CUCUMIS. Cucumbers and Melon. [Cucurbitaceae]


Three species of Cucumis are recorded in Britain the introduced Cucumber (C. sativus), Gooseberry Cucumber (C. myriocarpos) and Melon (C. melo).

Two Diptera miners, the polyphagous agromyzids Chromatomyia horticola and Liriomyza bryoniae, are recorded on Cucumis in Britain.

The anthomyiid Delia platura is recorded on Cucumis (Hering, 1957). However, this is not a true leaf-miner but a soil maggot (G.C.D. Griffiths, pers. comm.) feeding in underground parts of seedlings and young plants.

Elsewhere the polyphagous agromyzids Chromatomyia horticola, Liriomyza bryoniae, Liriomyza huidobrensis, Liriomyza sativae, Liriomyza strigata and Liriomyza trifolii are recorded mining Cucumis.

No non-Diptera miners are recorded on Cucumis in Britain.

A key to the Eruopean mines recorded on Cucumis is provided in Bladmineerders vcan Europa. This includes Chromatomyia horticola, Delia platura, Liriomyza bryoniae, Liriomyza strigata but not Liriomyza huidobrensis or Liriomyza trifolii.




Key for the identification of the mines of British Diptera recorded on
Cucumis




Note: Diptera larvae may live in a corridor mine, a corridor-blotch mine, or a blotch mine, but never in a case, a rolled or folded leaf, a tentiform mine or sandwiched between two more or less circular leaf sections in later instars. Pupation never in a cocoon. All mining Diptera larvae are leg-less maggots without a head capsule (see examples). They never have thoracic or abdominal legs. They do not have chewing mouthparts, although they do have a characteristic cephalo-pharyngeal skeleton (see examples), usually visible internally through the body wall. The larvae lie on their sides within the mine and use their pick-like mouthparts to feed on plant tissue. In some corridor miners frass may lie in two rows on alternate sides of the mine. In order to vacate the mine the fully grown larva cuts an exit slit, which is usually semi-circular (see Liriomyza huidobrensis video). The pupa is formed within the hardened last larval skin or puparium and as a result sheaths enclosing head appendages, wings and legs are not visible externally (see examples).

1a > Leaf-miner: A short, irregular, linear upper surface mine on any part of the leaf. Puparium pale yellowish brown

On 119 plant genera in 31 plant families of which only 4 plant genera in 2 plant families, ncluidng Cucumis, are records in Britain. Local, probably introduced to Britain. Widespread in continental Europe particularly in Botanical Gardens and glasshouses. Also recorded in Egypt.

Liriomyza bryoniae (Kaltenbach, 1858) [Diptera: Agromyzidae].

1b > Leaf-miner: Mine linear, whitish, both upper and lower surface. Pupation internal, at the end of the mine with the anterior spiracles projecting through the epidermis (Spencer, 1976: 433). Upper-surface, less often lower-surface corridor. Frass in isolated grains. Pupation within the mine, in a, usually lower-surface, pupal chamber (Bladmineerders van Europa). A long whitish upper surface corridor, which eventually goes lower surface (British leafminers).

Two highly polyphagous species of Chromatomyia, with indistinguishable mines, have been recorded in Britain. These are syngenesiae (Hardy) and horticola (Goureau) which can only be distinguished by the male genitalia. Both are polyphagous and widespread in Britain and elsewhere, although syngenesiae is almost entirely restricted to Asteraceae (see also 'atricornis').

Chromatomyia horticola is recorded on 55 plant genera in 19 families including Cucumis in Britain.

Chromatomya syngenesiae is recorded in Britain on 27 plant genera in the family Asteraceae and many more genera elsewhere, but not yet on Cucumis in Britain.

Chromatomyia horticola (Goureau, 1851) [Diptera: Agromyzidae].
OR
Chromatomyia syngenesiae Hardy, 1849 [Diptera: Agromyzidae].



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