Philodoria, Walsingham, 1907

Kobayashi, Shigeki, Johns, Chris A. & Kawahara, Akito Y., 2021, Revision of the Hawaiian endemic leaf-mining moth genus Philodoria Walsingham (Lepidoptera: Gracillariidae): its conservation status, host plants and descriptions of thirteen new species, Zootaxa 4944 (1), pp. 1-175 : 90

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4944.1.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:380D2F75-D4F9-4974-97E2-25E0C62CB3B0

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4683580

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/038087CB-FFB7-0756-FF75-96F3FD04A6B9

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Philodoria
status

 

Philodoria View in CoL sp. 1 of Johns et al. (2018)

Fig. 59F, G View FIGURE 59 , 76 View FIGURE 76 , 87E View FIGURE 87 , F.

Philodoria sp. 1; Johns et al. (2018): fig. 2.

Material examined. 3♀, 2 (sex unknown), Ulupalakua Ranch, Maui, 6–11.viii.2014 (stored), C.A. Johns leg., host: Dubautia menzesii , 23.vii.2014, CJ328 / SK 835♀, CJ334 (1♀, 2 sex unknown, only photos), CJ364 /PHIL0021 ♀, in BPBM. The five specimens are all partial and none we felt were eligible as a type specimen, but we consider it distinctive enough and worth describing. What remains of the specimens, CJ328 was mounted as a dry pinned specimen with unspread wings, which has poor condition (stored originally in RNAlater solution); CJ364 only has the genitalia and abdomen remaining. CJ344 was entirely sacrificed for the molecular analysis of Johns et al. (2018) .

Diagnosis. Among Philodoria species having similar ds 2 at middle connecting basal patch i.e., P. keahii , sp. n., P. funkae sp. n., P. pittosporella (Swezey) , Philodoria sp. 1 is distinguished by the narrowing and straight basal patch and pale orange or brown apical portion of the forewing ( Fig. 76 View FIGURE 76 ).

Description: Adult ( Fig. 76 View FIGURE 76 ). Forewing length <2.0 mm, specimen examined was very damaged. Descriptions of the forewing was based on photographs of adult moths (CJ344). Head and frons white; maxillary palpus present; labial palpus white, basal half with ocherous scales. Antenna dark fuscous and same length as forewing. Thorax white and dark brown at lateral side. Forewing dark brown with three outwardly oblique white streaks: cs 3 at 4/5; ds 2 at about 1/2, ds 3 at 2/3; a narrowing white band from base to 1/2 along dorsal margin, connecting a ds 2; all streaks bordered with black scales; apical portion orangish brown and white at center with three costal white lines (a, b, c) at apical cilia; a fuscous spot at apex (as); a fuscous patch at dorsal 3/4; cilia fuscous, bl 1 of terminal cilia orangish brown, tornal cilia interruputed with two white lines. Hindwing and cilia fuscous. Abdomen fuscous, yellow ground color, tuft white.

Male genitalia. Unknown.

Female genitalia. ( Fig. 59F, G View FIGURE 59 ) (n=2). 1050 µm long. Ostium bursae large; antrum cup-shaped with a pair of lateral lobes,; lamella antevaginalis 180–190 µm, weakly sclerotized, indented near the posterior margin, widening toward anterior margin of A7. Ductus bursae rather broad, middle part weakly sclerotized, round and flat; terminus of ductus bursae tubular, biforked. Corpus bursae 530 µm, oblong; paired rows of longitudinal, partly sclerotized wrinkles.

Distribution. Maui.

Host plants. Asteraceae : Dubautia menzesii (A. Gray) D.D. Keck

Biology. ( Fig. 87E, F View FIGURE 87 ). Larvae form a linear mine along the leaf margin making a near complete oval shape. As the larva grows, the mine turns into a blotch.

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