Orseolia paspali (Felt)

Kolesik, Peter & Gagné, Raymond J., 2020, A review of the gall midges (Diptera: Cecidomyiidae) of Indonesia: taxonomy, biology and adult key to genera, Zootaxa 4847 (1), pp. 1-82 : 56-57

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.4476905

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/A32D87D4-1C7C-5349-55DE-F98E2169E2FE

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Orseolia paspali (Felt)
status

 

Orseolia paspali (Felt) View in CoL

[ Figs 32 View FIGURES 32 a–k]

Parallelodiplosis paspali Felt, 1921d: 92 View in CoL .

Orseolia paspali (Felt): Gagné 1973: 507 View in CoL , new combination.

Material examined. We examined Felt’s male lectotype, des. by Gagné (1985: 150) and 1 male, 2 female and 1 pupal paralectotype s reared from a leaf sheath gall on Paspalum scrobiculatum L. (as P. scrobiculatum Hook. ) in Bogor, Java, Indonesia, vi-1920, Felt type #a3151. The lectotype is mounted whole, cleared, with terminal flagellomeres missing, gonocoxites partially folded, gonostylus mounted at angle, wings folded, legs intact, head partially shriveled. The male paralectotype, mounted with the lectotype on the same slide, has all flagellomeres preserved and all tarsi missing.

Description. Wing length 2.5–2.9 mm in male, 2.8–3.5 mm in female Gagné (1985). Palpus 4-segmented, palpiger present [ Fig. 32k View FIGURES 32 ]. Tarsal claws [ Fig. 32c View FIGURES 32 ]. Male flagellomeres [ Fig. 32b, d View FIGURES 32 ]. Male terminalia [ Figs 32 View FIGURES 32 e–j]: gonostylus wide, distal edge constricted at midlength, setulose on basal half, carinate beyond, tooth large; hypoproct long, wide; aedeagus narrow, as long as hypoproct; cerci triangular.

Remarks. Orseolia paspali is similar to O. oryzae from which it can be separated by the gonostylus that is constricted at midlength and setulose on its basal half [ Figs 32e, f View FIGURES 32 ], as opposed to gradually tapered and almost entirely setulose [ Fig. 31b View FIGURES 31 ]. The female tergum 10 has more numerous setae than O. oryzae [ Fig. 31f View FIGURES 31 ] ( Gagné 1985).

Biology. This species causes a 10–15 cm long and 2 mm wide, tubular leaf sheath gall, similar to Orseolia oryzae , on Paspalum scrobiculatum L. ( Poaceae ) (DvLR & DvL (1926, gall No 66, Fig. 40 View FIGURES 40 [ Fig. 32a View FIGURES 32 ]) and P. conjugatum P.J.Bergius ( Gagné 1985) .

Geographical distribution. Orseolia paspali occurs in Indonesia and India. In Indonesia it was found only in the type locality Bogor, alt. 250 m, v-1920, on P. scrobiculatum (DvLR & DvL 1926). In India it is common, with the following confirmed localities (all from Gagné 1985): Kannur, Kerala, 20–30-viii-1928, on P. scrobiculatum ; Allahabad, Uttar Pradesh, 1973, as laboratory colony on P. scrobiculatum ; Orissa, Cuttack, Odisha, 1979, on Paspalum sp.; Jabalpur, Madhya Pradesh, 1948, on P. scrobiculatum ; Raipur, Bhopal, Madhya Pradesh, 1981, on Paspalum sp.; Goa, 1981, on Paspalum sp.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Diptera

Family

Cecidomyiidae

Genus

Orseolia

Loc

Orseolia paspali (Felt)

Kolesik, Peter & Gagné, Raymond J. 2020
2020
Loc

Orseolia paspali (Felt): Gagné 1973: 507

Gagne, R. J. 1973: 507
1973
Loc

Parallelodiplosis paspali

Felt, E. P. 1921: 92
1921
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