Apochrysa, Schneider, 1851
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.3835.2.2 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:4B629542-4FB4-42CE-B8B6-3BDF029086CB |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5129138 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/CF1887A8-FFC1-4958-FF28-FB479985FBEB |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Apochrysa |
status |
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Apochrysa View in CoL View at ENA generic characteristics
Based on the A. voeltzkowi specimen described here ( Figs 3 View FIGURE 3 , 4 View FIGURE 4 , 7 View FIGURE 7 , 8 View FIGURE 8 ,), along with the description and illustrations of the third instar A. matsumurae by Tsukaguchi (1995: 139, 142, Figs 106r–106u), the following combination of larval features appears to characterize the genus Apochrysa :
General Characteristics (all instars)
Body: elongate, abdomen slightly thickened, cream-colored, with no or few markings.
Debris packet: large, dense (both known species reported to carry flocculence of Sternorrhyncha) (photo by P. Duelli in Aspock & Aspöck 2007, photo by Yusei Hara in Tauber et al. 2014).
Eye: Anterior two stemmata large; posterior four slightly reduced in size ( A. voeltzkowi : Figs 3 View FIGURE 3 , 7 View FIGURE 7 here; not reported for A. matsumurae ).
Mandibles: slender, elongate, ~1.5x length of head capsule.
Antenna: flagellum long (approximately 0.75x (L1) to 0.45x (L3) length of pedicel).
Cranial setation: All primary cranial setae present, smooth and acute, including S12 and three frontoclypeal setae; Vx setae in longitudinal row beneath cervical membrane.
Thorax: Lateral tubercles (LTs) well developed, but not large; prothoracic LTs not reaching the region of the head.
Thoracic setation: All setae smooth; setae (LS) on lateral tubercles elongate, tapering to very fine, acute or lightly hooked tip; dorsal setae shorter, less tapered, with acute tips. Mesonotum, metanotum each with two (L1) or three (L3) transverse rows of setae.
Abdomen: A1–A7 with laterodorsal tubercles (LDTs) bearing robust setae.
Semaphoront A (first instar) [based on A. voeltzkowi only]
Thoracic lateral tubercles: Prothoracic LTs each with two LS; mesothoracic and metathoracic LTs each with three LS.
Thoracic setation: Prothorax with primary setae S1, S3, S4, S5, S1Sc1, and S2Sc1 present (S2, S1Sc2 apparently absent). Mesothorax with primary setae S1Sc1, S2Sc1 present, SSp absent; posterior region with transverse row of four setae. Metathorax with primary setae S1Sc1, S2Sc1, S3Sc1 present; posterior region with transverse row of four long setae arising from robust chalazae.
Abdominal tubercles: A1 with small LT bearing single long LS; LDT with single elongate, slightly hooked LDS and one very small lateral seta. A2–A7 with well developed LTs, each bearing two elongate LS.
Abdominal setation: Each segment with anterior transverse row of four acutely tipped or slightly hooked setae, two submedian setae (SMS) arising from large chalazae between LDTs.
Semaphoront B (third instar)
Head: Secondary setae present in patch near S1, S3, S11.
Thorax: LTs broadly cylindrical, tapered distally (especially on T2 and T3), longer than those on abdomen, extending dorsolaterally (prothorax) or laterally (mesothorax, metathorax); prothoracic LTs slightly smaller than those on mesothorax or metathorax.
Thoracic sclerites: Prothoracic primary sclerites (Sc1, Sc2) large, rounded, associated setae not distinguished; mesothoracic sclerites Sc2, Sc3 distinct, with associated setae S1Sc2, S2Sc2, and S1Sc3 present; metathoracic sclerite Sc3 distinct, with associated seta S1Sc3 present.
Thoracic setation: Setae on LTs numerous, elongate; dorsal setae numerous, smooth, short to medium-length, tips acute; most primary setae not distinguishable; posterior subsegment of metathorax with transverse row of ~12–15 slightly more robust setae than elsewhere on thorax.
Abdomen: LTs papilliform (A2–A5, A8) to slightly cylindrical (A6–A7); well sclerotized LDTs (A1–A7), each with two to four elongate setae and several shorter setae.
Abdominal setation: LS, LDS elongate but shorter than those on thoracic tuberlces, with tips weakly hooked or acute; submedian setae (SMS) of A1–A6 moderately hooked; dorsal setae of A7–A10 with acute tips; SMS (A2–A6) numerous, in three transverse rows.
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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