Orseolia Kieffer & Massalongo, 1902

Kolesik, Peter & Gagné, Raymond J., 2020, A review of the gall midges (Diptera: Cecidomyiidae) of Indonesia: taxonomy, biology and adult key to genera, Zootaxa 4847 (1), pp. 1-82 : 48

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.4476881

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/A32D87D4-1C64-535E-55DE-FA8B2697E733

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scientific name

Orseolia Kieffer & Massalongo
status

 

Orseolia Kieffer & Massalongo View in CoL View at ENA in Indonesia

This is a genus of 28 known species mainly of tropical Asia, but three from tropical Africa, one from the Mediterranean Region and one from Japan and Korea. One of the more important species is O. oryzae , a pest of rice in Indonesia and elsewhere. All form leaf sheath galls on grasses ( Poaceae ). One remarkable aspect of these galls is that they continue to lengthen after the larva turns into a pupa. DvLR & DvL (1926) attribute this to the continued absorption of water by the plant. Seven species are known from Indonesia and all were part of a generic revision by Gagné (1985) . They are fairly large gall midges with a wing length of 2.3-4.5 mm, the R 5 vein bowed to join C beyond the wing apex [ Fig. 31h View FIGURES 31 ]. Heads lack an occipital protuberance. The last flagellomere usually has a conical extension at its apex [ Figs. 27f View FIGURES 27 , 31j View FIGURES 31 ]. Male flagellomeres have two nodes, the proximal spherical, with one whorl of looped circumfila, the distal prolonged, slightly constricted at midlength, with two whorls of looped circumfila. Tarsal claws are simple, narrow, bent at distal third, and are as long as the empodia [ Fig. 31g View FIGURES 31 ]. Female cerci are large, ovate and covered with setae among which is a pair of thick, blunt, apical setae [ Fig. 31e View FIGURES 31 ]. Some of the best taxonomic characters in the genus are differences in male terminalia and pupal antennal horns. Larvae are known for only two species but they do have a spatula. We do not repeat below all details of descriptions from Gagné (1985) but present additional, new morphological drawings as well as illustrations of galls from DvLR and DvL (1926).

Gagne, R. J. (1985) A taxonomic revision of the Asian rice gall midge, Orseolia oryzae (Wood-Mason), and its relatives (Diptera: Cecidomyiidae). Entomography, 3, 127 - 162.

Gallery Image

FIGURES 27a–g. Orseolia caulicola: a, gall on Sacciolepis indica (arrows indicate galls; Fig. 36 of DvLR & DvL (1926), gall No 59); b–g, male: b, distal part of wing; c, palpus; d, terminalia (dorsal); e, 3rd flagellomere (circumfila partly obscured on specimen); f, 12th flagellomere; g, claw and empodium.

Gallery Image

FIGURES 31a–j. Orseolia oryzae: a, gall on Oryza sativa in India (arrow indicates gall; photo from NICRA, 2011); b, male terminalia (dorsal); c, 3rd male flagellomere; d, 3rd female flagellomere; e, female 10th tergite and cerci (dorsolateral; arrow indicates pair of thick setae on cercus; Karawang, Java, Indonesia); f, female 10th tergite (Cuttack, Odisha, India); g, claw and empodium; h, wing; i, female head; j, female flagellomeres 3–12. Fig. b from Harris & Gagné (1982), Figs c–f from Gagné (1985).

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Diptera

Family

Cecidomyiidae