Phytomyza omlandi Scheffer & Lonsdale
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.5997913 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03D287EF-FFEC-E407-A8E5-55F24080FC29 |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
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Phytomyza omlandi Scheffer & Lonsdale |
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Phytomyza omlandi Scheffer & Lonsdale View in CoL
( Fig. 195 View FIGURES 189–199 )
Material examined. GEORGIA: Clarke Co., Athens , North Oconee River, 22.iii.2013, em . 18.iv–2.v.2013, C.S. Eiseman, ex Gelsemium sempervirens , #CSE303, CNC358482–358485 (3♂ 1♀); NORTH CAROLINA: Scotland Co., Laurinburg , St. Andrews University, 1.xii.2015, em . iv.2016, T.S. Feldman, ex Gelsemium sempervirens , #CSE2441, CNC653956 (1♀).
Host. Gelsemiaceae : Gelsemium sempervirens (L.) W.T. Aiton.
Leaf mine. ( Fig. 195 View FIGURES 189–199 ) Broadly linear throughout, but often so contorted as to form a secondary blotch. Mines are largely greenish (interparenchymal); minute frass grains are visible in transmitted light.
Puparium. Brown; formed within the mine, with the anterior spiracles projecting through the upper epidermis. The spiracles are surrounded by a small, transparent, circular “window” in the leaf’s upper epidermis where all the green tissue has been consumed.
Distribution. USA: *GA, NC (Scheffer & Lonsdale 2011); we found leaf mines at Highlands Hammock State Park, FL.
Comments. Scheffer & Lonsdale (2011) noted that in two years spent in North Carolina, leaf mines on Gelsemium plants were only observed in natural settings despite the fact that G. sempervirens is often planted as an ornamental. Although our reared specimens were from wild plants, we also collected mines from an ornamental G. sempervirens vine growing on the front stoop of a house in suburban Roswell, Georgia, but only parasitoids emerged. Phytomyza omlandi is so far the only agromyzid reared from Gelsemium , but at two locations in Florida (Greenville and Highlands Hammock State Park) we found probable mines of the polyphagous species Liriomyza schmidti (Aldrich) . They were linear as in P. omlandi , but epidermal rather than interparenchymal, and pupation was external rather than internal. T. Feldman has collected much narrower epidermal mines of an unknown agromyzid from G. sempervirens in North and South Carolina; these mines are not uncommon but so far have always been aborted.
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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