Biology:Rabdophaga rosariella

From HandWiki
Short description: Species of fly

Rabdophaga rosariella
Rhabdophaga rosariella 3548M.jpg
Scientific classification edit
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Insecta
Order: Diptera
Family: Cecidomyiidae
Genus: Rabdophaga
Species:
R. rosariella
Binomial name
Rabdophaga rosariella
(Kieffer, 1897)

Rabdophaga rosariella is a species of gall midge which forms galls on sallows (Salix species). It was first described by Jean-Jacques Kieffer in 1897.

Description

The gall is a small rosette, most often in an axillary bud on sallows. In Britain sallow usually refers to S. aurita, S caprea, S. cinerea and the hybrids between these species. The rosette leaves are not obviously hairy and the full grown larva does not have a sternal spatula (i.e. a structure on the underside of the thorax of the final (third) instar larva of Cecidomyiidae).[1] Larvae of R. rosariella are unique as all other known Rabdophaga larvae have a sternal spatula.[2]

Distribution

Recorded from Belgium and Great Britain.[1][3]

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 Redfern, Margaret; Shirley, Peter; Boxham, Michael (2011). British Plant Galls (Second ed.). Shrewsbury: Field Study Council. pp. 282–299. ISBN 978-185153-284-1. 
  2. Harris, K M (2006). "The willow rosette gall, Radophaga rosaria: name correction". Cecidology (21): 34–35. 
  3. Ellis, W N. "Rabdophaga rosariella (Kieffer, 1897)". http://bladmineerders.nl/parasites/animalia/arthropoda/insecta/diptera/nematocera/cecidomyiidae/cecidomyiinae/lasiopteridi/oligotrophini/rabdophaga/rabdophaga-rosariella/. Retrieved 2 January 2018. 


Wikidata ☰ Q43380524 entry