Published September 7, 2020 | Version v1
Taxonomic treatment Open

Dasineura elatostemmae Felt

Description

Dasineura elatostemmae Felt

[Figs 11 a–g]

Dasyneura elatostemmae Felt, 1921b: 140.

Material examined. Syntypes, male, female, reared from petiole galls on Elatostema sp. [specified as Elatostema paludosum Miq. by DvLR & DvL (1926), see Remarks below] at Mt Ungaran, alt. 1000 m, 1910, Felt #a3095). Felt (1921b) gives the year 1914, likely an error (see DvL 1921). Felt’s single slide bears both type specimens. The male is mounted laterally, the abdomen uncleared, wings entirely shriveled, head and palpi partly shriveled, antennae with all 12 flagellomeres present, slightly shriveled, two legs with all segments, parts of remaining legs missing, terminalia partially misaligned and slightly shriveled. The female is uncleared, with wings entirely shriveled, head and palpi partially shriveled, antennae with all 12 flagellomeres present, slightly shriveled, all legs entire, cerci well-preserved.

Description. Male. Length 1.25 mm (Felt 1921b). Palpus 4-segmented, progressively longer (Fig. 11f). Flagellomeres with nodes twice as long as wide, necks as long as nodes (Fig. 11c). Tarsal claws toothed, as long as empodia (Fig. 11d). Terminalia: mesobasal lobes sheathing aedeagus with 4 short-setose distal papillae, gonoxocal apodemes merged basally, cerci large, tapered to apex, hypoproct divided into two narrow lobes, each with setae apically, gonostylus long, tapered, sparsely setose, setulose at basal 1/7 dorsally and 3/5 ventrally (Fig. 11b).

Female. Length 1.5 mm (Felt 1921b). Flagellomeres with neck 1/10 length nodes (Fig. 11g). Fully extended ovipositor as long as remainder of abdomen; fused cerci 5x longer than wide, cylindrical, setulose, setose, these denser apically, several of them thickened; hypoproct about 1/5 length of cerci (Fig. 11e).

Pupa unknown.

Larva. White (DvL (1921).

Remarks. At the time of the type series collection at Mt Ungaran on 7-v-1910, the host plant was not in bloom and its identification to species level was not possible (DvL 1921). The plant was identified later as Elatostema paludosum Miq. by DvLR & DvL (1926), evidently based on the second collection of this species in xi-1919.

Biology. This species causes [single-chambered] stem and petiole galls on Elatostema paludosum Miq. (Urticaceae). The gall was described by DvL (1921, Fig. 1 [Fig. 11a]) as follows. They are mostly spheroid or oblong swellings of the stem and the midrib. The petiole and the flower stalk can also be infested. The surface is smooth and light green. Inside is a small larval chamber with a white larva.

Geographical distribution. This species is known from its type locality at Mt Ungaran, Java, alt. 1000–1200 m, where it was found 7-v-1910 and xi-1919 (DvL 1921; DvLR & DvL 1926).

Notes

Published as part of Kolesik, Peter & Gagné, Raymond J., 2020, A review of the gall midges (Diptera: Cecidomyiidae) of Indonesia: taxonomy, biology and adult key to genera, pp. 1-82 in Zootaxa 4847 (1) on page 25, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4847.1.1, http://zenodo.org/record/4406856

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Linked records

Additional details

Biodiversity

Family
Cecidomyiidae
Genus
Dasineura
Kingdom
Animalia
Order
Diptera
Phylum
Arthropoda
Scientific name authorship
Felt
Species
elatostemmae
Taxon rank
species

References

  • Felt, E. P. (1921 b) Javanese gall midges. Treubia, 1, 139 - 151.