Rhizomyia Kieffer, 1898

Fedotova, Z. A. & Perkovsky, E. E., 2014, New Gall Midges (Diptera, Cecidomyiidae, Brachineurini, Ledomyiini) From The Late Eocene Rovno Amber, Vestnik Zoologii 48 (1), pp. 35-50 : 44

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.2478/vzoo-2014-0004

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6452803

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/051587BD-FFF8-FF8E-AA85-7001FD53FBE1

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Rhizomyia Kieffer, 1898
status

 

Rhizomyia Kieffer, 1898 View in CoL

Rhizomyia Kieffer, 1898: 56 View in CoL .

T y p e s p e c i e s: Rhizomyia perplexa Kieffer, 1898: 57 View in CoL (monotypy).

D i a g n o s i s ( fig. 5, 1–8, 7, 6, 7 View Fig View Fig View Fig View Fig View Fig View Fig View Fig View Fig ). Wing, body and legs are conspicuously covered by scales. Head almost completely covered by eyes or eye bridge wide. Antennae are 2+9–10-segmented. Male flagellomeres are subcylindrical with neck and swollen basal enlargement with numerous swollen peritremae of setae. Neck of male middle flagellomeres is longer, equal or slightly shorter than basal enlargement. Female flagellomeres are elongated, sessile, subcylindrical, without neck or with very short neck. Male fore tarsi usually with teeth, middle and hind tarsi with or without teeth. Palpi are 3–4-segmented, labrum is triangular. Wing is broad, R 1+2 joins costa before its midlength. R 4+5 is straight, joining C rather near wing apex or at wing apex; C broken at junction with R 4+5; Cu forked. Claws with tooth. Genitalia are transversal. Gonocoxites are short, ovoid or parallel-sided. Gonostylus is long, narrowing apically, terminated by very little apical claw. Cerci with very deep excision. Hypoproct is slightly caved or excavated. Aedeagus is usually shorter than gonocoxites or equal in length. Basal outgrowths (or parameres) of gonocoxites absent. Ovipositor very short, not protrusible, apically with two terminal lamellae.

S p e c i e s i n c l u d e d. Holarctic and Oriental genus with 29 species, 21 of them Palaearctic ones ( Skuhravá, 1997; Mamaev, 1998; Mamaev, Zaitzev, 2002; Fedotova, 2004; Gagné, 2004, 2010; Fedotova, Sidorenko, 2005, 2006 b). Extinct species of Rhizomyia were unknown until now.

B i o l o g y. Larvae of Rhizomyia perplexa Kieffer, 1898 and R. circumspinosa (Rübsaamen, 1899) develop on roots and in sheath of leaves of a sedge ( Carex spp. , Cyperaceae ) ( Mamaev, Krivosheina, 1965).

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Diptera

Family

Cecidomyiidae

Loc

Rhizomyia Kieffer, 1898

Fedotova, Z. A. & Perkovsky, E. E. 2014
2014
Loc

Rhizomyia

Kieffer, J. J. 1898: 56
1898
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