taxonID	type	description	language	source
AB40878AFF9B0807FF0DFDCAFD051954.taxon	description	http: // zoobank. org / urn: lsid: zoobank. org: act: 7390 F 13 D-EE 04 - 41 FF-B 001 - 53955 DA 96977 (to be added once manuscript is accepted)	en	Jiao, Ke-Long, Zhou, Xiao-Yi, Wang, Hao, Fu, Huai-Jun, Zhou, Da-Kang, Li, Jing-Bo, Xiong, De-Ping, Wang, Yuan-Hong, Bu, Wen-Jun, Kolesik, Peter (2020): A new genus and species of gall midge (Diptera: Cecidomyiidae) inducing leaf galls on Peking lilac, Syringa reticulata subsp. pekinensis (Oleaceae), in China. Zootaxa 4742 (1): 194-200, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4742.1.13
AB40878AFF9B0807FF0DFDCAFD051954.taxon	materials_examined	Type species: Pekinomyia syringae Jiao & Kolesik, sp. nov.	en	Jiao, Ke-Long, Zhou, Xiao-Yi, Wang, Hao, Fu, Huai-Jun, Zhou, Da-Kang, Li, Jing-Bo, Xiong, De-Ping, Wang, Yuan-Hong, Bu, Wen-Jun, Kolesik, Peter (2020): A new genus and species of gall midge (Diptera: Cecidomyiidae) inducing leaf galls on Peking lilac, Syringa reticulata subsp. pekinensis (Oleaceae), in China. Zootaxa 4742 (1): 194-200, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4742.1.13
AB40878AFF9B0807FF0DFDCAFD051954.taxon	diagnosis	Diagnosis. The genus belongs to the supertribe Lasiopteridi because it has an irregular number of flagellomeres within species, the male and female flagellomeres are barrel-shaped, with male flagellomeres differing from those of the female by longer apical necks, the postvertical peak on the head is absent and the female cerci are fused into a single terminal lamella. Were it not for the missing gonocoxal mesobasal lobes in male terminalia, the genus could be accommodated within the tribe Oligotrophini (sensu Gagné 2016) or Dasineurini (sensu Dorchin et al. 2019). The lack of the mesobasal lobes is a character state unusual among genera of Lasiopteridi which ordinarily have a weakly sclerotized aedeagus supported by variously shaped mesobasal lobes. The aedeagus of the new genus is strongly sclerotized, a character that must have developed parallel with the loss of the mesobasal lobes. The COI and 12 S gene sequences place the new genus among Lasiopteridi, with no proximity to any currently sequenced genera. Therefore, we consider Pekinomyia a Lasiopteridi genus currently not assigned to a tribe.	en	Jiao, Ke-Long, Zhou, Xiao-Yi, Wang, Hao, Fu, Huai-Jun, Zhou, Da-Kang, Li, Jing-Bo, Xiong, De-Ping, Wang, Yuan-Hong, Bu, Wen-Jun, Kolesik, Peter (2020): A new genus and species of gall midge (Diptera: Cecidomyiidae) inducing leaf galls on Peking lilac, Syringa reticulata subsp. pekinensis (Oleaceae), in China. Zootaxa 4742 (1): 194-200, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4742.1.13
AB40878AFF9B0807FF0DFDCAFD051954.taxon	description	Description. Head. Eye hemispheres joined by an eye bridge consisting of several ommatidia. Flagellomeres irregular in number, made up of a barrel-shaped node and a neck that is long in male and short in female; first and second flagellomeres fused. Maxillary palpus 4 - segmented. Thorax. Wing vein R 5 slightly shorter than wing length, C not interrupted at juncture with R 5, R S rudimentary. Tarsal claws simple, empodia longer than claws. Abdomen. Male terminalia with completely setulose gonostylus; aedeagus strongly sclerotized, with few vertical grooves ventrally; non papillose; no gonocoxal mesobasal lobes. Female eighth tergite undivided. Ovipositor short, robust, retractable; fused cerci large, rounded; distal part of 9 th abdominal segment in form of a large, setose lobe. Pupa. Antennal horns small, cephalic papillae with long setae, abdominal segments with no dorsal spines. Larva. The basic pattern of papillae as for Lasiopteridi (Möhn 1955) except reduced lateral and terminal papillae. Sternal spatula bilobed.	en	Jiao, Ke-Long, Zhou, Xiao-Yi, Wang, Hao, Fu, Huai-Jun, Zhou, Da-Kang, Li, Jing-Bo, Xiong, De-Ping, Wang, Yuan-Hong, Bu, Wen-Jun, Kolesik, Peter (2020): A new genus and species of gall midge (Diptera: Cecidomyiidae) inducing leaf galls on Peking lilac, Syringa reticulata subsp. pekinensis (Oleaceae), in China. Zootaxa 4742 (1): 194-200, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4742.1.13
