Phyllocnistis, Zeller, 1848

Kirichenko, Natalia, Triberti, Paolo, Akulov, Evgeniy, Ponomarenko, Margarita, Gorokhova, Svetlana, Sheiko, Viktor, Ohshima, Issei & Lopez-Vaamonde, Carlos, 2019, Exploring species diversity and host plant associations of leaf-mining micromoths (Lepidoptera: Gracillariidae) in the Russian Far East using DNA barcoding, Zootaxa 4652 (1), pp. 1-55 : 39

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4652.1.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:6A7D6858-A43D-4FD5-8B76-FE3C1EB8DAB3

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5584304

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/4F5D878B-2567-E04E-FF79-B9B6FB2BF9F0

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Phyllocnistis
status

 

Phyllocnistis View in CoL sp. 1

( Fig. 14H View FIGURE 14 )

Material examined. Russia: PK, Gornotaezhnoe , forest around MTS, 43.68N, 132.17E, 224 m alt., Salix sp., 23.VII.2016, 1 larva, NK595 GoogleMaps , MG 191427 View Materials , deposited in INRA.

Leaf mine. The mine is a long relatively slender whitish epidermal tunnel, slightly wavy, usually starting at the leaf tip and proceeding along the main vein, on the lower side of the leaf ( Fig. 14H View FIGURE 14 ). The growing mine increases in width insignificantly. Pupation in the mine, in the cocoon, near the leaf margin on the lower side ( Fig. 14H View FIGURE 14 ).

Trophic specialization. Monophagous on Salix sp. ( Salicaceae ).

Distribution. Russia: RFE—PK.

Remarks. BIN of unknown species—BOLD: ADF2906. Overall, only two Salix -feeding Phyllocnistis are known in East Asia: Ph. gracilistylella Kobayashi, Jinbo et Hirowatari and Ph. saligna (Zeller) ( De Prins & De Prins 2018) . Other three species that develop on Salix , occurs in the western part of the Palearctic: Ph. canariensis Hering , Ph. ramulicola Langmaid et Corley and Ph. valentinensis Hering ( De Prins & De Prins 2018) . The DNA barcode sequence of Phyllocnistis sp. 1 does not match any of these species. The closest neighbor, with 4.9% divergence, is Ph. valentinensis from Austria, followed by Ph. gracilistylella from Japan, 6.4% ( Table 2 View TABLE 2 ). Other three species are significantly genetically distant from Phyllocnistis sp. 1, i.e.> 12.9 % ( Table 2 View TABLE 2 ). Phyllocnistis sp. 1 is a putative new species to science. It was mentioned in our recent study ( Kirichenko et al. 2018a).

MG

Museum of Zoology

GBIF Dataset (for parent article) Darwin Core Archive (for parent article) View in SIBiLS Plain XML RDF