Forcipomyia (Thyridomyia) johannseni Thomsen, 1935
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.5352908 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/0A029528-3F02-EE1D-FF60-158EB394FB80 |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Forcipomyia (Thyridomyia) johannseni Thomsen |
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Forcipomyia (Thyridomyia) johannseni Thomsen View in CoL
Forcipomyia johannseni Thomsen, 1935: 286 View in CoL (New York). Forcipomyia (Euforcipomyia) johannseni: Johannsen 1943: 778 View in CoL . Forcipomyia (Synthyridomyia) johannseni: Wirth 1965: 124 View in CoL . Forcipomyia (Thyridomyia) johannseni: Dow and Wirth 1972: 182 View in CoL (revision of Nearctic Thyridomyia
Saunders; distribution); Wilkening et al. 1985: 517 (Florida records); Borkent and Grogan 2009: 10
(in Nearctic catalog; distribution).
Discussion. Thomsen (1935) described this species from adults that she reared from larvae collected from a wound on the bark of an elm tree in Ithaca, New York. The holotype female and allotype male are pinned, and, Dow and Wirth (1972) slide-mounted at least three paratypes from which they based their redescriptions and illustrations of this species. Subsequently, Wirth identified several specimens from Florida as this species including a male from Orchid Jungle, Dade Co., Florida. Wilkening et al. (1985) listed F. johannseni from Dade Co., based probably on these specimens and noted “This is the first published Florida records of this rare species. It was previously recorded only from New York.” Our examination of this Dade Co. male revealed that it is clearly not an example of F. johannseni as it lacks the characteristic palpal pit of this species, and, its genitalia do not match the illustrations by Thomsen (1935) and Dow and Wirth (1972). Furthermore, its wing length is only 0.63 mm, which is considerably smaller than what Dow and Wirth (1972) recorded for two male paratypes (0.82 mm). We discovered two females and two males mounted on slides in the FSCA from Vero Beach, Indian River Co., Florida that Wirth initially identified as F. johannseni , but he apparently subsequently crossed out that name and wrote in red pencil “tenuichela.” Of these four specimens, only one male is a specimen of F. tenuichela , and a female is a specimen of F. nodosa , however, the second female is a specimen of F. monilicornis . See accounts of these three species for details on these specimens. Because it is now doubtful that F. johannseni actually inhabits Florida, we have removed it from the ceratopogonid fauna of the state.
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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Forcipomyia (Thyridomyia) johannseni Thomsen
William L. Grogan, Jr., Hribar, Lawrence J., Murphree, C. Steven & Cilek, James E. 2010 |
Forcipomyia johannseni
Dow, M. I. & W. W. Wirth 1972: 182 |
Wirth, W. W. 1965: 124 |
Johannsen, O. A. 1943: 778 |
Thomsen, L. 1935: 286 |