Thirteen new species of Agromyzidae (Diptera) from the United States, with new host and distribution records for 32 additional species
Author
Eiseman, Charles S.
Author
Lonsdale, Owen
0000-0001-7034-3330
onsdale@agr.gc.ca
Author
Linden, John Van Der
0000-0003-2651-0634
johnbvdl@gmail.com
Author
Feldman, Tracy S.
0000-0001-5939-6810
feldmants@sa.edu
Author
Palmer, Michael W.
0000-0003-1452-2152
mike.palmer@okstate.edu
text
Zootaxa
2021
2021-02-17
4931
1
1
68
journal article
7424
10.11646/zootaxa.4931.1.1
d63cab47-63f1-4fdc-9209-26a256c91ccb
1175-5326
4545337
88CF2B0D-E02B-46E1-9F52-1B95F717FC8F
Liriomyza euphorbivora
Eiseman & Lonsdale
,
spec. nov.
(
Figs. 40–43
,
75
,
140–143
)
Holotype
.
USA
.
OKLAHOMA
:
Payne Co.
,
Marena
, 36.072618°, -97.247242°,
29.v.2018
, em.
14.vi.2018
,
M.W. Palmer
, ex
Euphorbia marginata
, #
CSE4617
,
CNC1144138
(1♁).
Etymology.
The specific epithet refers to the host plant genus,
Euphorbia
L.
Host.
Euphorbiaceae
:
Euphorbia marginata
Pursh.
Leaf mine.
(
Fig. 75
) The single collected mine was a whitish (partially greenish), roughly circular blotch on the upper leaf surface, centered on the midrib,
7 mm
across when complete, with frass in a few small, dark grains and lumps. A photo taken of the lower leaf surface at the time of collection shows what appears to be a 0.2-mm wide, epidermal linear mine, but this does not appear to be contiguous with the mine that contained the fly larva and we believe it is unrelated. It is not discernible in the preserved leaf.
Puparium.
Yellow; formed outside the mine.
Phenology and voltinism.
The only known specimen was collected as a larva in late May, emerging as an adult in mid-June.
Distribution.
USA
: OK.
Adult description.
Wing length
1.5 mm
(♁). Female unknown. Length of ultimate section of vein M
4
divided by penultimate section: 2.8. Eye height divided by gena height: 3.0. First flagellomere small, rounded. Thorax subshining.
Chaetotaxy
: Two ori, two ors; subequal to ocellar and postvertical setae. Four dorsocentral setae, only first seta long, with second seta
⅖
length. Five rows of acrostichal setulae.
Coloration
: (
Figs. 40–43
) Setae dark brownish-black. Head yellow with ocellar spot dark brown; posterolateral corner of frons dark brown nearly to base of outer vertical, paler brown to base of inner vertical; back of head and clypeus brown. Scutum dark brown with wide, complete lateral yellow stripe on scutum (reaching base of posterior supra-alar and intra-alar) that continues along posterior margin as narrow line along scutellum. Mediotergite dark brown; anatergite brown with posterodorsal corner yellow; katatergite yellow with posteroventral corner brown. Pleuron yellow in base color; anepisternum with wide clavate anteroventral stripe (wider anteriorly) and narrow posteromedial line along suture; anepimeron mottled brown; katepisternum brown below level of seta; meron mostly brown. Scutellum dark anterolaterally. Legs yellow with basal half of fore coxa dark brown, mid coxa basally brownish and hind coxa mottled brown; base of femora narrowly brown (reduced ventrally); tibiae brown with base of fore and mid tibiae yellow, fore tibia yellower and hind tibia darker; tarsi brown. Abdomen brown dorsally, stripe narrowing posteriorly to tergite 5; epandrium brown. Calypter margin yellow with grey tint, hairs greyish-brown.
Genitalia
: (
Figs. 140–143
) Epandrium not fused to surstylus, with one spine. Surstylus with two apical spines. Phallophorus with venter much reduced, short. Basiphallus sclerotized along dorsal and left lateral surface with extension on left distal margin below paraphallus. Paraphallus simple, narrow. Hypophallus with small rod-shaped sclerite with apical hairs. Ejaculatory duct swollen and pigmented apically. Mesophallus slightly shorter than distiphallus, subcylindrical, fused to distiphallus dorsally, with slight ventral carina along suture. Distiphallus slightly wider than mesophallus, distal half shallow and cup-shaped, enclosing one pair of short processes, angled dorsally; basal half slightly narrower, sides parallel in ventral view, tapering basally in lateral view. Ejaculatory apodeme large and well-developed with broad blade; sperm pump with broad sclerotized cup-like venter.
Comments.
This is the second
Liriomyza
to be reared from
Euphorbia
in North America, after
L. euphorbiella
Eiseman & Lonsdale. That
species is likewise known only from Payne Co.,
Oklahoma
, but it was reared from
E. heterophylla
var.
cyathophora
(Murray) Griseb.
rather than
E. marginata
, and its mine begins with a distinct linear portion and does not cross the midrib. Mines on
E. marginata
similar to that of
L. euphorbivora
have been photographed in
Ontario
(
Mews 2019b
), and the aborted mine on
E.
cf.
brachycera
Engelm.
in
Colorado
noted by Eiseman & Lonsdale (2019) could conceivably have represented this species. TSF has found largely linear
Liriomyza
mines on
E. curtisii
Engelm.
in
North Carolina
, but so far adults have not been reared from these.
Worldwide, 12
Liriomyza
species have now been reported from
Euphorbia
, including three listed by Benavent- Corai
et al.
(2005) that were omitted without explanation from the review of
Euphorbia
-feeding
Agromyzidae
by
Martinez & Sobhian (2000)
. Of these three,
L. congesta
(Becker)
normally feeds on
Fabaceae
, and
L. sonchi
Hendel
on
Asteraceae
, so these records seem likely to be erroneous (both are derived from a paper on parasitoids of
Agromyzidae
in
Valencia
, published in 1987). The record of the highly polyphagous
L. sativae
Blanchard
appears plausible, however, apart from its being poorly documented (the cited source, Martinez (1993), is apparently a simple list of host genera, and is a publication we have been unable to obtain after multiple attempts;
Martinez & Sobhian (2000)
explicitly stated that
L. sativae
is “not yet recorded on
Euphorbia
”). Possibly this record refers to
McClanahan (1975)
, who caged a population of
L. sativae
with
E. pulcherrima
Willd. ex Klotzsch
and observed light mining but no puparium formation. Whether the unidentified Nearctic mines noted above represent any of these 12 species remains to be seen, but to aid in the identification of
Liriomyza
specimens reared from
Euphorbia
, a modified version of the key by
Martinez & Sobhian (2000)
is presented below with
L. euphorbiella
,
L. euphorbivora
, and
L. sativae
added, and supplemented with data from
Ellis (2020)
.