AB40878AFF9B0807FF0DFDCAFD051954.taxon	etymology	Etymology. The name combines Pekinum, the Latin name for Beijing, where the type species of the new genus was discovered, and the suffix - myia, Greek for fly.	en	Jiao, Ke-Long, Zhou, Xiao-Yi, Wang, Hao, Fu, Huai-Jun, Zhou, Da-Kang, Li, Jing-Bo, Xiong, De-Ping, Wang, Yuan-Hong, Bu, Wen-Jun, Kolesik, Peter (2020): A new genus and species of gall midge (Diptera: Cecidomyiidae) inducing leaf galls on Peking lilac, Syringa reticulata subsp. pekinensis (Oleaceae), in China. Zootaxa 4742 (1): 194-200, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4742.1.13
AB40878AFF9B0802FF0DF9FBFB5F1D54.taxon	description	(Figs 1 – 19) http: // zoobank. org / urn: lsid: zoobank. org: act: AE 971 B 12 - CA 82 - 4 C 49 - A 99 D-D 37 EB 26792 B 3 (to be added once manuscript is accepted)	en	Jiao, Ke-Long, Zhou, Xiao-Yi, Wang, Hao, Fu, Huai-Jun, Zhou, Da-Kang, Li, Jing-Bo, Xiong, De-Ping, Wang, Yuan-Hong, Bu, Wen-Jun, Kolesik, Peter (2020): A new genus and species of gall midge (Diptera: Cecidomyiidae) inducing leaf galls on Peking lilac, Syringa reticulata subsp. pekinensis (Oleaceae), in China. Zootaxa 4742 (1): 194-200, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4742.1.13
AB40878AFF9B0802FF0DF9FBFB5F1D54.taxon	materials_examined	Material studied. Holotype male, China, Beijing, Haidian District, Xiangshan, Beijing Botanical Garden (40 ° 00 ′ 01 ″ N, 116 ° 12 ′ 13 ″ E), collected by Huai-Jun Fu as larva feeding in leaf gall on Syringa reticulata subsp. pekinensis, III-IV. 2017, reared in laboratory, deposited in TAUC. Paratypes: 9 males, 12 females, 8 larvae, same data as holotype; 8 pupae, same data as holotype but collected II. 2017; 10 larvae, same data as holotype but collected 8. X. 2017; 10 larvae, same data as holotype but collected 15. X. 2017.	en	Jiao, Ke-Long, Zhou, Xiao-Yi, Wang, Hao, Fu, Huai-Jun, Zhou, Da-Kang, Li, Jing-Bo, Xiong, De-Ping, Wang, Yuan-Hong, Bu, Wen-Jun, Kolesik, Peter (2020): A new genus and species of gall midge (Diptera: Cecidomyiidae) inducing leaf galls on Peking lilac, Syringa reticulata subsp. pekinensis (Oleaceae), in China. Zootaxa 4742 (1): 194-200, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4742.1.13
AB40878AFF9B0802FF0DF9FBFB5F1D54.taxon	description	Description. Male (Figs 1 – 7, 17). Colour of abdomen dark orange (Fig. 17). Wing length 1.4 – 1.7 mm (n = 10), 2.9 – 3.2 x longer than wide. Head. Eye bridge 6 – 7 facets long. First palpal segment shortest, third and fourth longest (Fig. 3). Antenna: flagellomeres 14 or 15 in number, circumfila consisting of two horizontal and two vertical, interconnected bands, neck 1.3 x length of node (Fig. 1). Thorax. Wing (Fig. 4) hyaline, with short setae on anterior edge and long setae on posterior edge, covered with narrow scales, R 1 joining C slightly proximad of wing mid-length, R 5 slightly bent anteriorly near juncture with C, R S in form of angular thickening on R 5 positioned closer to distal end of R 1 than arculus, wing fold recognizable only as area with denser scales, M 4 and CuA forming fork. Legs densely covered with narrow scales and setae. Empodium substantially longer than tarsal claws (Fig. 2). Abdomen. First through sixth tergites rectangular, with single posterior row