Paraclius obtus, Zhang & Yang & Grootaert, 2007
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.5454637 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/24259C33-176E-FFF2-FEF6-FDA8FD85F960 |
treatment provided by |
Diego |
scientific name |
Paraclius obtus |
status |
sp. nov. |
Paraclius obtus View in CoL , new species
( Figs. 17–21 View Figs )
Material examined. – Holotype: male, Sungei Buloh, 11 May.2005, Mal. 1, (25159, coll. P. Grootaert, Si 814, ZRC).
Paratypes: 1 male, Sungei Buloh, 22 Apr.2005, Mal. 2, (25078, coll. PG, det. PG, Si772) ; 2 males, Sungei Buloh, 11 May.2005, Mal. 1, (25159, coll. PG, Si819) ; 1 male, Sungei Buloh, 11 May.2005, Mal. 1, (25159, coll. PG, det. LZ, Si814) ; 1 male, Sungei Buloh, 11 May.2005, Mal. 2, (25160, coll. PG, det. PG, Si1239, deposited in IOZ) ; 3 males, Sungei Buloh, 22 Apr.2005, Mal. 2, (25078, coll. PG, det. PG, Si775) ; 1 male, Sungei Buloh, 22 Apr.2005, Mal. 2, (25078, coll. PG, det. PG, Si1216) .
Diagnosis. – Antenna dark yellow, first flagellomere with narrow dark dorsal margin, ventral margin yellowish, 2.3 times as long as wide. Mid femur at its base with 3–4 black v (slightly longer than femur is wide) and with a row of 14 spinules on posterior ventral margin.
Description. – Male: Body length 4.7–4.8 mm, wing length 3.9–4.0 mm.
Head metallic green with pale grey pollen. Face narrowing downward, almost touching just below middle, distinctly narrower than first flagellomere. Hairs and bristles black. Mid and lower postocular bristles (including posteroventral hairs) pale. Antenna ( Fig. 18 View Figs ) dark yellow, first flagellomere with dark brown dorsal margin, 2.3 times as long as wide; arista black, minutely pubescent with very short basal segment. Proboscis black with black hairs, palpus black with black hairs and black apical bristle.
Thorax metallic green with pale grey pollen. Six strong dc, 5 pairs of acr; scutellum with 6 bristles (lateral pair longest). Propleuron with 1 black bristle at lower part. Legs yellow, fore coxa yellow, mid coxa black with yellow apex, hind coxa mainly dark yellow with black spot. Fore tarsomeres 3–5 black, mid and hind tarsi from tip of tarsomere 1 onward blackish to black. Hairs and bristles black. Mid and hind coxae each with 1 exterior bristle. Mid and hind femora each with 1 preapical bristle. Mid femur ( Fig. 19 View Figs ) with 3–4 v (slightly longer than femur is wide) basally and Mid femur at its base with 3-4 black v (slightly longer than femur is wide) and with a row of 14 spinules on posterior ventral margin. Fore tibia with 3 ad and 2 pd, apically with 2 short bristles; mid tibia with 4 ad, 3 pd and 1 av, apically with 5 bristles; hind tibia with 4 ad, 4 pd and one row of thin v, apically with 4 bristles. Relative lengths of tibia and 5 tarsomeres LI 1.75: 1.0: 0.5: 0.3: 0.17: 0.2; LII 2.5: 1.2: 0.8: 0.6: 0.4: 0.23; LIII 2.75: 0.9: 1.5: 1.0: 0.5: 0.25. Wing ( Fig. 17 View Figs ) hyaline, veins black; R 4+5 and M distinctly convergent apically, CuAx ratio 0.8. Squama yellow with black hairs. Halter yellow.
Abdomen metallic green with pale grey pollen. Hairs and bristles black. Male genitalia ( Figs. 20-21 View Figs ): Epandrium longer than wide, lateral lobe short with 3 bristles; cercus black, obtuse apically, with long bristles; hypandrium obtuse apically; aedeagus with small denticles at middle.
Female: Unknown.
Distribution. – Singapore.
Etymology. – The specific name refers to the obtuse ventral apex of cercus.
Remarks. – Paraclius obtus is similar to P. polychaetus , new species, in having the first flagellomere elongated, more than two times as long as wide, and the aedeagus with denticles, but may be separated from the latter by the cercus with the obtuse ventral apex, the mid femur with a row of spinules at its base, and the hind femur without the ventral bristles. In P. polychaetus , the antenna is completely black, mid femur has no denticle-like spines on the posterior ventral margin, but the hind femur has 5 v in the basal half.
ZRC |
Zoological Reference Collection, National University of Singapore |
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.