Dasineura frauenfeldi ( Schiner, 1868 )

Kolesik, Peter & Gagné, Raymond J., 2016, Revision of early taxa of Australian gall midges (Diptera: Cecidomyiidae), Zootaxa 4205 (4), pp. 301-338 : 313-315

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4205.4.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:BAC8F107-21D6-49FE-BAC7-BF4EE6C3E6A4

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4752515

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/D759878B-0E73-EE5E-5BF6-FB902E47FD5B

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Dasineura frauenfeldi ( Schiner, 1868 )
status

 

Dasineura frauenfeldi ( Schiner, 1868)

[ Figs 2 View FIGURE 2 j,7]

Cecidomyia frauenfeldi Schiner, 1868: 7 View in CoL .

Dasineura frauenfeldi , new combination by Kolesik (1999: 31). Dasineura tomentosa Dorchin (in Dorchin & Adair 2011: 68) , new synonym.

Material studied. Schiner (1868) stated that 10 males and 8 females were reared from plant galls collected in Sydney, NSW (between 6th November and 6th December 1858). Lodged at NHMW, dried insect specimens were inside a small glass vial with a cork stopper that was pierced with a pin bearing 3 labels, reading “Cecid. frauenfeldi Schin ”, “Sidney 30.” and “Novara 1857.-59. Reise”, accompanied by a pin with dried plant specimen bearing a gall [ Fig. 2 View FIGURE 2 j middle image]. In the glass vial we found 8 males, 9 females and 2 pupal skins, all of which were mounted. The type males, females, and pupae have retained major morphological characters in at least one specimen except for the terminal antennal flagellomeres which were missing in all males originally ( Schiner 1868) and only one and five basal flagellomeres retaining among all the females. One of the males is designated here as lectotype, remaining 7 males, 9 females and 2 pupal skins as paralectotypes.

Associated gall. Schiner (1868) included in his paper a figure of the gall [ Fig. 2 View FIGURE 2 j left image] and described it as a large ornate pine cone-shaped swelling of the branch tip on Melaleuca sp. Skuse collected this species and corrected the host name to Leptospermum laevigatum (Anonymous 1890) . Based on Schiner’s original figure of the gall and the surviving dried plant specimen [ Fig. 2 View FIGURE 2 j middle image], Martin O’Leary and Hellmut Toelken (pers. comm., 2014), both of South Australian Herbarium, Adelaide, agreed with Skuse (Anonymous 1890) on the host plant being L. laevigatum . Floral and vegetative bud galls of this species on L. laevigatum were collected by Penny Gullan at Wilsons Promontory National Park, Victoria [38°55’S, 146°22’E], in January 2005 and by one of us (PK) at Queenscliff, Victoria, [38°16’S, 144°40’E], on 8th December 2008 [ Fig. 2 View FIGURE 2 j right]. Dasineura tomentosa Dorchin was reared from the same kind of gall on floral and vegetative buds of L. laevigatum at Pearcedale, Victoria [38°14.325′S, 145°14.129′E] in September 2004 ( Dorchin & Adair 2011). Dorchin & Adair’s (2011) description of D. tomentosa fits D. frauenfeldi and confirms the synonymy of D. tomentosa with D. frauenfeldi .

Description [ Fig. 7 View FIGURE 7 ]. Abdomen of adults reddish yellow (Schiner 1858).

Male. Wing 2.1 mm long, 0.9 mm wide. Palpus four-segmented; segments progressively longer, second widest; palpiger present. Eye bridge 6–7 ocelli long. Antennae with 17–18 flagellomeres ( Dorchin & Adair 2011), flagellomeres with largest number 17 but all missing one or more terminal ones. Flagellomeres with necks slightly shorter than nodes, first and second flagellomeres fused dorsally, nodes with two transverse and one vertical circumfila. Wing: R4+5 slightly shorter than wing length, slightly bowed at distal fourth; R1 slightly shorter than ½ wing length; Rs not present; C with break at juncture with R4+5. Tarsal claws toothed, empodia as long as claws. Terminalia: gonocoxite cylindrical beyond mediobasal lobe, lobe divided into dorsal, rounded part covered with long microtrichia and ventral, longer, more tapered part with 3 short setae apically and otherwise covered with microtrichia; gonocoxal apodemes merged basally; gonostylus tapered distally, sparsely setose, covered with dense microtrichia to about 1/3 length dorsally and nearly entirely ventrally, bearing distal comb-like claw apically; aedeagus slightly longer than mediobasal lobe; mediobasal lobe broad, subdivided, the dorsal part of lobe short, hemispherical, long-microtrichose, ventral part tapered, closely sheathing one side of the aedeagus, nearly as long as aedeagus, mostly microtrichose but glabrous apically, tipped with short setae; cerci elliptical in dorsal view, with several setae at posterior edge; hypoproct deeply divided, lobes narrow, each bearing single apical seta.

Female. Wing 2.3 mm long, 0.9 mm wide. Antennae with 18 flagellomeres (Schiner 1858), Dorchin & Adair (2011) give 16–18. Flagellomeres with nodes twice as long as wide, with two transverse and one vertical circumfila, necks 1/7 node length. Seventh tergite widest at posterior edge, width at anterior fourth half of posterior width, sclerites of eighth tergum slightly converging around midlength, trichoid sensilla at anterior fourth. Ovipositor long, protractile; fused cerci cylindrical, 5x longer than basal width, vestiture not present, presumably lost in preparation, hypoproct about 1/8 length of cerci, with pair of apical setae.

Pupa. Length 2.6 mm. Colour: abdomen red, remaining parts brown ( Schiner 1868). Antennal base with small triangular projection. Prothoracic spiracle slightly tapering, many times longer than wide at base, slightly curved at apical fourth, trachea ending at apex. Cephalic papilla with long thin seta. Frons on either side with one asetose papilla, additionally accompanied by one asetose papilla on one side of one of two available specimens. Integument of abdominal segments with spiculae, segments 2–8 each with field of simple short dorsal spines on anterior half, on either side with one outer and one inner asetose dorsal papilla.

Remarks. Dorchin & Adair (2011) described adults, pupae and larvae of D. frauenfeldi (as D. tomentosa ) and compared them to those of Dasineura strobila Dorchin that causes pine-cone like galls on vegetative and floral buds of Leptospermum laevigatum and possibly also on L. myrsioides and L. lanigerum .

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Diptera

Family

Cecidomyiidae

Genus

Dasineura

Loc

Dasineura frauenfeldi ( Schiner, 1868 )

Kolesik, Peter & Gagné, Raymond J. 2016
2016
Loc

Dasineura frauenfeldi

Dorchin 2011: 68
Kolesik 1999: 31
1999
Loc

Cecidomyia frauenfeldi

Schiner 1868: 7
1868
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