Bruggmanniella orientalis (Felt)
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4847.1.1 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:1F8E3DED-6EA9-4D8A-8DA9-CD8C0CC9147F |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4476844 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/A32D87D4-1C5C-5369-55DE-FA1A279EE2FE |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Bruggmanniella orientalis (Felt) |
status |
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Bruggmanniella orientalis (Felt) View in CoL . New combination.
[ Figs 10 View FIGURES 10 a–e]
Diceromyia orientalis Felt, 1927b: 388 View in CoL .
Apoasphondylia orientalis (Felt): Gagné 1973: 493 , new combination.
Material examined: Holotype male reared by DvL, 3-ii-1924 from Phoebe declinata Nees. (Lauraceae) collected in virgin forest, near Sibolangit (Medan area), Sumatra, Indonesia, Felt #a3387). The specimen was “badly broken” when Felt (1927b) received it. The Canada balsam slide preparation contains the uncleared body with flagellomeres missing, wings collapsed and only two entire legs present, one fore- and one hindleg. The terminalia are viewable caudally, only the gonostyli are visible.
Description. Male. Length 2 mm. Palpus 1-segmented, twice as long as wide, with long setae [ Fig. 10d View FIGURES 10 ]. First tarsal segment with strong, slightly curved, pointed, ventroapical spur [ Fig. 10c View FIGURES 10 ]. Tarsal claws rather narrow, bent at distal third, empodia reaching bend in claws [ Fig. 10b View FIGURES 10 ], pulvilli tiny. Gonostylus as long as wide at midlength, with two separate, pointed, distal teeth, 3x as long as basal width, one of them slightly shorter than the other [ Fig. 10e View FIGURES 10 ].
Female, pupa, and larva unknown.
Remarks. This species, previously assigned to Apoasphondylia Gagné , a replacement name for the preoccupied Diceromyia Felt , shows no close affinity to the type species A. vernoniae (Felt) that causes an undescribed gall on Vernonia lancifolia Merr. (Asteraceae) in the Philippines ( Felt 1918). That species has a single, bifurcate gonostylar tooth with two greatly uneven points, one of them twice the length of the other ( Gagné 1969 , Fig. 4 View FIGURE 4 ). Known only from the male, B. orientalis could fit in either Bruggmanniella or Pseudasphondylia , genera defined on the basis of larval and pupal characters ( Gagné 1994 ; Elsayed, pers. comm.). We elect to place A. orientalis in Bruggmanniella , the older name of the two possibilities.
Biology. This species induces a complex stem gall on Phoebe declinata ( Fig. 10a View FIGURES 10 ), described and illustrated by DvLR & DvL (1926, gall No. 468, Fig. 331). The gall consists of a large, irregular, amorphous swelling made of hypertrophic bark tissue from which several thin, cylindrical, pointed tubes protrude. The basal swelling is greybrown, about 30 mm long and 10–15 mm wide, and does not alter the woody tissue inside the bark. The protruding tubes, green with red bases, narrow, pointed, hard-walled and 10–20 mm long in total, are embedded within the swelling. Each tube contains a larval chamber that stretches along the length of the tube and is occupied by a single larva.
Geographical distribution. This species is currently known only from the type locality near Sibolangit, Medan area , on the east coast of Sumatra where it was collected from Phoebe declinata 3-ii-1924 .
No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.
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Bruggmanniella orientalis (Felt)
Kolesik, Peter & Gagné, Raymond J. 2020 |
Apoasphondylia orientalis (Felt): Gagné 1973: 493
Gagne, R. J. 1973: 493 |
Diceromyia orientalis
Felt, E. P. 1927: 388 |