Philodoria basalis 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 : 36-38

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.4683224

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/038087CB-FFCD-072A-FF75-9072FBBBA680

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Philodoria basalis Walsingham, 1907
status

 

Philodoria basalis Walsingham, 1907 View in CoL

Figs. 8C–F View FIGURE 8 , 26C View FIGURE 26 , 34D View FIGURE 34 , 37A View FIGURE 37 , 40E–H View FIGURE 40 , 41I View FIGURE 41 , 42H View FIGURE 42 , 43H View FIGURE 43 , 61H View FIGURE 61 , 81 View FIGURE 81 .

Philodoria basalis Walsingham, 1907: 720 View in CoL , pl. 5, fig. 24; Zimmerman 1978a: 695, figs. 468, 475.

Type locality. Olinda (Haleakala), 4000 ft (Maui).

Type material. Lectotype ♀ (=“Type ♂ (26666) Mus. Wlsm” in original description), Olinda, 4000ft, Haleakala, Maui, iv. 1894, Perkins 26666, B.M. ♀ Genitalia slide no. 3952 | PHILODORIA BASALIS, Wlsm. Fn. Hawaii. I. TYPE ♂ descr. figd.| Walsingham Collection. 1910—427.| NHMUK010305331 in NHMUK (here designated). Paralectotype ♂, same locality as holotype, v. 1896, Perkins 28541 | Philodoria basalis ♂ Wlsm PARATYPE 1/1 descr. figd.| Walsingham Collection. 1910—427.| NHMUK 010305332 in NHMUK. Described from two specimens: ‘Type ♂ (26666)’ and ‘paratype’ from Maui. This may indicate that Lord Walsingham considered them as holotype and paratype, as indicated on the specimen label. But because a holotype was not specified in the description, the so-labeled holotype and paratype are to be considered syntypes under Article 73.2 of the Code ( ICZN 1999), and any one is thus eligible for designation as lectotype under Article 74 of the Code ( ICZN 1999). The syntype ‘Type ♂ (26666)’ (= ♀) is here designated as lectotype ( Fig. 8C View FIGURE 8 ), and the other syntype is the paralectotype.

Additional material. 41 (17♂, 20♀, 4 sex unknown). Maui, in BPBM: 1♀, 2 (sex unknown), Keanae, 22.viii.1918, BPBM 34151; 1 (sex unknown), Makawao forest Reserve, 7.v.2013 (stored), C.A. Johns leg., host: Metrosideros polymorpha , 13.iv.2013, CJ112, KT982411 View Materials ; 2♂, 2♀, Makawao For. Res., Flume Rd. 1296 m, N20.80720 W 156.25259, 10–11.v.2013 ( UV Bucket trap 1), A. Prestes & W. Haines leg., SK635–638. Hawaii (Big Island): 1♂, S. Kona, 8.viii.1919, O.H. Swezey Collector, “Ohia”, BPBM 34148; 1♀, Upper Hamakua Ditch Trail, Kohala Mts., 4.ix.1919, O.H. Swezey Collector, “Ohia Lehua”, Z-XII-20-62-4 (“Slight vari”), BPBM 34152; host: M. polymorpha in BPBM: 1♂, Kohala Watershed Partnership, 4.vi.2015 (stored), C.A. Johns leg., 18.v.2015, CJ416, SK775♂; 2♂, 1♀, Puu Makaala Natural Area Reserve, Hawaii, 30.v.& 13.vi.2015 (stored), C.A. Johns leg., 7.v.2015, CJ410, CJ430 / SK776♂, CJ431 / SK778♂; 4♂, 12♀, 1 (sex unknown), same locality, 3.v.–6.vi.2016 em., A.Y. Kawahara leg., 1.v.2016, SKH-09-1 / SK 615♀, SK 616♀, 617♀; 1♂, Volcanoes National Park, Thurston Lava Tube, 24.v.2016 em., C.L.-Vaamonde & C. Doorenweerd leg., 22.iv.2016, HILO019; 4♂, 2♀, Same locality, 16–28.v.2016 em., A.Y. Kawahara leg., 27.iv.2016 (larva); 3♂, 1♀, same locality, 28–29.iv.2016 (light trap). In NHMUK: 1♂, Hawaii 1300’, S. Hilo Distr., Waiakea F. R., Stainback Highway, 21.vi.1976, K. & E. Sattler, B.M.1976-605, Philodoria sp. 11 (Hawaii) Sattler Coll., D. C. Lees Sep. 2016, BMNH(E)1621300; 1♂, Hawaii 1300’, S. Hilo District, Upper Waiakea F. R., Stainback Highway, 9.vii.1976, K. & E. Sattler, B.M.1976-605, Philodoria sp. 11 (Hawaii) Sattler Coll., D. C. Lees Sep. 2016, BMNH(E)1621134; 1♂, Hawaii 2800’, Kau District, Ocean View, 20.vi.1976, K. & E. Sattler, B.M.1976-605, Philodoria sp. 10B cf splendida (Hawaii [=Big Island]) Sattler Coll., D. C. Lees Sep. 2016, BMNH(E)1621065; 1♂, Hawaii 6200’, Kau District, Kahuku Ranch, Punaluu Kahawai, 4.viii.1976, K. & E. Sattler, B.M.1976-605, Philodoria sp. 15 (Hawaii [=Big Island]) Sattler Coll., D. C. Lees Sep. 2016, BMNH(E)1621320; 1♂ 1♀, Kilauea, Hawaii (Big Island), at light (= light trap), 20& 21.v.1915, A. Busck Collector, deposited in USNM.

