Phytomyza lycopi Nowakowski

Guglya, Yuliia, 2021, Rearing mining flies (Diptera: Agromyzidae) from host plants as an instrument for associating females with males, with the description of seven new species, Zootaxa 5014 (1), pp. 1-158 : 71-73

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.5014.1.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:63EEF5A6-EAE0-438F-87BC-AF5806BD3641

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5162426

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/D2619A43-FFBF-2A2A-49DB-A2A0FD4AFC17

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Phytomyza lycopi Nowakowski
status

 

Phytomyza lycopi Nowakowski View in CoL

( Figs. 211–215 View FIGURES 211–220 , 588–593 View FIGURES 588–593 )

Material examined: Ukraine: Kharkiv Region: near Haidary, The National Nature Park “Homilshanski Lisy”, 49°37’N, 36°19’E, 8–18.viii.2020, Yu. Guglya, ex Lycopus europaeus (6♂ 4♀) GoogleMaps .

Host. Lamiaceae : Lycopus europaeus L. ( Nowakowski 1959).

Mine. ( Fig. 211 View FIGURES 211–220 ) The larva forms brown leaf mine that is initially linear, later forming a secondary blotch. The mine can be located apically or marginally. Pupation takes place within the mine on the underside of the leaf ( Fig. 212 View FIGURES 211–220 ).

Puparium. ( Figs. 213–215 View FIGURES 211–220 ) Orange, 2.5 mm long, with distinct segmentation; surface quite smooth except for wide bands of fine spines and the last two abdominal segments finely wrinkled. Posterior spiracles set on wide and short conical protuberances that are entirely separate; black, glossy and two-horned. Ventral portion of last abdominal segment distinctly protruding posteriorly viewed from the side. Anal plate orange, distinctly protruding above the surface of the puparium viewed from the side and directed ventro-posteriorly.

Cephalopharyngeal skeleton. ( Fig. 588 View FIGURES 588–593 ) Right mouthhook much larger than the left, each bearing two strong accessory teeth. Intermediate and pharyngeal sclerites very slender in comparison with mouthhooks. Intermediate sclerite narrow and straight, 1.16× as long as maximum height of left mouthhook. The mouthhook and the intermediate sclerite ventro-anteriorly are strongly sclerotized, the rest of the sclerites much less so especially the ventral cornu. Indentation index 95.

Female head. ( Figs. 589, 590 View FIGURES 588–593 ) Brown, with antenna and postgena black; orbit not projecting above eye in profile; 2 orb s, 2 fr s; lunule broad, high, narrowing posteriorly, reaching the level of the posterior fr s; pped of medium size, flattened apically; gena medially 0.15× as high as maximum height of eye.

Female genitalia. ( Figs. 591–593 View FIGURES 588–593 ) Capsule of spermatheca relatively very small, 0.1× as high as height of anterior part of oviscape. Spermathecae equal in size, dark brown, slightly concave basally and rounded apically, higher than wide. Internal duct invagination widened apically, 0.07× as high as height of spermatheca. Neck of spermatheca cylindrical, strongly sclerotized, 0.15× as high as height of spermatheca. Spermathecal duct weakly sclerotized. Ventral receptacle S-shaped, with weakly sclerotized tail that is two-bladed and widening in basal half. Tail sharply narrowed medially. Body of receptacle flattened cylindrical, with sharply curved basal connecting tube, strongly sclerotized, 2.3× as wide as capsule of spermatheca; with opening equal to the diameter of spherical part of body.

Distribution. Albania, Bulgaria, the Czech Republic, Denmark, Germany, Hungary, Lithuania, Poland, Slovakia ( Papp & Černý 2019). Ukraine (first record).

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Diptera

Family

Agromyzidae

Genus

Phytomyza

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