 |
|
(Coleoptera, Diptera, Hymenoptera and Lepidoptera)
by
Brian Pitkin, Willem Ellis, Colin Plant and Rob Edmunds
|
|
|
MADIA.
Tarweeds. [Asteraceae]
|
Two
species of Madia are recorded in Britain. Both are introduced.
Only one British miners is recorded on Madia.
A key to the European miners recorded on Madia is provided in Bladmineerders van Europa.
|
Key for the identification of the known mines of British
insects (Diptera and non-Diptera) recorded on Madia
|
1 > Leaf-miner: A
short linear mine in first instar, later producing a circular or
oval blotch. Frass is excreted in a black mass prior to pupation;
puparium firmly glued with frass within the mine (Spencer,
1976: 306).
Large,
whitish, upper-surface blotch, preceded by a short corridor that
often is overrun later by the developing blotch. The larva hardly
produces any frass; the few grains that are present are black and
rather coarse. But when the larva is about to pupate, it empties
its intestine, which has the effect that the puparium is anchored
in the mine by dried frass.
The initial gallery by the first instar larva then leads to a whitish blotch. The puparium is fixed to the inside of the mine by an accumulation of frass. |
|
On Aster, Bellis and Erigeron, but not yet on Madia, in Britain and
additional genera of Asteraceae elsewhere. Widespread in southern
England and continental Europe. Also recorded in Canada, Argentina, South
Africa, India, Australia and Papua New Guinea.
|
Calycomyza
humeralis (von Roser, 1840) [Diptera: Agromyzidae]. |
|