Forcipomyia calamistrata Debenham & Wirth, 1984

Pal, Gouri Sankar, Brahma, Shubhranil & Hazra, Niladri, 2023, One new species and new records of three species of the genus Forcipomyia Meigen, 1818 (Diptera, Ceratopogonidae) from West Bengal, India, Evolutionary Systematics 7 (1), pp. 83-89 : 83

publication ID

https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/evolsyst.7.97331

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:C2918830-3C6F-498D-A71B-16F68FD5E66F

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/B7DFE39D-A4F5-5E2F-A560-379B63774CEF

treatment provided by

Evolutionary Systematics by Pensoft

scientific name

Forcipomyia calamistrata Debenham & Wirth, 1984
status

 

Forcipomyia calamistrata Debenham & Wirth, 1984 View in CoL

Fig. 4 View Figure 4

Forcipomyia calamistrata Debenham & Wirth, 1984: 862; Lie and Yu 2001: 495.

GenBank accession number.

MZ769938

Material examined.

3♂♂, India, West Bengal, Purba Bardhman, Burdwan Town (23°13'33"N, 87°51'30"E), Light trap, 18.IV.2021, Col. N. Hazra. GoogleMaps 2♂♂, West Bengal, Birbhum, Suri, Tilpara (23°56'39.48"N, 87°31'31"E), light trap, 13.XI.2020, Col. G.S. Pal. GoogleMaps

Diagnosis.

Male. Aedeagus with tooth like serrations at apex and subapex. Female. Mandible with 30 teeth; spermathecae two, unequal, large and oval.

Male (n = 5).

Supplementary description.

Head dark brown. Antenna with dark brown second segment and others pale brown; length ratio of flagellomeres (I-XIII): 17-19 (17.6): 12-14 (12.8): 12-14 (13): 12-14 (13): 11-13 (12.2): 11-13 (12): 11-13 (12.4): 13-16 (13.8): 12-14 (13.4): 37-41 (38): 24-27 (25.6): 17-19 (18): 27-30 (29); AR 1.13-1.16 (1.14). Length ratio of palpal segments (I-V): 10-12 (10.6): 12-14 (13.2): 24-29 (26.6): 14-16 (15.4): 8-10 (8.8); PR 3.57-3.85 (3.72). WL 0.85-0.88 (0.86), WW 0.30-0.33 (0.32); CR 0.39-0.43 (0.4). TRI 0.81-0.87 (0.84), TRII 0.85-0.92 (0.87), TRIII 1.35-1.41 (1.38). Gonocoxite almost twice as long as wide bearing numerous setae, broad in middle and constricted at apex with well developed apicolateral process. Gonostylus little shorter than gonocoxite. Aedeagus almost triangular, basal arch shallow with apical and subapical serrations (Fig. 4 View Figure 4 ).

Discussion.

Both palpal and hind tarsal ratios are lower than those of Chinese ones.

Distribution.

China, Taiwan, Australia and India (new record).

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Diptera

Family

Ceratopogonidae

Genus

Forcipomyia

SubGenus

Forcipomyia

Loc

Forcipomyia calamistrata Debenham & Wirth, 1984

Pal, Gouri Sankar, Brahma, Shubhranil & Hazra, Niladri 2023
2023
Loc

Forcipomyia calamistrata

Debenham & Wirth 1984
1984