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  • Van Nieukerken <i>et al.</i> (2010)
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  • Van Nieukerken <i>et al.</i> (2010)
dct:abstract
  • h e nine western Palaearctic species of the subgenus Zimmermannia Hering, 1940 and 48 species in the subgenus Ectoedemia Busck, 1907 of the genus Ectoedemia are reviewed. One species in the subgenus Zim- mermannia and four species in the subgenus Ectoedemia are described as new: Ectoedemia (Zimmermannia) vivesi A. Lastuvka, Z. Lastuvka & Van Nieukerken sp. n. from southern Spain and Cyprus with unknown host plant, Ectoedemia (E.) hendrikseni A. Lastuvka, Z. Lastuvka & Van Nieukerken sp. n. from south- ern France on Quercus suber, E. (E.) heckfordi Van Nieukerken, A. Lastuvka & Z. Lastuvka sp. n. from southern England on Quercus petraea and Q. robur, E. (E.) phaeolepis Van Nieukerken, A. Lastuvka & Z. Lastuvka sp. n. from Spain and Portugal probably on Quercus ilex and Q. rotundifolia and E. (E.) coscoja Van Nieukerken, A. Lastuvka & Z. Lastuvka sp. n. from Spain on Quercus coccifera. h e following species are redescribed: Ectoedemia (Zimmermannia) hispanica Van Nieukerken 1985, Ectoedemia (Zimmerman- nia) reichli Z. & A. Lastuvka 1998, Ectoedemia (E.) algeriensis van Nieukerken 1985, E. (E.) pseudoilicis Z. & A. Lastuvka 1998 and E. (E.) alnifoliae van Nieukerken 1985. Ectoedemia albiformae Puplesis & mannia) nuristanica Van Nieukerken, 1985; further the four species described from Tadzhikistan since 1985 are excluded (Puplesis 1988a; 1994). However, the Kopet Dag range in Turkmenistan and all of Iran are included: they have an essentially Euro- pean-Mediterranean fauna. h e fauna associated with oaks apparently is much richer than was understood in 1985, and especially in the Mediterranean region identii cation can be dii cult. We recognize now 26 species in all, seven in the suberis group, and 19 in the subbimaculella group, although the specii c status of a few in the latter is uncertain. To aid in the iden- tii cation, we provide new keys for the Quercus feeding species as well as one for the subgenus Zimmermannia. Together with the recent revision of the oak mining species of Stigmella (Van Nieukerken and Johansson 2003), all western Palaearctic Nepticuli- dae mining Quercus can now be safely identii ed in the adult stage. As in Stigmella, identii cation of mines alone is only possible for some of the species, but DNA barcoding of larvae is already becoming a good alternative to rearing adults (Van Nieukerken & Doorenweerd in preparation).
bibo:abstract
  • h e nine western Palaearctic species of the subgenus Zimmermannia Hering, 1940 and 48 species in the subgenus Ectoedemia Busck, 1907 of the genus Ectoedemia are reviewed. One species in the subgenus Zim- mermannia and four species in the subgenus Ectoedemia are described as new: Ectoedemia (Zimmermannia) vivesi A. Lastuvka, Z. Lastuvka & Van Nieukerken sp. n. from southern Spain and Cyprus with unknown host plant, Ectoedemia (E.) hendrikseni A. Lastuvka, Z. Lastuvka & Van Nieukerken sp. n. from south- ern France on Quercus suber, E. (E.) heckfordi Van Nieukerken, A. Lastuvka & Z. Lastuvka sp. n. from southern England on Quercus petraea and Q. robur, E. (E.) phaeolepis Van Nieukerken, A. Lastuvka & Z. Lastuvka sp. n. from Spain and Portugal probably on Quercus ilex and Q. rotundifolia and E. (E.) coscoja Van Nieukerken, A. Lastuvka & Z. Lastuvka sp. n. from Spain on Quercus coccifera. h e following species are redescribed: Ectoedemia (Zimmermannia) hispanica Van Nieukerken 1985, Ectoedemia (Zimmerman- nia) reichli Z. & A. Lastuvka 1998, Ectoedemia (E.) algeriensis van Nieukerken 1985, E. (E.) pseudoilicis Z. & A. Lastuvka 1998 and E. (E.) alnifoliae van Nieukerken 1985. Ectoedemia albiformae Puplesis & mannia) nuristanica Van Nieukerken, 1985; further the four species described from Tadzhikistan since 1985 are excluded (Puplesis 1988a; 1994). However, the Kopet Dag range in Turkmenistan and all of Iran are included: they have an essentially Euro- pean-Mediterranean fauna. h e fauna associated with oaks apparently is much richer than was understood in 1985, and especially in the Mediterranean region identii cation can be dii cult. We recognize now 26 species in all, seven in the suberis group, and 19 in the subbimaculella group, although the specii c status of a few in the latter is uncertain. To aid in the iden- tii cation, we provide new keys for the Quercus feeding species as well as one for the subgenus Zimmermannia. Together with the recent revision of the oak mining species of Stigmella (Van Nieukerken and Johansson 2003), all western Palaearctic Nepticuli- dae mining Quercus can now be safely identii ed in the adult stage. As in Stigmella, identii cation of mines alone is only possible for some of the species, but DNA barcoding of larvae is already becoming a good alternative to rearing adults (Van Nieukerken & Doorenweerd in preparation).
dct:issued
dct:bibliographicCitation
  • Van Nieukerken, E. J., Laštůvka, A. &amp; Laštůvka, Z. 2010. Western Palaearctic <em>Ectoedemia</em> (<em>Zimmermannia</em>) Hering and <em>Ectoedemia</em> Busck s. str. (Lepidoptera, Nepticulidae): five new species and new data on distribution, hostplants and recognition. <em>ZooKeys</em>, 32: 1-82.
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