Stigmella castanopsiella

Stonis, Jonas R., Diškus, Arūnas, Remeikis, Andrius, Navickaitė, Asta & Rocienė, Agnė, 2013, Description of new species of oak leaf-miners (Lepidoptera: Nepticulidae), with notes on the species groups of Stigmella Schrank associated with Quercus as a host-plant, Zootaxa 3737 (3), pp. 201-222 : 219-220

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.3737.3.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:6193AEF5-30AB-4005-9412-C4D111153F26

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6151157

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03B6879B-FFEA-A664-FF0F-FB68FA00FB61

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Stigmella castanopsiella
status

 

The castanopsiella View in CoL group

Diagnostic characters ( Fig. 44 View FIGURES 44, 45 ): forewing usually with fascia, androconial scales often developed; in male genitalia, uncus usually with two short and broad lateral lobes, gnathos always with two posterior processes, aedeagus always bulbous basally, numerous spine-like cornuti always aggregated into a band, vesica always coiled, manica always present; in female genitalia, accessory sac always long and with (usually coiled) band of long spines, no signa.

Host-plant preferences. Lithocarpus , Castanopsis and Quercus : subgenera Cyclobalanopsis and Quercus (section Mesolobatus) ( Fig. 37 View FIGURE 37 ).

Distribution and taxonomic diversity. Comprises six species, all East Palaearctic: Stigmella castanopsiella (Kuroko, 1978) ; S. kurokoi Puplesis, 1984 ; S. dentatae Puplesis, 1984 ; S. circumargentea van Nieukerken & Liu, 2000; S. lithocarpella van Nieukerken & Liu, 2000; S. vandrieli van Nieukerken & Liu, 2000.

Note. S. dentatae and S. circumargentea are included in to the castanopsiella group here for the first time (previously they were placed in the ruficapitella group) (van Nieukerken & Liu 2000; Diškus & Puplesis 2003).

The hemargyrella group

Diagnostic characters ( Fig. 45 View FIGURES 44, 45 ): forewing often with fascia, androconial scales often developed (present); in male genitalia, uncus often with two short, distally divided lateral lobes (i.e. four small distal lobes), gnathos large, always with two posterior processes (M-shaped), valva often with slender and subcaudaly directed apical process, aedeagus always with numerous spine-like cornuti aggregated into a band, manica almost always present; in female genitalia, accessory sac often wrinkled, corpus bursae always without signa.

Host-plant preferences. Fagaceae ( Fagus and Quercus : section Quercus ), Sapindaceae (Acer) and Caprifoliaceae (Lonicera) ( Fig. 38 View FIGURE 38 ).

Distribution and taxonomic diversity. Comprises six species, all in the Palaearctic Region.

West Palaearctic: Stigmella hemargyrella (Kollar, 1832) ; S. lonicerarum (Frey, 1857) ; S. speciosa (Frey, 1858) .

Central Palaearctic (Central Asia and Himalaya): S. kuznetzovi Puplesis, 1994 ; S. acuta Diškus, Navickaitė & Remeikis , sp. nov.

East Palaearctic: S. monticulella Puplesis, 1984 .

Note. S. motiekaitisi Puplesis, 1994 (Central Asia) is excluded from the hemargyrella group here for the first time but left assigned to any group).

Key to the species groups based on males (with a few additional data on females)

1. Gnathos with single caudal process; uncus semi-rounded, without lobes ( Fig. 39 View FIGURES 39 – 41 )............... S. caerusifasciella group

- Gnathos with two caudal processes; uncus with lobes........................................................ 2

2. Male genitalia with cornuti extremely large, each approx. as long as half length of aedeagus............. S. cornuta View in CoL group

- Male genitalia with cornuti small to large.................................................................. 3

3. Cornuti not aggregated into a band (“loose”); manica absent [female genitalia with prominent, strongly chitinized signa] ( Fig. 41 View FIGURES 39 – 41 )................................................................................... S. saginella View in CoL group

- Cornuti aggregated into a full or broken band; manica (except a few species) present [female genitalia without signa]..... 4

4. Gnathos broadly U-shaped ( Fig. 43 View FIGURES 42, 43 ); caudal lobes of uncus usually narrow and long (as it is shown in fig. 43); forewing usu- ally without fascia (occurrence 70%)..................................................... S. ruficapitella View in CoL group

- Gnathos with central plate and two closely situated caudal processes; caudal lobes of uncus broad and (or) short; forewing usu- ally with fascia...................................................................................... 5

5. Aedeagus bulbous basally ( Fig. 44 View FIGURES 44, 45 ), vesica (and band of cornuti) coiled [female genitalia with coiled spinose structure]....................................................................................... S. castanopsiella View in CoL group

- Aedeagus not bulbous basally, vesica (and band of cornuti) not coiled [female genitalia without coiled spinose structure].. 6

6. Gnathos with long anterior processes ( Fig. 42 View FIGURES 42, 43 ), uncus bilobed; host-plants exclusively from section Lobatae, genus Quercus View in CoL ; North and Central America [female genitalia with enormously enlarged, markedly spiral (coiled) accessory sac]............................................................................................ S. quercipulchella View in CoL group

- Gnathos without anterior processes ( Fig. 45 View FIGURES 44, 45 ), uncus usually with four small caudal lobes or papillae; host-plants: Lonicera View in CoL , Acer View in CoL , Fagus View in CoL and Quercus View in CoL (but not section Lobatae); distributed from Europe to Central and East Asia [female genitalia with short accessory sac or without it]........................................................ S. hemargyrella View in CoL group

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Lepidoptera

Family

Nepticulidae

Genus

Stigmella

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