common name: blotch leafminer
scientific name: Amauromyza maculosa (Malloch) (Insecta: Diptera: Agromyzidae)

Introduction - Synonymy - Distribution - Identification - Hosts - Leaf Damage - Management - Selected References

Introduction

A blotch leafminer, Amauromyza maculosa (Malloch), is a pest of dooryard plantings of chrysanthemum throughout most of Florida. It is not an important pest of commercial chrysanthemums in the principal commercial planting areas of Bradenton-Ft. Myers and Stuart-Delray Beach. This species, which, according to Spencer and Stegmaier (1973), probably evolved in South America and has extended its range into North America since the end of the Pleistocene Period, may be distinguished readily from related species by the variegated color of the halteres of the adult flies. The large blotch mines, produced on foliage by the feeding of the larvae, are similar to those produced by larvae of another agromyzid fly, Nemorimyza posticata (Meigen), which also occurs in Florida and usually on Solidago and Aster.

foliar damage

Synonymy

Agromyza maculosa Malloch, 1913: 302. Holotype female from Jamaica, New York, in U.S. National Museum of Natural History.
Phytobia (Amauromyza) maculosa Frick, 1952: 393.

Distribution

Throughout most of the United States, including Florida and Hawaii; Antilles, Bahamas, Bermuda, Costa Rica, Argentina, Brazil, Uruguay and Venezuela.

Identification

The adult is a small, shiny black, clear-winged fly about 2.2 to 2.7 mm long. Head entirely black; mesonotum shining black; pleura and legs entirely black; squamae and fringe silvery white; halteres variegated, primarily white, but knob with a conspicuous black area above; wing length about 2.2 to 2.7 mm. Larvae are yellowish white, about 3 mm long, and make blotch-like tunnels within leaves where these larvae are readily visible as they feed.

adult

mature larva

Hosts

Polyphagous on Compositae; known hosts in Florida include Baccharis, Bidens, Chrysanthemum, Emilia, Erechtites, Eupatorium, Gaillardia, Gnaphalium, Helianthus, Melanthera, Senecio, Sonchus, and Tagetes. Recorded hosts elsewhere include Arctium, Artemisia, Aster, Erigeron, Lactuca, and Xanthium.

Leaf Damage

Feeding larvae cause conspicuous blotch mines in foliage before they emerge and pupate externally. Injury to foliage by mines and oviposition punctures causes plant to be unsightly. Heavy infestations may cause some leaf mortality. Three to six larvae are common in a single leaf, frequently forming a large community mine.

severely infested plant

blotch mine with exposed larva

oviposition punctures

Management

Pest management programs for commercial production of chrysanthemums are sufficient to control A. maculosa.

Insect Management Guide for landscape plants

Selected References


Author: H.V. Weems, Jr., and G.W. Dekle, Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services, Division of Plant Industry.
Originally published as DPI Entomology Circular 132.
Photographs: Division of Plant Industry
Project Coordinator: Thomas R. Fasulo, University of Florida
Publication Number: EENY-73
Publication Date: February 1999. Latest revision: December 2002.
Copyright 1999-2002 University of Florida

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