Linevitshia prima Makarchenko
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.3872.4.2 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:8B19A492-A820-4E19-9F33-2DA9E5AEDB76 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5678551 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03BD401E-E26F-FFF3-E0ED-212FFED0FE11 |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Linevitshia prima Makarchenko |
status |
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Linevitshia prima Makarchenko View in CoL
( Figs. 1–28 View FIGURES 1 – 7 View FIGURES 8 – 11 View FIGURES 12 – 17 View FIGURES 24 – 28 )
Linevitshia prima Makarchenko, 1987: 207 View in CoL , Fig. 1 View FIGURES 1 – 7 ; Brundin 1989: 27, Fig. 4.3; Saether et al. 2000: 134, Fig. 144; Ashe & Connor 2009: 292.
Linevitshia yezoensis Endo View in CoL in Endo, Makarchenko & Willassen, 2007: 93, Figs 1–4, 7–13 View FIGURES 1 – 7 View FIGURES 8 – 11 View FIGURES 12 – 17 ; Ashe & Connor 2009: 292. Syn. nov.
New material examined. Far East of Russia. Jewish Autonomous Region, Obluchie District: 2 males, 1 pupa, 2 larvae, Fedotkin Spring of Bidzhan River basin (Amur River basin), N 48º38' 409'', E 131º37' 217'', 5.IV. 2014, leg. E. Makarchenko; 8 males, 6 pupal exuviae, 12 larvae of fourth instar, the same data except Lopatinskyi Spring, N 48º37' 810'', E 131º39' 114'', 7.IV. 2014, leg. E. Makarchenko. Kunashir Island (Kurile Islands), 3 larvae, unnamed stream of Kipiashee Lake, N 43°51' 521", E 145°29' 530", 28.VII. 2013, leg. D. Palatov.
Description. A detailed description of the adult male based on specimens from Japan is given by Endo et al. (2007) but due to slight differences found, we present a complemented redescription on the basis of the material from the Amur River basin.
Adult male (n = 4, except when otherwise stated).
Total length: 3.8–4.3 mm. Wing length 3.2–3.3 mm. Total length/wing length 1.4–1.5. Coloration: body largely brown to dark brown; head and thorax grayish.
Head. Antenna with 13 flagellomeres and well-developed plume; ultimate flagellomere with 1–2 subapical setae 34–36 µm long. AR 1.10–1.25. Temporal setae: 0–1 weak and short inner verticals and 3–5 stronger postorbitals. Length of palpomeres 1–5 (µm): 40–48, 79–84, 146–152, 168–180, 240–272.
Thorax. Antepronotum with 2–3 dorsal and 8–14 lateral setae. Acrostichals 17–19, dorsocentrals 17–18, prealars 8–10, supralars 3, and scutellars 14–17. Posterior anepisternum II with 4–6 setae. Epimeron II with 8 setae. Wing. Width 0.56–0.80 mm. Costa produced beyond R4+5 on 70–72 µm. Anal lobe developed, round. Brachiolum with 3–5 setae. R with 24–29 setae, R1 with 9–15 setae, R4+5 with 2–5 setae subapically. Alula with 4–6 setae. Squama with 25–31 setae.
Legs. Spurs of fore tibia 88–96 µm, of middle tibia 72–96 and 72–80 µm, of hind tibia 90–100 and 64–84 µm long. Hind tibial comb composed of 12–14 setae. Fore leg with 1 apical pseudospur on ta1; mid and hind legs with 2 apical pseudospurs on ta1 and ta2. Sensilla chaetica absent. ta4 cylindrical, ta5 slightly curved. Pulvilli small. Tip of claws serrate, with about 5 teeth. Lengths and proportions of legs as in Table 1 View TABLE 1 .
Hypopygium ( Figs.1–7 View FIGURES 1 – 7 , 24–25 View FIGURES 24 – 28 ). Tergite IX with 11–18 setae. Anal point absent. Laterosternite IX with 8–13 setae. Gonocoxite 240–256 Μm long. Sternapodeme broadly arched, 180–216 Μm long and 36 Μm wide. Phallapodeme 100–132 Μm long; aedeagal lobe large, forked distally. Gonostylus 112–124 Μm long; in distal part with long, strong setae and 1–2 apical megasetae 8–16 Μm long. HR 1.94–2.29.
