L.) Richardson,
Sonchus asper
(L.) Hill. (
Malloch 1915
). We have seen probable leaf mines of this species on
A
. howellii
Greene
and
A
. neglecta
Greene.
Leaf mine.
(
Fig. 86
) On
Antennaria
, the mines typically consist of broad, branching tracks emanating from the petiole. Some
Oklahoma
specimens were reared from contorted linear mines, branching or not, that did not involve the petiole. Frass is in discrete grains and small, irregular lumps. The
type
specimen was reared from a larva “mining in
Sonchus asper
” in
Utah
.
Malloch (1915)
did not say more than this about the larval feeding habit, and no other reared specimens have been cited by subsequent authors.
Frost (1924)
incorrectly cited
Malloch (1915)
as stating that this species was reared from leaves;
Frick (1959)
stated that
O. coniceps
is a stem miner, and this was repeated by
Spencer (1969
,
1981
) and
Spencer & Steyskal (1986)
.
Puparium.
Whitish to dark brown; on
Antennaria
, formed within the petiole or leaf blade, with the anterior spiracles projecting through the upper epidermis.
Distribution.
USA
: CA, IN, LA, *MA, *OK, UT;
Canada
: BC, MB, ON, QC, SK. Beyond our tentatively identified female from AL, we have seen probable leaf mines of this species (including photographs submitted to www.BugGuide.net) in CT, IA, and WI.
Comments.
Spencer & Steyskal (1986)
included what appears to be the mine of this species in their list of unidentified leaf mines. Mines on
Antennaria plantaginifolia
containing larvae were found in
Arkansas
in mid- May: “The larva feeds primarily in the midrib forming offshoots into the leaf blade, pupating at the leaf mine. The species probably belongs to the
Phytomyza robustella
group, but unfortunately no adults were reared.” Their illustration shows branching tracks emanating from the petiole rather than the midrib.