Atyphella aphrogeneia ( Ballantyne, 1979 )
publication ID |
11755334 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5324244 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/0394D665-BE05-FF95-FF3C-558B23CBE89F |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Atyphella aphrogeneia ( Ballantyne, 1979 ) |
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Atyphella aphrogeneia ( Ballantyne, 1979) View in CoL
( Figs 118–121)
Luciola (Luciola) aphrogeneia Ballantyne View in CoL , in Ballantyne & Buck, 1979:119. Case, 1984:201.
Atyphella aphrogeneia (Ballantyne) View in CoL . Ballantyne & Lambkin, 2000:15; 2001:374, 2006:30.
Holotype. Male. PAPUA, NEW GUINEA: Madang Pr., 4.59S, 145.40E, Cape Croisilles , Madang District ( ANIC). GoogleMaps
Other material examined. PAPUA, NEW GUINEA: Madang Pr., 4.59S, 145.40E, Madang, B. Challis, male ( SAM) GoogleMaps . VANUATU ( New Hebrides ): 16.19S, 167.30E, Malakula (Atchin Island), L. Cheesman, iii.1930, 2 males; vi. 1929 male ( NHML) GoogleMaps . Rana Island , 30.v.1903, male ( AMS) .
Diagnosis. Dorsal colouration of dark brown elytra and pronotum with median dark markings is similar to that of some Magnalata carolinae ; distinguished by the apical expansion of the male elytra, which are not contiguous dorsally in apical half, taper towards their thickened apices, where the apical ¼ of both epipleuron and sutural ridge and elytral apex are wider than remainder ( Figs 118, 119); females macropterous and capable of flight; larva dorsally black with lateral yellow markings on all but terminal two terga ( Ballantyne & Buck, 1979, Figs 28, 29).
Remarks. Atyphella aphrogeneia occurs in the salt spray zone of coral outcrops near Madang, Papua New Guinea ( Ballantyne & Buck, 1979), where, during the premating exchange of light signals, the female is sessile (but not wingless, see Case, 1984:202) and the male ‘patrols a narrow strip between the surf spray zone and the jungle’ ( Case, 1984:201). It also occurs on island locations in Vanuatu. It is only the second firefly species known from such an unusual habitat (the other is a Jamaican firefly larva, McDermott, 1953). The larva is neither aquatic nor apparently semiaquatic. Ballantyne (1987b:175) suggested that the elytral apex thickening might contribute towards a means of securing mating pairs in an otherwise precarious position on coral outcrops, and the narrowing of the elytral apices afford the abdomen more flexibility. This has not been substantiated by observation.
No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.
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Atyphella aphrogeneia ( Ballantyne, 1979 )
Ballantyne, Lesley A. & Lambkin, Christine 2009 |
Atyphella aphrogeneia (Ballantyne)
Ballantyne, L. A. & Lambkin, C. 2000: 15 |
Luciola (Luciola) aphrogeneia
Case, J. F. 1984: 201 |
Ballantyne, L. A. & Buck, E. 1979: 119 |