A new genus of oak gallwasps, Kinseyella Pujade-Villar & Melika, with a description of a new species from Mexico (Hymenoptera: Cynipidae: Cynipini)
Author
J. Pujade-Villar
Author
S. Romero-Rangel
Author
Chagoyán-García
Author
A. Equihua-Martínez
Author
E. G. Estrada-Venegas
Author
G. Melika
text
Zootaxa
2010
2335
16
28
journal article
37424
10.5281/zenodo.205279
1d2db8b2-1ad0-4659-b49a-537cb9ed984e
1175-5326
205279
Kinseyella quercusobtusata
Pujade-Villar & Melika
,
new species
Figs 1–5
Type
material.
HOLOTYPE
female:
MEXICO
, San Luis Anahuac (
2545 m
., Municipio de Villa del Carbón, Estado de
México
), code C2F24S1 Chagoyan leg.; ex.
Q. obtusata
(
11.May.2005
)
24.September
.2005:
1 female
;
Kinseyella quercusobtusata
P-V & M det., asexual gen.;
Holotype
Kinseyella quercusobtusata
” (red label). Three female
PARATYPES
: one female: San Luis Anahuac (
2545 m
., Municipio de Villa del Carbón, Estado de
México
,
México
), code C2F1S1 Chagoyan leg., ex.
Q. obtusata
, (
11.May.2005
)
18.August
.2005; one female: Tepotzotlán (
2250 m
., Estado de
México
), code C1C1F1 Chagoyan leg., ex.
Q. obtusata
, (09.Setember.2007) 18.Setember.2007:
1 female
; one female: Arcos del Sitio (
2352 m
., Municipio de Tepotzotlán, Estado de
México
), code C4F1S4 Chagoyan leg., ex
Q. obtusata
, (09.Setember.2007) 18. Setember.2007. The
holotype
female and
1 female
paratype
(code C2F1S1) are deposited in the collection of UB, one female
paratype
(code C1C1F1) in the collection of PDL, and one female
paratype
(code C4F1S4) in the collection of CP.
Etymology
. The species is named after the host plant,
Q. obtusata
, which on it induces galls.
Diagnosis
.
Kinseyella quercusobtusata
is most closely related to
Kinseyella lapiei
(Kieffer)
,
comb nova
, known also from
Mexico
. In the uniformly amber
K. lapiei
genae behind eye 1.3 times as broad as the cross diameter of eye (measuring along the transfacial line); the clypeus impressed around its limits, elevated in the middle; the propodeum with very superficial but complete lateral propodeal carinae, however, the sculpture of the central propodeal area nearly the same as laterally; the projecting part of the ventral spine of the hypopygium is short, not longer than broad; the metasomal tergites are alutaceous-reticulate dorsally and laterally. In
K. quercusobtusata
the body is brown-testaceous and the mesoscutum with longitudinal dark stripes; the gena behind the eye as broad as the cross diameter of the eye; the clypeus uniformly impressed, flat, not elevated in the middle; the propodeum with indistinct, incomplete lateral propodeal carinae, the sculpture of the central propodeal area the same as laterally; the prominent part of the ventral spine of the hypopygium is nearly 2.0 times as long as broad; the metasomal tergites smooth dorsally, alutaceous laterally.
Description.
ASEXUAL FEMALE (
holotype
). Head and mesosoma uniformly; metasoma redtestaceous, dorsally lighter; all legs uniformly brown.
Head uniformly coriaceous, covered with short dense white setae, narrower than mesosoma, 1.5 times as broad as high, 2.3 times as broad as long from above, trapezoid in front view; gena strongly broadened behind eye, as broad as cross diameter of eye (measuring along transfacial line); malar space without sulcus, 0.4 times as long as eye height, with very delicate short striae, radiating from clypeus and nearly reaching eye margin; POL:OOL:LOL=7:3:3, diameter of lateral ocellus slighly less than length of LOL; lower face and frons without or with very delicate striae. Clypeus impressed, flat, rounded, delicately coriaceous, rounded and broadly emarginated ventrally, medially not incised, anterior tentorial pits small, indistinct; epistomal sulcus and clypeo-pleurostomal line distinct, broad, impressed. Antenna with 12 flagellomeres; F1 slightly longer than F2, F2 broader distally; subsequent flagellomeres progressively shorter, F12 longer than F11. Antennal formula: 5: 4(x2.5): 9(x1.5): 8(
x2
): 6: 5.5: 5: 4: 3: 3: 3: 3: 3: 4. All flagellomeres with placodeal sensilla.