of long setae, with anterior pair of trichoid sensilla, no lateral and central setae, without scales; seventh tergite as sixth but slightly smaller; eighth considerably smaller than seventh, bare except anterior pair of trichoid sensilla; second through seventh sternites rectangular, with irregular but mostly single posterior row of long setae, dense lateral and several central setae, with anterior pair of closely set trichoid sensilla; seventh sternite as for sixth but slightly smaller; eighth sternite as seventh but considerably smaller. Terminalia (Figs 5 – 7): gonocoxite more than twice as long as wide, without mesobasal lobes; gonostylus slightly tapering posteriorly, arched, fully setulose, sparsely setose, bearing strong comb-like tooth distally; aedeagus about as long as gonocoxite, evenly wide at distal half, rounded apically, strongly sclerotized dorsally and laterally; cerci slightly shorter than aedeagus, round, separated by shallow U-shaped incision, each with several long apical setae; hypoproct as long as cerci, shallowly emarginated, with pair of short setae sub-apically. Female (Figs 8 – 11, 16). Colour of abdomen red (Fig. 16). Wing length 1.4 – 1.9 mm (n = 12), 2.7 – 2.9 x longer than wide. Head. Eye bridge 6 – 7 facets long. Flagellomeres 11 or 12 in number, with very short neck; circumfila consisting of two transverse and two or three longitudinal, interconnected bands (Figs 8, 9). Abdomen. Eighth sternite unsclerotized, with anterior pair of closely set trichoid sensilla. Ovipositor robust, slightly shorter than eighth segment, fused cerci round in lateral view (Fig. 11) and rounded-square in dorso-ventral view (Fig. 10), densely setose; hypoproct rounded-trapezoid in dorso-ventral view, with pair of short apical setae. Pupa (Fig. 15). Head and thorax yellow brown, abdomen whitish yellow at early stage and orange yellow at later stage. Length 1.3 – 1.5 mm, width 0.5 – 0.8 mm (n = 8). Antennal horns acute. Prothoracic spiracle 4 x longer than wide at base, trachea reaching apex. Abdominal spiracles not protuberant. Mature larva (Figs 12 – 14). Colour yellow. Length 1.1 – 2.0 mm, width 0.4 – 0.7 mm (n = 8). Antennae tapered, 2.1 – 2.3 x longer than wide at base, head capsule obtusely rounded, posterolateral apodemes 1.1 – 1.2 x longer than head capsule (Fig. 12). Sternal spatula (Fig. 13) with two rounded anterior teeth divided by shallow U-shaped incision, anteriorly on each side with three setose and two asetose lateral papillae. Terminal segment with two pairs of dorsal setose papillae (Fig. 14). Egg. Spindle-form, translucent, light orange just after deposition, then gradually turning to red, 0.11 – 0.16 mm in length and 0.060 – 0.065 mm in width (Fig. 16).	en	Jiao, Ke-Long, Zhou, Xiao-Yi, Wang, Hao, Fu, Huai-Jun, Zhou, Da-Kang, Li, Jing-Bo, Xiong, De-Ping, Wang, Yuan-Hong, Bu, Wen-Jun, Kolesik, Peter (2020): A new genus and species of gall midge (Diptera: Cecidomyiidae) inducing leaf galls on Peking lilac, Syringa reticulata subsp. pekinensis (Oleaceae), in China. Zootaxa 4742 (1): 194-200, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4742.1.13
AB40878AFF9B0802FF0DF9FBFB5F1D54.taxon	etymology	Etymology. The specific name of the new species is derived from the generic name of the host plant.	en	Jiao, Ke-Long, Zhou, Xiao-Yi, Wang, Hao, Fu, Huai-Jun, Zhou, Da-Kang, Li, Jing-Bo, Xiong, De-Ping, Wang, Yuan-Hong, Bu, Wen-Jun, Kolesik, Peter (2020): A new genus and species of gall midge (Diptera: Cecidomyiidae) inducing leaf galls on Peking lilac, Syringa reticulata subsp. pekinensis (Oleaceae), in China. Zootaxa 4742 (1): 194-200, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4742.1.13
