Agromyza pudica Spencer

Eiseman, Charles S. & Lonsdale, Owen, 2018, New state and host records for Agromyzidae (Diptera) in the United States, with the description of thirty new species, Zootaxa 4479 (1), pp. 1-156 : 12

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4479.1.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:93C84828-6EEF-4758-BEA1-97EEEF115245

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5997609

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03D287EF-FFAB-E441-A8E5-50034446F9AE

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Agromyza pudica Spencer
status

 

Agromyza pudica Spencer View in CoL

( Fig. 74 View FIGURES 63–74 )

Material examined. MASSACHUSETTS: Franklin Co., Northfield , 276 Old Wendell Rd. , 4.vii.2016, em . 21.vii.2016, C.S. Eiseman, ex Dichanthelium acuminatum ssp. fasciculatum , #CSE2787, CNC654200–654202 (1♂ 2♀); NORTH CAROLINA: Durham Co., Durham, 17 - Acre Wood Preserve, 15.v.2016, em. 4 , vi.2016, T.S. Feldman, ex Dichanthelium clandestinum , 4 larvae from 1 mine, #CSE2542, CNC654303–654306 (4♂); Durham, Stagecoach Road Eagle Spur Trail, 10.vii.2017, em. 5.viii.2017, T.S. Feldman, ex Dichanthelium , #CSE4076, CNC939831–939833 View Materials (2♀ 1 puparium); Scotland Co., Laurinburg, St. Andrews University , 11.v.2016, em. 3.vi.2016, T.S. Feldman, ex Dichanthelium scoparium , #CSE2540, CNC653948, CNC653949 (1♂ 1♀); 18.v.2016, em. 13.vi.2016, T.S. Feldman, ex Dichanthelium , #CSE2572, CNC634813–634815 (3♂); OHIO: Hocking Co. , South Bloomingville, Deep Woods Farm, 5.viii.2016, em . 20–22.viii.2016, C.S. Eiseman, ex Dichanthelium clandestinum , #CSE2925, CNC654480–654482 (1♂ 2♀).

Hosts. * Poaceae : Dichanthelium acuminatum (Sw.) Gould & C. A. Clark , D. clandestinum (L.) Gould, D. scoparium (Lam.) Gould.

Leaf mine. ( Fig. 74 View FIGURES 63–74 ) Eggs are inserted near the leaf margin, associated with a cluster of feeding punctures. The larva initially mines along the margin almost to the apex, then turns around and forms a gradually widening, greenish-brown blotch with distinct concentric feeding lines. Dark, liquidy frass is deposited in a widening, more or less continuous central mass (or sometimes presenting a speckled appearance). A leaf may contain 1–4 mines originating from the same cluster of feeding punctures; in some cases the larvae maintain separate channels rather than forming a common mine. On the small leaves of Dichanthelium acuminatum , each leaf was mined by a single larva and the completed mine occupied the entire leaf surface.

Puparium. Yellow-orange to reddish-brown; formed outside the mine.

Distribution. USA: AR, GA, *MA, MN, NC, *OH.

Comments. The leaf mine of Agromyza pudica appears to be indistinguishable from that of A. parca , which also feeds on Dichanthelium . Agromyza pudica differs from the latter species in having a first flagellomere that is sometimes orange along the basal margin, the apex of the basiphallus is bifid (not linear) and without lateromedial membranous lobes, and the distiphallus is narrowest medially (not apically) and more strongly convoluted.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Diptera

Family

Agromyzidae

Genus

Agromyza

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