Agromyza reptans Fallén

Guglya, Yuliia, 2021, Rearing mining flies (Diptera: Agromyzidae) from host plants as an instrument for associating females with males, with the description of seven new species, Zootaxa 5014 (1), pp. 1-158 : 10-12

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.5014.1.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:63EEF5A6-EAE0-438F-87BC-AF5806BD3641

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5162346

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/D2619A43-FFF0-2A69-49DB-A23BFDC0FBA3

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Agromyza reptans Fallén
status

 

Agromyza reptans Fallén View in CoL

( Figs. 16–18 View FIGURES 9–18 , 300–304 View FIGURES 295–304 )

Material examined: Ukraine: Transcarpathia: near Chop, flood land on the River Latoritsa Bank, 48°27’N, 22°12’E, 18.ix.2016, Yu. Guglya, ex Urtica dioica (6 puparia); “Skalka”, near Uzhhorod, 48°41’N, 22°24’E, 16.vii.2017, Yu. Guglya, ex Urtica dioica (3 puparia); same locality, 17.ix.2017, Yu. Guglya, ex Urtica dioica (7 puparia); Esen, near Uzhhorod, 48°21’N, 22°16’E, 19.ix.2016, Yu. Guglya, ex Urtica dioica (12 puparia); near Lubnya, Uzhanskyi National Park, 49°00’N, 22°43’E, 5.vii.2019, Yu. Guglya, ex Urtica dioica (1 puparium); Khust, 48°09’N, 23°18’E, 22.ix.2016, Yu. Guglya, ex Urtica dioica (8 puparia); Volyn Region: near Shatsk, The Shatsk National Nature Park, 52°34’N, 23°54’E, 12.viii.2016 —mines collected, Yu. Guglya, ex Urtica dioica — 17.iii.2017 (2♀ 15 puparia); same locality, 27.v.2019 —mine collected, Yu. Guglya, ex Urtica dioica (1 puparium); Dachne, near Lutsk, 50°48’N, 25°22’E, 7.vi.2019, Yu. Guglya, ex Urtica dioica (5 puparia); Vinnytsa Region: near Dokhno, 48°16’N, 29°18’E, 2.vii.2019, Yu. Guglya (2♂ 1♀); Kharkiv Region: near Petrivske, 49°10’N, 36°58’E, 11.vii.2014, Yu. Guglya, ex Urtica dioica (1 puparium); Donetsk Region: Kryva Luka, 13 km SEE Lyman, 48°52’N, 37°54’E, 1.vi.2019, Yu. Guglya, ex Urtica dioica (4 puparia).

Hosts. Urticaceae : Urtica spp. , Parietaria L.; Cannabaceae : Cannabis L., Humulus L.; Mentzelia Plum. ex L. ( Spencer 1976).

Mine. The larva forms a greenish-black full-depth blotch mine. In the early stage it is located mainly along the leaf margin and then can spread to occupy the whole leaf (depending on the leaf size). Three larvae feed together in one mine. Pupation takes place outside the mine in the soil.

Puparium. ( Figs. 16–18 View FIGURES 9–18 ) Reddish-brown, glossy, 3.2 mm long, with deep segmentation; surface quite smooth except for spine bands. Both posterior spiracles set on one stout conical protuberant mounting; brown, with three strong orange bulbs set in a circular configuration at acute angles to each other. Anal plate black, not protruding above the surface of the puparium viewed from the side and directed ventro-posteriorly.

Cephalopharyngeal skeleton. ( Figs. 300, 301 View FIGURES 295–304 ) Both mouthhooks equal in size and shape, rounded ventrally. Each mouthhook bears two sharp accessory teeth. Intermediate sclerite long and narrow, 1.16× as long as height of mouthhook. Straight parastomal bar exist. Dorsal and ventral cornua bear wide and long “closed” windows. Intermediate sclerite strongly sclerotized only in dorso-anterior half. The pharyngeal sclerite is much more sclerotized ventro-anteriorly. Indentation index 83. See also in Sasakawa (1961: Fig. 11 l View FIGURES 9–18 ).

Female head. ( Figs. 302, 303 View FIGURES 295–304 ) Black, with orbit not projecting above eye in profile, 2 orb s, 3 fr s and low, largerly semicircular lunule, reaching the level between 2 nd and 3 rd fr s; pped elongated, flattened ventrally with white pubescence; gena medially 0.1× as high as maximum height of eye.

Female genitalia. ( Fig. 304 View FIGURES 295–304 ) Spermathecae unequal in size, brown, with corrugated surface, flattened basally, with wide and shallow internal duct invagination. Neck of spermatheca narrow and strongly sclerotized. Shape of capsule of spermatheca can be rounded, trapezoid or rectangular. Proctiger and egg guide see in Sasakawa (1961: Fig. 11 h, g View FIGURES 9–18 ).

Distribution. Extremely widely distributed species known from the Palaearctic, Nearctic, and Oriental Regions ( Papp & Černý 2015; Eiseman & Lonsdale 2018; Černý & Roháček 2020). Also widespread in Ukraine ( Guglya 2011, 2012, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2020).

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Diptera

Family

Agromyzidae

Genus

Agromyza

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