Mesosoma longer than high, slightly concave laterally. Pronotum coriaceous laterally, with few weak striae posteriorly, anterolateral rim of pronotum strongly carinated, with deep invagination along the side.
Mesoscutum slightly broader than long; microreticulate, rugose-reticulate anterolaterally, between notauli and anterior parallel lines. Notauli incomplete and superficial, extending the most to 2/3 length of mesoscutum, median mesoscutal line in a form of very short triangle, if longer than very superficial; parapsidal lines indistinct, anterior parallel lines differentiated by more delicate sculpture. Mesoscutellum rounded, as long as broad, uniformly dull rugose; with transverse depression anteriorly, with longitudinally carinated, shiny bottom. Mesopleuron coriaceus, with dense white setae. Propodeum weakly and uniformly rugulose, with dense setae; lateral propodeal carinae indistinct, incomplete or absent, central propodeal area of the same sculpture as lateral areas. Metascutellum subrectangular, coriaceous. Ventral bar of metanotal trough shiny, smooth, slightly higher than metanotal trough, which delicately coriaceous, shiny, with setae and some parallel longitudinal carina. Tarsal claws with distinct lobe. Forewing 1.15 times longer than body, weakly brown-infuscated, with uniform dense setae and cilia on margins; radial cell opened, around 3.0 times as long as broad; veins dark brown, areolet triangular, closed.
FIGURE 1.
Kinseyella quercusobtusata
,
new species
: a, head, front view; b, head, dorsal view; c, clypeus, dorsal view; d, head, posterior view; e, antenna.
FIGURE 2.
Kinseyella quercusobtusata
,
new species
: a, forewing; b, mesosoma, lateral view.
Metasoma as long as head+mesosoma, as high as long; all metasomal tergites with dense white setae laterally, smooth dorsally, alutaceous laterally. Ventral spine of hypopygium short, nearly 2.0 times as long as broad, with parallel sides along entire length, without narrowing to a point at apex, with tuft of long subapical setae, reaching far beyond apex. Body length 4.1–4.2 mm (n=4).
FIGURE 3.
Kinseyella quercusobtusata
,
new species
: a, mesoscutum, dorsal view; b, mesoscutellum, dorsal view; c, metascutellum and propodeum, postero-dorsal view; d, tarsal claw, hind leg.
Gall
(
Fig. 4
). A leaf gall, almost always on the underside, usually attached to the midrib, more rarely on the lateral veins or leaf petiole. Usually one gall per leaf, sometimes two-three. Unilocular, approximately spherical,
20–40 mm
in diameter, yellowish and tinged with pink and red when mature, the surface with dense rusty-brown felt-like pubescence. The gall is very fragile, with a very thin external wall. The hard larval chamber is
3–4 mm
in diameter, with
2–3 mm
thick hard wall, in rusty dense hairs and located in the centre of the gall, supported by numerous radiating brown fibres.
Biology.
Only the asexual generation of this species is known, inducing leaf galls on
Q. obtusata
(Section
Quercus
‘
sensu stricto
’). The gall starts to develop in summer and mature in autumn; adults start to emerge in late autumn and probably prolong the winter. This is the first record of a cynipid gallwasp on this endemic Mexican oak species, characteristics of which are given in Romero-Rangel
et al
. (2002), Flores-Maya
et al
. (2006) and Rodriguez-Rivera & Romero-Rangel (2007).
Distribution.
Adults currently known only from
Mexico
: Estado de
México
. Galls were collected in the following counties: Tepotzotlan, Villa del Carbón, Chapa de Mota y Villa Nicolás Romero.
FIGURE 4.
Kinseyella quercusobtusata
,
new species
: a, metasoma, lateral view; b–c, ventral spine of hypopygium: b, lateral view, c, ventral view.
Kinseyella lapiei
(
Kieffer)
, comb. nova
Disholcaspis lapiei
Kieffer, 1911: 346
–347 (female, gall); Melika & Abrahamson, 2002.