Diagnosis. A leaden gray patch covers the entire lower (anal vein) portion of forewing ( Fig. 8C–F View FIGURE 8 ). The male genitalia has a broad valva with a short dorsal process, a rather broad and shorter capsule, and a broad phallus. The female has a sclerotized lamella antevaginalis and oblong pod-shaped signa similar to those of P. splendida Walsingham and P. lama sp. n.

Redescription: Adult ( Fig. 8C–F View FIGURE 8 , 34D View FIGURE 34 ). Wingspan 8–10 mm; forewing length 4.5 mm in holotype, 3.8–4.3 mm in the additional specimens examined. Head leaden gray; frons white; maxillary palpus reduced; labial palpus white ( Fig. 34D View FIGURE 34 , 37A View FIGURE 37 ). Antenna grayish fuscous. Thorax: grayish fuscous. Forewing leaden gray suffused with pale brown patches enclosing dark gray fascia; tf from costal 1/3 to dorsal 1/2, tp after the middle to apical portion, distinctly narrowing near the dorsum, containing two short, shining, steel gray costal spots; apical portion with large jet-black terminal patch from tornus to apex, containing two upright steel-gray spots near its opposite extremities; a single bright silvery dot in its middle; a very narrow ocherous line along the base of tornus; cilia shiny, leaden gray with a blackish fringe line; two white costal streaks, longer streak extends to apex; terminal cilia often black. Hindwing tawny black; cilia tawny gray. Abdomen grayish fuscous above, banded with white beneath. Legs pale graysih fuscous, spurs white.

Male genitalia ( Figs. 41I View FIGURE 41 , 42H View FIGURE 42 , 43H View FIGURE 43 ): new record (n=4). Capsule 750 µm. Tegumen 1.1–1.2 x length of valva; valva 500 µm long, rather broad and having a knob-shaped dorsal process; dorsal process densely covered with minute spines ventrally and on inner margin ( Fig. 41I View FIGURE 41 ). Saccus rather short, broad, slightly narrowing in the middle ( Fig. 42H View FIGURE 42 ). Phallus 650 µm long, rather broad; two series of cornuti large and developed in vesica ( Fig. 43H View FIGURE 43 ).

Female genitalia ( Fig. 40E–H View FIGURE 40 , 61H View FIGURE 61 ; Zimmerman 1978a: fig. 474) (n=3). 1450 µm long. Ostium bursae broad; antrum very short and wide; lamella antevaginalis 200 µm, semicircular ( Fig. 40F, H View FIGURE 40 ). End of ductus bursae broad, connecting in dorsal portion of anterior part of corpus bursae; corpus bursae about 1000 µm long; anterior end of corpus bursae weakly sclerotized; some lines consisting of wrinkles running longitudinally, some sclerotized; paired signa oblong and podlike with a series of minute spines ( Fig. 40G, H View FIGURE 40 ).

Distribution. Maui ( Walsingham, 1907) and Hawaii (Big island) ( Zimmerman 1978a).

Host plants. Myrtaceae : Metrosideros polymorpha Gaudich. (present study), Metrosideros sp. ( Zimmerman 1978a).

Biology. ( Fig. 81 View FIGURE 81 ). Zimmerman (1978a: 695) reported the cocoon and mature larval habit based on Swezey's observations. We observed larvae on multiple occasions. Early instar larvae form a slender, linear mine on the adaxial leaf surface that gradually expands into a larger blotch mine as the larva feeds and grows ( Fig. 81A, G View FIGURE 81 ). Mines ~ 5 cm in length, brownish pale green; older mines turn dark brown to pale grayish ocherous and redish brown ( Fig. 81B View FIGURE 81 ). One or two mines per leaf ( Fig. 81E View FIGURE 81 ). The larva nearly always causes the leaf to dehisce from the plant, leading to the mined leaf to fall to the ground. Fully grown larvae exit the mine, and cut an oval ring into the upper (adaxial) epidermis of the bloch mine ( Fig. 81J View FIGURE 81 ). The oval epidermis is folded by the final instar larva by using silk to pulling two ends of the outer surface of the epidermis, creating a “taco”-like cocoon (5.0–6.0 mm in length and 1.5–2.0 mm in width), which hardens and becomes bronze-colored over time ( Fig. 81B, K–M View FIGURE 81 ). The taco often falls out of the oval cut-out in the leaf and falls beneath the leaf litter ( Fig. 81C View FIGURE 81 ), but can occasionally remain attached ( Fig. 81C, D, F View FIGURE 81 ). We suspect it may help avoid parasitoids and other predators while being in a humid environment. The penultimate and final instar larvae are approximately 4–5 mm long and pale yellow ( Fig. 81H, I View FIGURE 81 ). During the day, adults rest on adaxial side of leaves of Melicope species, Rutaceae (not a Philodoria host plant) at Mt. Kaala on Oahu.

Parasitoids. Eulophidae : Euderus metallicus (Ashmead, 1901) ( Zimmerman 1978a) .

Remarks. We identified one adult moth (Coll ID CJ-112 / GenBank accession no. ID KT982411 View Materials ) as P. basalis , based on a leaden gray patch covering the entire lower portion of forewing, from which whole bodies were sacrificed for molecular analysis ( Johns et al. 2016). William Haines (pers. comm.) collected> 10 adults of this species in UV Bucket trap at one night in Makawao Forest Reserve, Maui (10–11.v.2013).

NHMUK

Natural History Museum, London

BPBM

Bishop Museum

UV

Departamento de Biologia de la Universidad del Valle

USNM

Smithsonian Institution, National Museum of Natural History

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Lepidoptera

Family

Gracillariidae

Genus

Philodoria

Loc

Philodoria basalis Walsingham, 1907

Kobayashi, Shigeki, Johns, Chris A. & Kawahara, Akito Y. 2021
2021
Loc

Philodoria basalis

Zimmerman, E. C. 1978: 695
Walsingham, Thomas 1907: 720
1907
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