AB40878AFF9B0802FF0DF9FBFB5F1D54.taxon	discussion	Remarks. Syringa hosts two other Cecidomyiidae, belonging to different supertribes than the new species (Gagné & Jaschhof 2017): Asphondylia ligustrinae Kovalev and Mycodiplosis ligustrinaphila Fedotova, both feeding on S. reticulata subsp. amurensis (Rupr.) P. S. Green & M. C. Chang (as Ligustrina amurensis) in eastern Russia (Kovalev 1964, Fedotova & Sidorenko 2004). DNA. The intraspecific similarity of the new species was 98.25 – 100.00 % in the COI sequence (GenBank accession numbers MN 648492 – MN 648501, sequence length 631 bp) and 98.65 - 100 % in the 12 S sequence (GenBank accession numbers MN 648502 – MN 648505, sequence length 370 bp). Thus, the intraspecific divergence of the type population of Pekinomyia syringae was 0 – 1.75 % in COI and 0 – 1.35 % in 12 S. The new species differed substantially from all sequences available in GenBank and BOLD. In the COI sequence, the new species was closest to an undescribed Cecidomyiinae sp. (GenBank: KJ 166670; BOLD: ACB 2773 [identified as Asteromyia sp.] voucher BIOUG 03738 - B 10) with the interspecific similarity of 92.74 – 93.30 % (= divergence of 6.70 – 7.26 %. In the 12 S sequence, the new species was closest to Lasioptera carophila (GenBank MG 684475, sequenced by Sikora et al. 2019) and Dasineura trifolii (GenBank MG 684469, sequenced by Sikora et al. 2019) with the interspecific similarity of 81.51 – 82.07 % and 81.56 % (= divergence of 17.93 – 18.49 % and 18.44 %, respectively). These low levels of similarity in COI and 12 S show that the new species is not closely related genetically to any currently sequenced Cecidomyiidae.	en	Jiao, Ke-Long, Zhou, Xiao-Yi, Wang, Hao, Fu, Huai-Jun, Zhou, Da-Kang, Li, Jing-Bo, Xiong, De-Ping, Wang, Yuan-Hong, Bu, Wen-Jun, Kolesik, Peter (2020): A new genus and species of gall midge (Diptera: Cecidomyiidae) inducing leaf galls on Peking lilac, Syringa reticulata subsp. pekinensis (Oleaceae), in China. Zootaxa 4742 (1): 194-200, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4742.1.13
AB40878AFF9B0802FF0DF9FBFB5F1D54.taxon	biology_ecology	Life history (Figs 16 – 19). Larvae of Pekinomyia syringae induce yellow pustulate galls on the upper side of leaves of Syringa reticulata subsp. pekinensis. The pustules are irregular, 2.0 – 3.0 mm in diamater and about 0.5 mm high, containing a chamber with a single larva (Fig. 18). In 2017, in the Beijing Botanical Garden, up to 120 galls per leaf were found during an outbreak. Adults emerged from the soil beneath the host plant from late March to mid-April. Females laid scattered eggs on the underside of young leaves (Fig. 16). The larval stage lasted from mid-April to October. There appeared to be a single generation per year. In October larvae left galls for the ground where they spun a cocoon, mainly within the top 10 mm of the soil, to overwinter. Pupation took place in the soil and adults emerged from ground’s surface between late February and late March the following year. Currently, the new species is known to occur only in Beijing’s districts of Haidian, Changping, Yanqing, Huairou and Miyun where it has been damaging the street, park and landscape greenery. During the 2017 outbreak, over 90 % of trees were affected in the Beijing Botanical Garden. Since then, chemical and physical control measures have been implemented to reduce the infestation.	en	Jiao, Ke-Long, Zhou, Xiao-Yi, Wang, Hao, Fu, Huai-Jun, Zhou, Da-Kang, Li, Jing-Bo, Xiong, De-Ping, Wang, Yuan-Hong, Bu, Wen-Jun, Kolesik, Peter (2020): A new genus and species of gall midge (Diptera: Cecidomyiidae) inducing leaf galls on Peking lilac, Syringa reticulata subsp. pekinensis (Oleaceae), in China. Zootaxa 4742 (1): 194-200, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4742.1.13
