Machaeriobia gemmae Maia, 2016

Maia, Valéria Cid, Wilson, Vinícius Abexander Condé & Monteiro, Ricardo Ferreira, 2016, A new species of Machaeriobia Rübsaamen, 1915 (Diptera, Cecidomyiidae) from Brazil, Revista Brasileira de Entomologia 60 (3), pp. 227-230 : 228-230

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.1016/j.rbe.2016.05.002

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/0389644C-076D-FFCA-FCB6-B2DDFA0E2EBB

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Machaeriobia gemmae Maia
status

sp. nov.

Machaeriobia gemmae Maia View in CoL , sp. nov. ( Figs. 2–13 View Figs View Figs View Fig )

Diagnosis: Adult: palpus one or two-segmented; tarsal claws simple; male hypoproct and cercus similar in shape; cercus slightly longer than hypoproct, aedeagus deeply notched; gonocoxites with rounded mesobasal lobe, ovipositor bulbous with long, flexible lateral setae, female cerci with some sensorial setae, the tapered cerci with a few short setae. Pupa: antennal horns short, abdominal tergites 6–8 with a row of three or four spines. Larva: spatula with two widely separated teeth and reduced shaft; mamelons absent; terminal segment elongate, tapered to apex, sclerotized apically, without apparent papillae.

Adult description. Male. Body length: 3.20–4.60 mm (n = 3). Head ( Fig. 2 View Figs ): eye facets circular, closely approximated. Antenna: scape about as long as large; pedicel: 0.50–0.55 times wider than long; flagellomeres binodal, distal node constricted at middle, tricircumfilar, circumfila with loops short and regular in length, neck bare ( Fig. 3 View Figs ), flagellomere 12 with a setulose apical process. Frontoclypeus with 08–10 setae (n = 3). Mouthparts ( Fig. 4 View Figs ): palpus

0.20

slightly longer than large, with one or two segments, claviform when one-segmented, first segment globose and second claviform when two-segmented; labrum long-attenuate with one pair of ventral sensory setae; hypopharynx of same shape as labrum, with long, apically directed lateral setulae; labella hemispherical, with several lateral setae and three pairs of short mesal sensory seta. Thorax: Anepimeron with several setae, other pleural sclerites asetose. Wing: 3.60– 2.80 mm long (n = 3). Halter: 0.60 mm long (n = 3). Apical projection of first tarsomere 0.016 mm (n = 3) long. Legs missing. Abdomen: tergite 1 sclerotized only at distal half; tergites 2–7 rectangular, completely sclerotized; tergites 1–7 with a complete row of posterior setae, two anterior trichoid sensilla and elsewhere with scattered scales. Tergite 8 elliptical, with only two anterior trichoid sensilla as vestiture. Sternites 2–8 completely sclerotized, rectangular, with setae more abundant mesally, a complete row of posterior setae, and two anterior trichoid sensilla. Terminalia ( Fig. 5 View Figs ): gonocoxite about 4 times long than large, cylindrical beyond short mesobasal lobe; gonostylus about 5 times as long as wide, cylindrical; cercus setose with margin convex, slightly longer than hypoproct; hypoproct setose, similar in shape to cercus; aedeagus deeply notched at apex. Female: as for male, except for: body length: 5.60 mm (n = 1); head: antenna: scape about 2 times wider than long; pedicel: 1.4 times wider than long (n = 1); flagellomeres cylindrical with two interconnected circumfilar rings and bare neck ( Fig.6 View Figs ); twelfth flagellomere with setulose apical process. Wing: 4.13 mm long (n = 1). Halter: 0.70 mm long (n = 1). Abdomen: tergites 1–7 rectangular with a complete row of posterior setae, a row of mesal setae, two anterior trichoid sensilla and elsewhere with scattered scales; tergite 8 unsclerotized, with a pair of anterior trichoid sensilla. Sternites 2–7 rectangular with setae more abundant mesally, a complete row of posterior setae and two anterior trichoid sensilla. Sternite 8 unsclerotized. Ovipositor basally bulbous, tapered beyond with lateral setae, 1.6 times longer than sternite 7, cerci tapered to point, with a few short setae, hypoproct glabrous ( Fig. 7 View Figs ).

Pupa. Length: 2.40–2.80 mm (n = 3). Head ( Fig. 8 View Figs ) with grainy integument and short antennal horns (0.05 mm long) (n = 3); pair of cephalic setae very short (0.007 mm long) (n = 3); two pairs of lower facial papillae, one asetose, the other with short seta; three pairs of lateral facial papillae, two with short seta, the other asetose. Prothoracic spiracle relatively short (0.12 mm long), setiform ( Fig. 8 View Figs ). Abdominal tergites 6–8 each with a single row of three or four dorsal spines, other tergites without spines ( Fig. 9 View Figs ).