Holcaspis weldi
Beutenmueller, 1911: 86
–87 (female, gall).
Adleria lapiei
: Weld (1952)
; Burnett (1977).
FIGURE 5.
Kinseyella quercusobtusata
,
new species
, gall: a, mature galls, general view; b, dissected gall, showing the inner structure of the gall; c, dissected gall, showing the lighter inner larval chamber.
Studied material.
Type
material of
Disholcaspis lapiei
probably lost. Authors (JP-V and GM) were unable to locate the
type
. Weld (1952) stated that the
holotype
is deposited in the Zoological Museum of the University in Berlin and presumably it was examined by him. Requests for a loan of the
type
sent to many European museums, where some Kieffer cynipid
types
known to be deposited, were failed, curators were unable to locate the
type
. Thus, the authors thing that the
type
of
D. lapiei
is lost. However, the original description of
D. lapiei
does agree with examined
D. weldi
females and galls and thus we accept Weld’s (1952) synonymization.
Type
material of
Holcaspis weldi
:
LECTOTYPE
female designated herein (JP-V): “mex” (handwrite); “cotype” (red label); “
Holcaspis weldi Beut.
” (handwrite); “
Type
2084” (red label); “
Lectotype
design. J. P-V 2009” (red label); “
Kinseyella lapiei (Kieffer)
det. J.P-V”. Eight female
PARALECTOTYPES
:
1 female
with the same labels as the
lectotype
in
MCZ
;
3 females
:”
Type
” (red label), ”City of
Mex
.”, ”
Holcaspis weldi Beutm.
”,”Beut. Coll. rec-d. 1935.”,”Acc 36986.” in
AMNH
, and
4 females
: “
Mex
.: Ajusco 9985
Sept 1910
T.Barbour”, Weld’s handwriting label “
Disholcaspis weldi Beut.
exch. with
MCZ
July 1921
“ in
USNM
.
Diagnosis
. See diagnosis to
K. quercusobtusata
.
Gall.
The galls are similar to
K. quercusobtusata
, sometimes larger, reaching
55 mm
in diameter.
Biology.
Only the asexual generation of this species is known, inducing twig and leaf galls on
Q. reticulata
(Section
Quercus
‘
sensu stricto
’). The gall starts to develop in summer (Kieffer 1911) and mature in autumn; adults start to emerge in October (Beutenmueller 1911).
Distribution.
Currently known only from
Mexico
. Galls were collected from El Parque at
2300m
a.s.l., near Cuernavaca (Estado de
Morelos
) (Kieffer 1911) and Ajusco (
Distrito Federal
) according to Beutenmueller’s labels.
FIGURE 6.
a,
Amphibolibs quercuscinerea
, mesoscutum, dorsal view; b,
Disholcaspis spissa
, ventral spine of the hypopygium, ventral view; c,
Atrusca cava
, forewing; d,
Antron plumbeum
(Weld)
, metasoma, lateral view; e,
Besbicus mirabilis
(Kinsey)
, ventral spine of hypopygium, ventral view.
Comments.
Originally
Kinseyella lapiei
was described by Kieffer (1911) as
Disholcaspis lapiei
. Kinsey (1937a) suggested that
D. lapiei
Kieffer
probably a synonym of
D. weldi
(Beutenmueller)
(=
Holcaspis weldi
Beutenmueller
, not
Cynips weldi
Beutenmueller
). However, Kinsey (1937a) suggestion for the synonymization of
D. lapiei
to
D. weldi
was erroneous from the point of view of ICZN, and what was correctly mentioned by Weld (1952). Chronologically,
D. lapiei
was described before
H. weldi
, which is a junior synonym, and thus Weld (1952) was right when synonymized
H. weldi
to
D. lapiei
. Later, Weld (1952) placed it in
Adleria
Rohwer & Fagan. Burnett (1977)
provisionally treated
lapiei
also as
Adleria
; Melika & Abrahamson (2002) re-established the
Disholcaspis
combination. On the other hand, the genus
Holcaspis
Mayr
, where
H. weldi
has been described, was preoccupied by Chadour 186- for
Coleoptera
and, thus Dalla Torre & Kieffer (1910) established
Disholcaspis
as new genus name for
Holcaspis
sensu Mayr.