Osculonirmus Mey, 1982

Bush, Sarah E., 2017, Morphological revision of the hyperdiverse Brueelia - complex (Insecta: Phthiraptera: Ischnocera: Philopteridae) with new taxa, checklists and generic key, Zootaxa 4313 (1), pp. 1-443 : 82-83

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4313.1.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:A5Fdfba5-F992-44A8-84C2-1756C943C19B

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5296897

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/832187E9-FFDB-FF91-FF74-645CFDA4F8D3

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scientific name

Osculonirmus Mey, 1982
status

 

Osculonirmus Mey, 1982

Brueelia Kéler, 1936a: 257 (in partim). Osculonirmus Mey, 1982a: 59 .

Type species. Osculonirmus limpidus Mey, 1982a: 60 , by original designation.

Diagnosis. Osculonirmus is superficially similar in general habitus to Brueelia s. str., but does not appear to be closely related to any other genus treated here. As in Anarchonirmus n. gen. ( Fig. 116 View FIGURES 116 – 121 ) s3 is a mesoseta and the antennae are sexually dimorphic in Osculonirmus ( Figs 124–125 View FIGURES 124 – 129 ), with flagellomeres II–III modified in males of both species. In both genera psps are present on tergopleurites II–III of both sexes ( Table 2), but aps are absent in Osculonirmus , and the pss is not contiguous with the aperture of psps II–III in Anarchonirmus ( Figs 114–115 View FIGURES 114 – 115 ). The two genera can be told apart based on the following characters: in Anarchonirmus ( Fig. 116 View FIGURES 116 – 121 ) clypeo-labral suture does not reach anterior margin of the head, ventral carinae and ventral anterior plate are continuous with marginal carina, and there is no dorsal preantennal suture ( Fig. 116 View FIGURES 116 – 121 ), whereas in Osculonirmus ( Fig. 124 View FIGURES 124 – 129 ) the clypeo-labral suture reaches the frons and widens there, marginal carina is displaced dorsally at osculum, there is no ventral anterior plate, but there is a dorsal preantennal suture. In Anarchonirmus ( Fig. 114 View FIGURES 114 – 115 ) there are tps on tergopleurites II–VIII in males, but these are absent in Osculonirmus ( Fig. 122 View FIGURES 122 – 123 ). The male ( Figs 126–128 View FIGURES 124 – 129 ) and female ( Fig. 129 View FIGURES 124 – 129 ) genitalia of Osculonirmus are different from those of all other genera treated here.

Description. Both sexes. Head flat-dome shaped with broad, slightly concave, frons ( Fig. 124 View FIGURES 124 – 129 ). Marginal carina uninterrupted, but displaced posteriorly and dorsally at osculum. Dorsal preantennal suture present, following lateral margin of head to near dsms and then obliquely to reach ads. Ventral carinae continuous with marginal carina but often diffuse anterior to pulvinus. Clypeo-labral suture widens anteriorly. Head setae as in Fig. 124 View FIGURES 124 – 129 ; vsms2 not on lateral margin of clypeo-labral suture; pos, pns, and mts 1 absent; s3 mesosetae. Coni small, blunt. Antennae sexually dimorphic, with male scapes ( Fig. 124 View FIGURES 124 – 129 ) swollen and twice as long as female scapes ( Fig. 125 View FIGURES 124 – 129 ); flagellomeres II–III modified in male as in Fig. 124 View FIGURES 124 – 129 . Temporal carinae not visible; mts 3 only macrosetae. Gular plate small, oblong.

Prothorax rectangular ( Figs 122–123 View FIGURES 122 – 123 ); ppss on postero-lateral corner. Proepimera slender; median ends hookshaped. Pterothorax pentagonal; lateral margins widely divergent; posterior margin convergent to median point. Meso- and metasterna not fused; 1 seta on postero-lateral corner on each side of each plate. Metepisterna broad, median ends blunt. mms widely separated medianly. mths absent. Leg chaetotaxy as in Fig. 25 View FIGURES 25 , except cI-v3, cI-d1, fI-v1, fI-v4, fIm2–4, cII-a3, cIII-a3, fIII-v2 absent; cI-v2, cII-v2, tII-v1, cIII-v2, tIII-v1 short

Abdomen oblong ( Figs 122–123 View FIGURES 122 – 123 ). Tergopleurites rounded rectangular, more oblong in males; tergopleurites II– IX+X in male and tergopleurites II–VIII in females moderately divided medianly ( contra Mey 1982a : fig. 1). Large fenestrae surround spiracle openings. Sternal plates rectangular, not approaching pleurites. Pleural incrassations narrow. Re-entrant heads absent. Male subgenital plate trapezoidal, but diffuse posteriorly; whether it reaches posterior margin of abdomen is not clear. Abdominal chaetotaxy as in Table 2. Female subgenital plate obovate, does not approach vulval margin. Vulval margin ( Fig. 129 View FIGURES 124 – 129 ) narrowly convex.

Male genitalia ( Fig. 126 View FIGURES 124 – 129 ) distinct. Basal apodeme slender and elongated. Proximal mesosome slender, rectangular, overlapping with basal apodeme. Gonopore ( Fig. 127 View FIGURES 124 – 129 ) open distally. Mesosomal lobes small, fused distally, with irregular distal and lateral margins; 2 pmes visible on each side of mesosome. Parameral heads ( Fig. 128 View FIGURES 124 – 129 ) large, bulbous, bifid. Parameral blades elongated, slender; pst1 sensilla, near distal tip; pst2 microseta, lateral near distal tip.

Host distribution. Osculonirmus is known only from Eremophila alpestris ( Linnaeus, 1758) , where it appears to be widely distributed on four different subspecies (see below). All other material we examined from larks (species of Alaemon Keyserling & Blasius, 1840 , Alauda Linnaeus, 1758 , Ammomanes Cabanis, 1851 , Calandrella Kaup, 1829 , Eremopterix Kaup, 1836 , Galerida Boie, 1828 , Lullula Kaup, 1829 , Melanocorypha Boie, 1828 , and Mirafra Horsfield, 1821 ) belong to Brueelia s. str. In addition, material examined from Eremophila alpestris ammophila (Oberholser, 1902) and E. a. flava (Gmelin, 1789) belong to Brueelia s. str., similar to other species of Brueelia s. str. known from larks. Alström et al. (2013) showed that Eremophila is deeply nested inside the Alaudidae , being closely related to Calandrella , and host phylogeny thus does not appear to offer any clues to the relationships of Osculonirmus , nor suggestions for where other members of the genus may occur.

Geographical range. Holarctic.

Remarks. Males of Osculonirmus limpidus appear to be very rare; among the 61 individuals we examined, only 5 were males and all from North American host subspecies. Mey (1994b) appears to have collected several individuals from most of the hosts he examined, but did not examine any males prior to his description of Os. limpidus . Osculonirmus was not included in the phylogeny of Bush et al. (2016), hence its exact placement within the Brueelia -complex is unknown.

Included species

* Osculonirmus limpidus Mey, 1982a: 60

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Phthiraptera

Family

Philopteridae

Loc

Osculonirmus Mey, 1982

Bush, Sarah E. 2017
2017
Loc

Osculonirmus limpidus

Mey 1982: 60
1982
Loc

Brueelia Kéler, 1936a : 257

Mey 1982: 59
Keler 1936: 257
1936
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