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Journal of the Lepidopterists' Society 36(2), 1982, 145-147
FOSSIL LEAF-MINES OF BUCCULATRIX (LYONETIIDAE) ON ZELKOVA (ULMACEAE) FROM FLORISSANT, COLORADO
Paul A. Opler
Office of Endangered Species, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Department of the Interior, Washington, D.C. 20240
ABSTRACT. A fossil leaf of Zelkova from the Florrisant formation was found to contain the mine of a species of Bucculatrix. This is compared to mines of extant species of Bucculatrix of the ulmifoliae-group.
Leaf-mining insects, whose larvae feed between the cell layers of individual leaves, are found in four orders, i.e., Hymenoptera, Dip-tera, Coleoptera, and Lepidoptera (Needham et al., 1928). Among the Lepidoptera, the habit is most widespread among primitive superfam-ilies. Some families are composed entirely of leaf-miners, e.g., Erio-craniidae, Gracillariidae, Lyonetiidae, while others have both leaf-mining and external feeding representatives, e.g., Incurvariidae, Gelechiidae (Opler, 1974). Leaf-mining larvae feed in a stereotyped, conservative manner, and their workings may be readily identified to family, genus and even species, even after the responsible inhabitant has departed.
The discovery of identifiable mines on finely preserved fossil leaves has allowed biologists not only to gain insight into the evolution of Lepidoptera, whose fossil record is scant, but to trace back specific insect-host plant relationships into geological time (Lewis, 1969; Opler, 1973, 1974; Hickey & Hodges, 1975).
Opler (1973, 1974) provided evidence from fossil mines that several oak leaf-mining moths from western North America have probably survived virtually unchanged since the late Miocene epoch (18 million years b.p.). Subsequently, Hickey and Hodges (1975) reported that a Phyllocnistis (Phyllocnistidae) fossil mine on Populus of Eocene age was clearly not the same species as any modern Populus -feeding Phyllocnistis.
The present report is of Buccalatrix mines found on fossil leaves of Zelkova drymeja (Ulmaceae) (Fig. 1) from the Florissant formation in central Colorado, which is Oligocene age (30 million years b.p.). The host genus (Zelkova) has long since vanished from North America and today occurs only in temperate Eurasia. The mines are dissimilar to those made by any living North American species (Braun, 1963), but are recognizably similar to, but not conspecific with, Bucculatrix ulmifoliae Hg., which feeds on Ulmus in Europe and by Bucculatrix ulmicola Kuzn., which feeds on Zelkova in eastern Europe (Fig. 2).
This discovery is another important piece of evidence which dem-
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Journal of the Lepidopterists' Society
Figs. 1 & 2. Bucculatrix leaf mines. 1, fossil leaf of Zelkova drymeja from Florrisant formation with Bucculatrix mine (photograph by J. A. Powell); 2, drawing of B. ulmicola mines on Zelkova sp. from Rodini, Rhodos, Austria (drawing by G. Deshka).
onstrates the historical fidelity of host relationships among the Bucculatrix ulmifoliae species group with Ulmaceae for at least 30 x 106 years. Whether the descendents of the Florissant moths eventually shifted their distribution to Eurasia as antecedents of the Bucculatrix ulmifoliae group or whether the Florissant mines represented an invasion from Eurasia which has since died out is indeterminate.
Acknowledgments
Jerry A. Powell provided encouragement and the photograph upon which Fig. 1 is based, while Gerfried Deshka provided the drawing of Bucculatrix ulmicola mines for Fig. 2. Both gentlemen are gratefully acknowledged. I also thank H. D. McGinitie for determining the Zelkova impression from Florissant.
Literature Cited
Braun, A. F. 1963. The genus Bucculatrix in America north of Mexico. Mem. Am.
Entomol. 18:1-208. HiCKEY, L. J. & R. W. HODGES. 1975. Lepidopteran leaf mine from the early Eocene
Wind River formation of northwestern Wyoming. Science 189:718-720. Lewis, S. E. 1969. Lepidopterous larval mining on an oak (?) leaf from the Latah
Formation (Miocene) of eastern Washington. Ann. Entomol. Soc. Amer. 62:1210.
Volume 36, Number 2
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Needham, J. G., S. W. Frost & B. H. Tothill. 1928. Leaf-mining Insects. Williams
and Wilkins Co., Baltimore. 351 pp. Opler, P. A. 1973. Fossil lepidopterous leaf mines demonstrate the age of some
insect-plant relationships. Science 179:1321-1323. --------- 1974. Biology, ecology, and host specificity of Microlepidoptera associated
with Quercus agrifolia (Fagaceae). Univ. California Publ. Entomol. 75:1-83.