Culicoides (Selfia) hieroglyphicus Malloch

Phillips, Robert A., 2022, Culicoides Latreille and Leptoconops Skuse biting midges of the southwestern United States with emphasis on the Canyonlands of southeastern Utah (Diptera: Ceratopogonidae), Insecta Mundi 2022 (907), pp. 1-214 : 81-82

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.6391684

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:CBD29188-143B-44DF-BE21-1654D50D8621

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/E8511E53-FF8E-EF2F-6A8A-FB5AFCC7FC34

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Culicoides (Selfia) hieroglyphicus Malloch
status

 

Culicoides (Selfia) hieroglyphicus Malloch View in CoL

( Fig. 37 View Figures 37–40 )

Culicoides hieroglyphicus Malloch, 1915: 297 View in CoL (key; female; fig. mesonotum; Arizona). Hoffman 1925: 280 (key; female; fig. wing, mesonotum). Root and Hoffman 1937: 158 (key; female; male genitalia; fig. male genitalia). James 1943: 148 (in part; seasonal distribution; Colorado). Wirth 1952a: 176 (key; female; male genitalia; distribution; fig. dorsal thoracic pattern, female palpus, male genitalia). Knowlton and Kardos 1951: 163 (Utah: Kane, Washington counties). Bullock 1952 (key).

Culicoides (Selfia) hieroglyphicus: Khalaf 1954: 38 View in CoL (subgenus Selfia Khalaf View in CoL ; designated C. hieroglyphicus View in CoL as type species). Foote and Pratt 1954: 24 (key; diagnosis; fig. female wing, mesonotum, palpus, male genitalia). Fox 1955: 241 (key and diagnoses of subgenera; species key; taxonomy). Wirth and Bottimer 1956: 263 (Texas ecology). Jones 1961a: 737 (key; pupa; fig. respiratory trumpet, operculum, cephalothoracic chaetotaxy). Atchley 1967: 962 (key; numerical characters; female; male genitalia; variation; feeding habits; fig. female wing, palpus, male genitalia, parameres). Atchley 1970: 242 (key; female, male, pupa, larva; 33 fig.). Atchley 1971b: 60 (pupa; geographic variation; comparison with C. denningi View in CoL and C. jamesi View in CoL ). Atchley 1973: 630 (female, pupa; comparison with C. denningi View in CoL and C. jamesi View in CoL ). Downes and Wirth 1981: 415, 418 (fig. male genitalia, spermathecae). Wirth et al. 1985: 32 (numerical characters; fig. female wing). Wirth et al. 1988: 56 (numerical characters; fig. female wing). Murphree and Mullen 1991: 363 (key; larva; numerical characters; fig. mandible, epipharynx). Borkent and Spinelli 2000: 37 (in Neotropical catalog).

Diagnosis. ( Tables 14, 15) Brown; wing without pattern of pale spots; three unsclerotized or faintly sclerotized long fingerlike spermathecae; male scutellum with six setae; hind tarsomeres with apical spines; posterior margin of male sternite 9 with pair of prominent caudomedial lobes ~4× longer than wide; gonocoxal apodeme simple, expanded distally, without hooklike process; gonocoxite not abruptly expanded basally; apex of gonostylus expanded foot-shaped, without tooth; aedeagus Y-shaped; parameres fused, longer than wide, median process 3–4× longer than wide, tonguelike.

Distribution. California, Nevada, Idaho (Bonneville County, new state record), Wyoming, South Dakota, south through Utah (Carbon, Garfield, Grand, Kane, San Juan, Uintah, Washington, Wayne counties), Colorado, Nebraska, Kansas, Oklahoma, Arizona, New Mexico, Texas, Sonora, to Baja California, Durango, Aguascalientes. Reports for Montana in Root and Hoffman (1937), Foote and Pratt (1954), and Fox (1955) were erroneous ( Atchley 1970).

Larval ecology. Atchley (1970) collected pupae from small to medium and fresh to alkaline warm stream and river margins at 1280–1650 m elevation in Carbon, Garfield, Grand, Kane, San Juan, and Wayne counties, Utah. The most productive habitat was in a small alkaline wash southwest of Cisco (47 km north-northeast of Moab) in Grand County with density of several hundred immatures per dm 2, along with some C. occidentalis or C. sonorensis (as C. variipennis ). The coldest collection site was in Wayne County, which had a water temperature of 22 °C and also had small numbers of C. jamesi . The other Utah sites had water temperatures>27 °C and no other Selfia species. Jones (1961b) reared many immatures from mudflats from a hot spring in Texas and few from lake margins in Oklahoma —exceptional habitats for this species.

Adult behavior. Known hosts are sheep ( Jones 1965; however, Atchley [1970] questions this may be for C. denningi ), jackrabbit ( Atchley 1970), burro ( Jones et al. 1977), and horse ( Elbel et al. 1977; Jones et al. 1977). In Weld County, Colorado, C. hieroglyphicus was most active during daylight hours April–October ( Barnard and Jones 1980b).

Symbionts. A female—likely C. hieroglyphicus —collected in Grand County was parasitized by a shriveled, and melanized mermithid nematode. Three females and an intersex male collected in Greenlee County, Arizona, were also parasitized by mermithids ( Table 11). In addition, Atchley (1967, 1970) reports a high incidence of intersex males parasitized by mermithid nematodes near Glenwood, Catron County, New Mexico; and my collections near the Gila River in Greenlee County, Arizona, and Grant County, New Mexico, included many C. hieroglyphicus parasitized by larval mites ( Table 10).

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Diptera

Family

Ceratopogonidae

Genus

Culicoides

Loc

Culicoides (Selfia) hieroglyphicus Malloch

Phillips, Robert A. 2022
2022
Loc

Culicoides (Selfia) hieroglyphicus: Khalaf 1954: 38

Borkent A & Spinelli GR 2000: 37
Murphree CS & Mullen GR 1991: 363
Wirth WW & Dyce AL & Spinelli GR 1988: 56
Wirth WW & Dyce AL & Peterson BV & Roper I. 1985: 32
Downes JA & Wirth WW 1981: 415
Atchley WR 1973: 630
Atchley WR 1971: 60
Atchley WR 1970: 242
Atchley WR 1967: 962
Jones RH 1961: 737
Wirth WW & Bottimer LJ 1956: 263
Fox I. 1955: 241
Khalaf KT 1954: 38
Foote RH & Pratt HD 1954: 24
1954
Loc

Culicoides hieroglyphicus

Wirth WW 1952: 176
Knowlton GF & Kardos EH 1951: 163
James MT 1943: 148
Root FM & Hoffman WA 1937: 158
Hoffman WA 1925: 280
Malloch JR 1915: 297
1915
Darwin Core Archive (for parent article) View in SIBiLS Plain XML RDF