Craspedochaeta apsilutea, Lonsdale & Marshall, 2006
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.1291.1.1 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:F7C11924-8B4C-475A-8A17-ECA5B8F5747C |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/039F8783-FFEC-CC2C-FEC4-FEBBC20EFEB2 |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Craspedochaeta apsilutea |
status |
sp. nov. |
Craspedochaeta apsilutea View in CoL spec. nov.
( Figs. 17 View FIGURES 10–23 , 27–29 View FIGURES 2729 , 77 View FIGURES 71–77 , Map 1)
Description ( Fig. 17 View FIGURES 10–23 )
Body length 3.2–3.5mm. Bristles light brown with apical scutellar and cephalic bristles yellow; most costal bristles black, those of basal section much lighter. Acrostichal bristle present. Notum black with wide yellow arch looping anteriorly past dorsocentral bristles. Scutellum black. Laterotergites black lateral to scutellum. Pleuron, coxa, and basal 4/5 of femora white with black spot on upper margin of anepisternum; remainder of legs yellow, with hind tibia brownish on basal 2/3 (excluding base) in nontypes. Head mostly yellow; frons dirty yellow to orange centrally; first flagellomere white (lightly infuscated on innerdistal margin in nontype); parafacial and gena white and silvery tomentose; lower margin of face silvery tomentose and strongly recessed into buccal cavity; back of head with one wide, bulging stripe radiating dorsally from foramen. Abdomen dark brown excluding light yellow tergite 1. Wing dusky, but more heavily infuscated on distal ¼ along R 2+3.
Male terminalia ( Figs. 27–29 View FIGURES 2729 )
Annulus well developed (sternites large and well defined). Epandrium as wide as high at widest point and slightly tapered dorsally; length 0.6 times height. Cerci deeply cleft with length 0.7 times that of epandrium. Surstylus 0.8 times height of epandrium with several apical tubercles; moderately bristled on posterobasal half of outer face and well bristled on inner face; twisted with distal portion of inner face visible posteriorly. Pregonite wide and rounded distally with three long distal setulae and numerous minute median bristles; posterodistal margin with one row of five minute setulae. Phallapodeme small and triangular. Basiphallus stout and 0.8 times length of hypandrial arm. Distiphallus large, saclike and membranous with several weakly sclerotized distal sections; basal half stout and straight;
Female
Externally as described for male, except terminalia and apex of scutellum yellow.
Female terminalia ( Fig. 77 View FIGURES 71–77 )
Spermatheca with tip thin, conical and inverted; distal ¼ (excluding apical section) wide, well sclerotized and transversely wrinkled; remainder of spermatheca cylindrical and poorly sclerotized, tapering basally. Spermathecal duct very short and barely discernable from spermatheca. Ventral receptacle subcylindrical with apex rounded; approximately as long as spermatheca; length four times width; subterminal flagellum extremely elongate with apex pointed and weakly annulated.
Etymology: The specific name is the Latin compound for “yellow arch”, describing the notal pattern.
Distribution: Bolivia, Dominican Republic, Ecuador (Map 1).
Holotype: DOMINICAN REPUBLIC. Pedernales, 26km N Cabo Rojo , 565m, evergreen dry forest, 29.xi–3.xii.1991, Masner & Peck (1♂, DEBU).
Additional material examined: BOLIVIA. Depto. La Paz, 8km S Chulumani, Apa Apa , ex. Malaise trap, 1950–2100m, 16°22’S, 67°30.4’W, 24.iii.2001, S.D. Gaimari (1♀, CBFC) GoogleMaps . DOMINICAN REPUBLIC. Pedernales Prov., PN Sierra de Baoruco, Las Abejas , 18°09.011’N, 71°37.342’W, 1150m, 11.vii.2004, N.E. Woodley (2♂♂, USNM) GoogleMaps . ECUADOR. Pichincha: Nanagalito, 7km SE trout farm ‘ San José’ , 1500m, 30.x.1999, S.A. Marshall (1♀, QCAZ) .
Comments: Craspedochaeta apsilutea is a widely distributed but uncommon species that can be easily separated from all congeners by its unique notal pattern.
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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