Pupa. Specimens from the Amur River basin do not differ from those described from Japan ( Endo et al. 2007).
Fourth instar larva (n = 6).
Total length 6.4–7.1 mm.
Coloration brownish; head capsule light yellow with postoccipital margin black and mandible dark brown or black in apical part; procercus light-yellow.
Head capsule 560–576 µm long and 360–440 µm wide; postoccipital margin narrow. Some setae of head with divided apex ( Fig. 15 View FIGURES 12 – 17 ). Labral setae S I long, divided into 6–8 unequal sized branches. Lamellae consisted of a semicircular row of broad, overlapping scales apically serrate (Fig. 18). Premandible narrow, with 6 inner teeth ( Fig. 17 View FIGURES 12 – 17 ). Length of antennal segments (µm): 62–64, 17, 3–4, 8. Longest branch of antennal blade 267 µm long, shorter branch 217 µm long. AR 2.17–2.38. Mandible with apical tooth in 1.5–1.6 times longer of combined width of inner teeth; seta interna with 3 simple branches (Fig. 19). Mentum with 3 pairs of lateral teeth and wide dome-shaped median tooth; ventromental plate small (Figs. 20–21). Maxillary palp 2–2.5 times longer than wide, with 5 short setae in apical part and 4–5 short setae laterally, basally with ring organ. M appendage of prementohypopharyngeal complex with 2 median lamellae and 6–8 pairs of lateral lamellae (Figs. 22, 27). Abdominal setae short and thin, pale. Procercus 2–2.5 times longer than wide, bearing 5–6 apical setae.
FIGURES 18–23. Linevitshia prima Makarchenko , larva. 18, labral lamellae and S I; 19, mandible; 20, mentum of 4th instar larva; 21, mentum of 3rd instar larva; 22, M appendage of premento-hypopharyngeal complex; 23, antenna. Scale bars: Figs. 18, 23: 20 µm; Figs. 19–22: 50 µm.
Taxonomic notes. In the remarks to description of Linevitshia yezoensis we wrote that “males of L. yezoensis differ from L. prima in the shape of gonostylus and the sternapodeme. L. yezoensis has one apical megaseta whereas L. prima has three to four” ( Endo et al. 2007). Additional study of L. prima holotype, Japanese material of L. yezoensis and the new material of L. prima from Amur River basin showed that shape of transverse sternapodeme of males from all populations are very similar or the same. In the holotype (freshly emerged male specimen), apical part of sternapodeme was not good visible. Shape of the hypopygial gonostylus from all populations are also very similar or the same and depends on its position on slides. Some males of L. yezoensis from Hokkaido have 2 megasetae on gonostylus ( Fig. 3 View FIGURES 1 – 7 ), whereas specimens of L. prima from Amur River basin have 1–2 megasetae ( Figs. 6–7 View FIGURES 1 – 7 ). All other features of adult males of known populations of Linevitshia completely overlap, justifying the presently proposed synonymization of Linevitshia yezoensis Endo and Linevitshia prima Makarchenko.
continued.
fe | ti | ta1 | ta2 | ta3 | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
P1 | 1168–1336 | 1376–1520 | 960–1069 | 451–518 | 301–351 |
P2 | 1152–1269 | 1269–1403 | 560–618 | 304–359 | 217–251 |
P3 | 1376–1503 | 1664–1787 | 832–935 | 464–534 | 272–301 |
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.
Kingdom |
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Phylum |
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Class |
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Order |
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Family |
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Genus |
Linevitshia prima Makarchenko
Makarchenko, Eugenyi A. & Semenchenko, Alexander A. 2014 |
Linevitshia yezoensis
Ashe 2009: 292 |
Endo 2007: 93 |
Linevitshia prima
Ashe 2009: 292 |
Saether 2000: 134 |
Brundin 1989: 27 |
Makarchenko 1987: 207 |