Paratischeria neotropicana ( Diškus & Stonis, 2015 )
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.5852/ejt.2020.723.1143 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:A10E8F27-8E1F-42F8-B2A3-C441B237C859 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4332310 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/883487D0-3246-FFC2-DAC8-FC6AA9B3CC9E |
treatment provided by |
Valdenar |
scientific name |
Paratischeria neotropicana ( Diškus & Stonis, 2015 ) |
status |
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Paratischeria neotropicana ( Diškus & Stonis, 2015) View in CoL
Figs 26–28 View Figs 21–34 , 128–129 View Figs 128–131
Astrotischeria neotropicana Diškus & Stonis, 2015: 457–465 View in CoL View Cited Treatment , figs 9–27.
Diagnosis
External characters are not sufficient for the identification of this species. In the male genitalia, the combination of a slender valva, a long, simple uncus, a unique, distally bilobed anellus ( Fig. 128 View Figs 128–131 ) and an apically deeply divided phallus ( Fig. 129 View Figs 128–131 ) distinguish Paratischeria neotropicana from other congeneric species. The host plant genus, Sida L. ( Malvaceae ), coincides with the host plant of only two other species, Astrotischeria scutifera sp. nov., described above, and the Nearctic A. omissa (Braun, 1927) ; however, A. scutifera sp. nov. and A. omissa belong to the genus Astrotischeria and are chracterized by a very different genitalic morphology.
Material examined
BELIZE • 18 ♂♂, 15 ♀♀; Cayo District, Chiquibul Forest Reserve, Las Cuevas ; 16°43′53″ N, 88°59′11″ W; alt. 550 m; 17 Sep.–17 Nov. 1997 and 6 Feb.–13 Jun. 1998; O.T. Lewis leg.; mining larvae on Sida sp.; field card nos 31-17/9♂, 2131-19/2♂, 1274-3/11♂, 2077-19/2♂, 1311-4/11♂, 1270- 3/11♂, 2210-24 /2♂, 1897-8/2♂, 2211-24 /2♂, 1280-3/11♂, 319-25/9♂, 3683-13/6♂, 1302-4/11♂, 320- 25/9♂, 681-13/10♂, 1309-17 /11♂, 2078-19/2♂, 1787-6/2♂, 1312-4/11♀, 1277-27/10♀, 1282-3/11♀, 1276-27/10♀, 346-25/9♀, 1275-3/11♀, 1279-3/11♀, 342-25/9♀, 1271-3/11♀, 2848-2/4♀, 2185-24/2♀, 1785-6/2♀, 2209-24 /2♀, 1300-4/11♀, 1313-4/11♀; genitalia slide nos 010316205♂, 010316206♂, 010316207♂, 010316208♂, 010316209♂, 010316210♂, 010316211♀; NHMUK 010289284 About NHMUK to 010289316 About NHMUK GoogleMaps .
Description
This species was described and illustrated by Diškus & Stonis (2015: 457–465, figs 9–27). Here, on the basis of the studied material, we provide the first photographic documentation of the male genitalia of this species from Las Cuevas ( Figs 128–129 View Figs 128–131 ).
Biology
Host plants: various species of Sida L. ( Malvaceae ), including S. rhombifolia L. At Las Cuevas , larvae mine throughout the year. The leaf mine was ilustrated by Diškus & Stonis (2015: figs 9–11). Of 117 living mines collected and reared successfully, 37 (31.6%) were parasitised.
Flight period
Based on the rearing data from Belize, adults are likely to occur throughout the year.
Distribution
Paratischeria neotropicana is the tischeriid species with the broadest distribution range yet documented in the Neotropics, having been recorded from various localities in Belize, Mexico, Guatemala, Ecuador, Peru and Bolivia ( Stonis & Solis 2020).
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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Paratischeria neotropicana ( Diškus & Stonis, 2015 )
Stonis, Jonas R., Diškus, Arūnas, Remeikis, Andrius & Lewis, Owen T. 2020 |