Antipodosis australis, Jaschhof, 2016

Jaschhof, Mathias, 2016, New species of Monepidosis Mamaev, 1966 and Antipodosis gen. nov., a closely related genus from New Zealand (Diptera, Cecidomyiidae), European Journal of Taxonomy 192, pp. 1-24 : 5-7

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5852/ejt.2016.192

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:5C461741-852C-4AEB-9DA3-31B92BB23777

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3852547

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/45076E74-E261-4A53-804F-8264851F5133

taxon LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:act:45076E74-E261-4A53-804F-8264851F5133

treatment provided by

Valdenar

scientific name

Antipodosis australis
status

gen. et sp. nov.

Antipodosis australis View in CoL gen. et sp. nov.

urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act:45076E74-E261-4A53-804F-8264851F5133

Fig. 2 View Fig A–B

Diagnosis

A combination of genitalic characters is specific to A. australis sp. nov., as follows ( Fig. 2 View Fig A–B). Of the gonocoxites ( Fig. 2A View Fig ), the processes are small but prominent (↓); the ventral emargination, whose shape is reminiscent of an inverted bell, has a broad glabrous rim that almost reaches the anterior gonocoxal margin (↓), and the apodemes are merged into a large subrectangular plate (↓). The ejaculatory apodeme has a distinct subapical extension (↓, Fig. 2B View Fig ).

Differential diagnosis

Antipodosis australis gen. et sp. nov. resembles A. pureora gen. et sp. nov. in having elongate, slender gonostyli; a long, plate-like gonocoxal apodeme; two pairs of unmodified parameral tusks, and a singlepointed, straight ejaculatory apodeme. Characters to differentiate between the two species are provided by the gonocoxal emargination, which in A. australis gen. et sp. nov. is bell-shaped ( Fig. 2A View Fig ) and in A. pureora gen. et sp. nov. U-shaped ( Fig. 5A View Fig ), and by the ejaculatory apodeme, whose base is flattened in A. australis gen. et sp. nov. (not visible in the ventral view depicted in Fig. 2B View Fig ) and widened in A. pureora gen. et sp. nov. ( Fig. 5B View Fig ).

Etymology

The name australis is a Latin adjective meaning ‘southern’, which refers to the distribution of this species in the two southern main islands of New Zealand.

Type material

Holotype

NEW ZEALAND: Ƌ, South Island , Buller , Lake Rotoroa, mixed podocarp / southern beech forest, 450 m, 15 Jan. 2001, Malaise trap “15”, Department of Conservation St. Arnaud ( NZAC).

Paratype

NEW ZEALAND: 1 Ƌ, Stewart Island, Christmas Village Hut, 46.74° S, 167.97° E, 18 Jan. 2000, Malaise trap, R.K. Didham ( NZAC).

Other characters

BODY LENGTH. 2.0 mm.

HEAD. Eye bridge 5–6 ommatidia long dorsally. Circumfila on flagellomeres 1 to 13–14. Neck of fourth flagellomere 1.8–1.9 times longer than node. Palpus as long as height of head.

WING. Length/width 3.0–3.1.

LEGS. Empodia rudimentary.

TERMINALIA ( Fig. 2 View Fig A–B). Ninth tergite subtrapezoid, medially unsclerotized, asetose. Gonostylus strongly tapered towards apex, pectinate tooth narrow ( Fig. 2A View Fig ). Gonocoxites with small protuberances on ventroposterior margin; apodemes protrude clearly beyond ventroanterior margin ( Fig. 2A View Fig ). Ventral parameral tusks bent dorsolaterally, dorsal tusks bent dorsally ( Fig. 2B View Fig ).

NZAC

New Zealand Arthropod Collection

R

Departamento de Geologia, Universidad de Chile

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Diptera

Family

Cecidomyiidae

Genus

Antipodosis

GBIF Dataset (for parent article) Darwin Core Archive (for parent article) View in SIBiLS Plain XML RDF