Icaia cygnus, Zahniser, James N. & Hicks, Andrew, 2007
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.175214 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5671229 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/480487D2-0817-FF9E-FF3F-72AD1106D232 |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Icaia cygnus |
status |
sp. nov. |
Icaia cygnus View in CoL sp. nov.
( Figs. 24–29 View FIGURES 24 – 29 )
Color ivory to ochraceous with extensive brown to black markings. Crown produced, nearly 2x length of inner margin of eye; completely shagreen; depressed; with a pair of large black markings flanking fuscous medial line; posterior margin ivory, with a longitudinal dark dashshaped mark on either side. Anterior margin of head distinctly upturned, glabrous. Ocellus about 3x its own diameter to eye. Transition of crown to face bluntly angulate. Frontoclypeus depressed anteriorly. Eyes notched. Brachypterous; wings veins reticulate and obscure medially. Ventral side of thoracic segments with large black markings. Legs ochraceous with brown markings; protibia formula 3+3, but proximalmost pair small; hind femur formula 2+2+0, with posteriormost seta of penultimate pair reduced in size.
Male. Pygofer subrectangular, with a blunt caudoventral lobe; without macrosetae. Subgenital plates without macrosetae. Connective about 1.2x length of style; with very long and gracile anterior arms; stem short, expanded posteriorly. Style preapical lobe rounded, with a patch of fine setae arising posteriorly; apophysis falcate with medial margin finely serrate. Aedeagus with gonopore on anterior/dorsal side and with a pair of small lamellate triangular processes arising from dorsal margin of gonopore; with a large recurved extension with a strongly sclerotized bifid triangular tip that nearly touches dorsal tip of atrium.
Material examined. Holotype male, PERU: Pasco, 8 km E / Carhuamayo, 4000m / 10°53’07”S 75°56’44”W / 23 Oct 2002, C.H.Dietrich / vacuum, 02351. Holotype deposited at MUSM. Etymology. The species name is a noun in apposition. Cygnus is the generic name for swans, and refers to the apical process on the aedeagus, which resembles the head of a swan in profile.
Diagnosis. The male genitalia of this species resembles that of I. ecphyla Blocker but differs in the shape of the aedeagus with its paired subapical processes (fig. 26).
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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