Larva. Body length: 3.20 mm (n = 1). Integument covered with pointed verrucae. Spatula: 0.07 mm long (n = 1), two-toothed, with very short shaft, three pairs of lateral papillae ( Figs. 10 and 11 View Figs ). Terminal segment with a tail-like projection of 0.15 mm of length (n = 1); sclerotized apically; terminal papillae not visible ( Fig. 12 View Figs )

Gall. Leaf bud gall, spherical, green or reddish, hairy, onechambered ( Fig. 13 View Fig ) on Machaerium macaense .

Type material. Holotype male. Brazil, Rio de Janeiro, Parque Nacional da Serra dos Órgãos, II.2009, Wilson and Monteiro leg., MNRJ . Paratypes, same data as holotype – 2 males, 1 female, and 1 larva; 15.XI.2013 – 2 pupae and 3 pupal exuviae. MNRJ .

Etymology. The name “ gemmae ” refers to the galled plant organ in Latin.

Comments. Machaeriobia is very similar morphologically to Anadiplosis . Adults of both genera show no essential differences ( Gagné, 1994), but according to Tavares (1920), larval characters can separate the two genera. In Machaeriobia , mamelons beneath the lateral papillae are absent and the prothoracic spatula is present, while in the species of Anadiplosis whose larvae are known, mamelons are present and the spatula is absent. Unfortunately, the larva of A. pulchra , the type-species, is still unknown. Among the family Cecidomyiidae , there are some genera whose species may or may not present a spatula, such as Baccharomyia Tavares, 1917 , Geraldesia Tavares, 1917 , Rhopalomyia Kieffer & Herbst, 1909 , and Lopesia Rübsaamen, 1908 ( Gagné, 1994; Rodrigues and Maia, 2010). We hereby synonymize Anadiplosis Tavares, 1916 under Machaeriobia Rübsaamen, 1915 based on similarities of the ovipositor, male cercus and hypoproct of both genera. Among the species previously described as Anadiplosis (hereafter referred to as Machaeriobia ), the new species is morphologically most similar to M. pulchra . The pupa of both species has short antennal horns, same complement of facial papillae, prothoracic spiracles similar in shape and length and similar number of abdominal spines.

Adults of M. pulchra have two-segmented palpi, whereas in the new species they are one or two-segmented. The ovipositor of both species is very similar ( Figs. 7 View Figs and 15 View Figs ). While there are few differences between the pupae and females of the two species, the male of M. gemmae is very different from the male of M. pulchra , especially in relation to the terminalia ( Figs. 5 View Figs and 16 View Figs ). Machaeriobia gemmae has a markedly more notched aedeagus, and longer and less curved gonostyli than those of M. pulchra . Furthermore, the mesobasal lobe of the gonocoxites is rounded in M. gemmae , and acute in M. pulchra . The larva of M. gemmae is unique among its congeners for the presence of spatula, the absence of mamelons and the shape of the terminal segment (elongate, tapered to the apex and without distal lobes).

The new species differs from Machaeriobia machaerii in the shape of the male hypoproct and cercus (both more acuminate in M. machaerii ) ( Fig. 17 View Figs ), and in the larval terminal segment which is bilobed in M. machaerii ( Fig. 18 View Figs ) and simple in the new species. From the first sample of 30 galls collected on September 2012), we obtained only M. gemmae , but from the 400 galls collected from October 2013 to January, 91 galls yielded wasps and 10 M. gemmae. The reared wasps belonged to six species: Tanaostigmodes carinatus La Salle 1987 , Tanaostigmodes sp. ( Tanaostigmatidae ), Galeopsomyia sp. ( Eulophidae ), Calorylea sp. ( Eurytomidae ) and two unidentified species of Eurytomidae .

Tanasotigmatidae include only gall inquilines, but the other families comprise gallers, parasitoids, and gall inquilines. It was not possible identify their habits as parasitoids or inquilines, but in all cases the cecidomyiid larvae died. We observed that galls attacked by some of these wasps were almost compact, with little space inside, probably due to inner tissue growth making these galls very hard and quite different from those that were not attacked. The high mortality of galling larvae caused by parasitoids or/and phytophagous modifiers has been reported in other similar communities (see Ferraz and Monteiro, 2003). We also observed that the gall development caused the death of the adjacent leaflets.

MNRJ

Museu Nacional/Universidade Federal de Rio de Janeiro

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Diptera

Family

Cecidomyiidae

Genus

Machaeriobia

Darwin Core Archive (for parent article) View in SIBiLS Plain XML RDF