Asphondylia strobilanthi Felt
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4847.1.1 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:1F8E3DED-6EA9-4D8A-8DA9-CD8C0CC9147F |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4407467 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/A32D87D4-1C44-5360-55DE-FA7327F3E3DD |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Asphondylia strobilanthi Felt |
status |
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Asphondylia strobilanthi Felt View in CoL
[ Figs 7 View FIGURES 7 a–n]
Asphondylia strobilanthi Felt, 1921b: 150 View in CoL .
Material examined. Syntypes, male, pupa [with female inside] and 2 larvae, reared from galls on aerial root of Strobilanthes cernua Bl. (Acanthaceae) collected at Mt Gede, Cibodas, Java, alt. 1800 m, xii-1918, Felt #a3097. One slide bears the male, the other the remainder of the series. The male is well-preserved, all legs entire, wings slightly folded, one antenna with remaining 7, the other with 6 flagellomeres, and terminalia in posterior position. The pupa and the female inside it are well-preserved. One of the larvae is cleared, the other uncleared.
Description. Male. Length 3 mm, wing length 3.8 mm, width 1.4 mm. Antenna: first flagellomere 5.5x longer than wide, sixth 4.5x [ Fig. 7e View FIGURES 7 ]. palpus 2-segmented, first segment short, irregular, second broadly oval. Apicoventral spur on first tarsal segment long, slightly bent [ Fig. 7c View FIGURES 7 ]. Tarsal claws strongly curved at distal third, empodia as long as claws, pulvilli about ¼ empodial length [ Fig. 7d View FIGURES 7 ]. Gonostylus 2x longer than wide in posterior view, teeth blunt, of slightly unequal length [ Fig. 7b View FIGURES 7 ].
Female. Description based on specimen still inside its pupa. Flagellomeres 1–9 progressively slightly shorter, 10–12 progressively much shorter [ Fig. 7g View FIGURES 7 ], first flagellomere 5.5x longer than wide. Needle-like protrusible part of ovipositor slightly widened at terminus in ventral view [ Fig. 7h View FIGURES 7 ].
Pupa. Length 5 mm, thorax dark, abdomen dark yellow ( Felt 1921b). Antennal horns long, triangular, serrate ventrally [ Fig. 7m View FIGURES 7 ]. Frontal anterior horn robust, bilobed, lobes pointed; posterior horns absent [ Fig. 7m View FIGURES 7 ]. Cephalic papillae minute [ Fig. 7m View FIGURES 7 ] Prothoracic spiracle unusually long, narrow, of constant width, trachea bulging, ending at basal fifth [ Fig. 7l View FIGURES 7 ]. Abdominal dorsal spines simple, relatively small, arranged in sparse anterior field and dense posterior row, size of spines increasing posteriad [ Fig. 7n View FIGURES 7 ].
Larva. Length 2.5 mm. Yellowish orange. Head rounded, trapezoid, wider than long, antennae 1.5x longer than wide at base, posterolateral apodemes absent [ Fig. 7i View FIGURES 7 ]. Spatula broad, short-shafted; with two long, narrowly triangular teeth separated by distance 3x greater than their basal width; on either side with 2 pairs of lateral setose papillae; no pigmented area around shaft [ Fig. 7j View FIGURES 7 ]. Terminal segment with anus positioned ventrocaudally and no terminal papillae visible on available specimens [ Fig. 7k View FIGURES 7 ].
Remarks. Asphondylia strobilanthi is unique among its Indonesian congeners for the narrow, widely separated lobes of the larval sternal spatula [ Fig. 7j View FIGURES 7 ], and, in the pupa, the long, tube-like prothoracic spiracle [ Fig. 7l View FIGURES 7 ], the two-lobed anterior frontal horn, the lack of posterior frontal horns [ Fig. 7m View FIGURES 7 ], and the ventrally serrated antennal horns [ Fig. 7m View FIGURES 7 ]. It can be separated from Indonesian congeners whose males are known by the prolonged gonostylus [ Fig. 7b View FIGURES 7 ].
Biology. DvL (1921, Fig. 9 View FIGURES 9 [ Fig. 7a View FIGURES 7 ]) described the gall on the aerial roots of Strobilanthes cernua , a plant that grows gregariously in virgin forests on mountain sides [of Mt Gede, Cibodas, Java]. Parts of the root develop above ground, which is where these were found, partly hidden under remains of leaves and patches of moss. They are galls of the bark, whose shape is either pyriform or more globular, stout and round at the base, and gradually narrowing towards the apex. The largest galls measured 10 mm in length, with a thickness of 6 mm. The usual size is smaller, being about 4 to 7 mm. The rind of the bark is thick and the chamber wide. The surface is densely pilose with long, white, unbranched hairs. Galls are found both singly and gregariously.
Geographical distribution. This species is known from Mt Gede, Cibodas , Java, where it was collected at 1800 m altitude, xii-1918 ( Felt 1921b), and at 1600 m, xii-1913 and x.1925 (DvLR & DvL 1926) .
No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.
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Asphondylia strobilanthi Felt
Kolesik, Peter & Gagné, Raymond J. 2020 |
Asphondylia strobilanthi
Felt, E. P. 1921: 150 |