Micrempis brevis, Solórzano Kraemer & Sinclair & Cumming, 2005
publication ID |
11755334 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5049004 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/B576B81A-D44B-E508-B45C-3D3483A6FA0C |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Micrempis brevis |
status |
sp. nov. |
Micrempis brevis View in CoL sp. nov.
DIAGNOSIS. Distinguished from other species of Micrempis by the cell bm being very slightly longer than cell br such that crossveins rm and bmcu are not confluent ( Fig. 4B).
DESCRIPTION. Female ( Fig. 4A). Length ca. 1 mm, body dark brown to black.
Head. Eyes with ommatrichia (pubescence); contiguous below antennae; facets not enlarged below antennae. Frons nearly parallelsided, subequal to width of ocellar triangle. Two pairs of ocellar bristles; anterior pair convergent, posterior pair divergent. One pair of long, slightly convergent vertical bristles. Antennae arising below middle of head; scape small, shorter than half length of pedicel; pedicel large globose, with ventral preapical bristle; postpedicel small, ovate, with dorsoapical aristalike style longer than head; basal two antennal segments, postpedicel and aristalike style brown to dark.
Thorax. Brown to black; postpronotal lobe small; 1 long pprn; 2 npl; 1 spal; 1 pal; 1 pair of sctl.
Wing. ( Fig. 4B) Length 0.8 mm. Third costal section slightly less than twice the length of second costal section; bmcu oblique; cell bm slightly longer than cell br; A 1 absent.
Abdomen. Segments uniformly telescopic with first 5 segments broader than posterior segments, lacking distinctive bristles. Terminalia: sternite 8 with apex partially separated from base; cercus slightly longer than halflength of tergite 8.
TYPE. Holotype female from Mexico: exact locality unknown, MX 266 – X. Housed in SMNS. The holotype is in a somewhat cubeshaped piece of clear amber measuring about 3 x 2 mm.
REMARKS. The inclusion was found together with a number of other families and orders, for example Cecidomyiidae , Chironomidae and an acalyptrate dipteran, Mymaridae , Formicidae, Coleoptera, Psocoptera and Isoptera. Two additional fossil species of Micrempis are known, both described from Baltic amber (see Table 1).
Extant species of Micrempis are found on vegetation in a wide variety of dry open habitats, such as very open sparse woodlands, mixed prairie communities, dry stony barrens and coastal beach vegetation ( Cumming & Cooper 1989).
ETYMOLOGY. From the Latin, brevis (short), in reference to cell br being slightly shorter than cell bm.
SMNS |
Staatliches Museum fuer Naturkund Stuttgart |
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.