Antispila ampelopsifoliella Chambers

Nieukerken, Erik J. van, Wagner, David L., Baldessari, Mario, Mazzon, Luca, Angeli, Gino, Girolami, Vicenzo, Duso, Carlo & Doorenweerd, Camiel, 2012, Antispila oinophylla new species (Lepidoptera, Heliozelidae), a new North American grapevine leafminer invading Italian vineyards: taxonomy, DNA barcodes and life cycle, ZooKeys 170, pp. 29-77 : 45

publication ID

https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.170.2617

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/AA691C0D-B4FC-74AF-3CA0-00AD7264F11B

treatment provided by

ZooKeys by Pensoft

scientific name

Antispila ampelopsifoliella Chambers
status

 

Antispila ampelopsifoliella Chambers Figs 3542, 435356

Antispila ampelopsifoliella Chambers, 1874a: 168. Syntypes: leafmines [USA: Kentucky, Covington] on Ampelopsis quinquefolia [= Parthenocissus quinquefolia ], “pseudotypes”, Kentucky, Covington (MCZ) [examined].

Antispila ampelopsisella Chambers, 1874a: 197. Subsequent incorrect spelling.

Antispila ampelopsiella Chambers, 1874a: 198. Subsequent incorrect spelling.

Antispila ampelopsifoliella ; Needham et al. 1928: 289 [partim]; Davis 1983: 4 [partim].

Antispila ampelopsiella ; Dyar et al. 1903: 539 [partim]; Barnes and McDunnough 1917: 181 [partim]; Forbes 1923: 226; McDunnough 1939 [partim]: 91; Brower 1984: 29 [partim].

Differential diagnosis.

We cannotseparate Antispila ampelopsifoliella (Fig. 35) from Antispila oinophylla based on external characters: it may average a bit smaller, but our samples are too few in number to make statistical comparisons. In the male genitalia (Figs 42-43), uncus not bilobed; valva with pecten with ca. 11-13 comb spines, base of valva with rounded lobe, not triangular; juxta rather wide, with lateral groups of spines; phallus with much shorter terminal spines and a comb of rather short triangular spines near phallotrema. Female genitalia (Fig. 53): ovipositor only with 3 cusps at either side. Vestibulum with some spines.

Biology.

Hostplant: Parthenocissus quinquefolia .

Leafmines

(Fig. 56). Egg usually inserted in leaf under- or upperside close to a vein, mine starting with a relatively long contorted gallery with thin broken frass, or when it runs along margin in a straighter course, later abruptly enlarged into elongate blotch or wide gallery; frass dispersed in middle. The early narrow gallery may be as long as the elongate blotch. The mine can be found in any part of the leaf. Larva yellowish white, black head, cut-out ca 3.5-4 mm long. The mine resembles that of Antispila hydrangaeella . It was most frequently found in the larger and thinner ground leaves of Virginia creeper.

Distribution.

Eastern North America, confirmed from USA: Connecticut, Kentucky, New York, Vermont and Canada: Ontario.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Lepidoptera

Family

Heliozelidae

Genus

Antispila