Simulium (Hebridosimulium) banksi Craig, 2006
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.1380.1.1 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:ADA6B48B-CF5D-43A2-8E66-CA946A79A8F8 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/1C1B2B5D-FFA3-FFF6-8748-FA214D3BFEB5 |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Simulium (Hebridosimulium) banksi Craig |
status |
sp. nov. |
Simulium (Hebridosimulium) banksi Craig View in CoL , n. sp.
( Figs. 9b View FIGURE 9 , 11b View FIGURE 11 , 13b View FIGURE 13 , 16b View FIGURE 16 , 18b View FIGURE 18 , 20b View FIGURE 20 , 22a View FIGURE 22 ,)
Types
Holotype. Larva : last instar larva in alcohol. Label data – “ Simulium (Hebridosimulium) banksi , Vanuatu, Banks Islands, Vanua Lava, Tahiti River. S13.84727° E167.52191°, alt. 12.5 m, 28.viii.2004. Coll. D. & R. Craig. HOLOTYPE #16607” ( BPBM) GoogleMaps . Paratypes. Larvae: last and penultimate larvae in alcohol. Label data – as for Holotype, but with “ PARATYPE ” (larvae; BPBM, DAC, ROM) .
Diagnosis
Relatively small species. Pupa: gill with short dorsal filaments, short petioles. Larva: head with distinct spot below stemmata; hypostomal median and lateral teeth not well developed, sublateral teeth small; fan rays ca. 37; abdomen callipygous, dorsolateral tubercles present. Posterior circlet with ca. 2,800 hooks.
Description
Adult female. Unknown.
Adult male. Unknown.
Pupa (based on 1 pharate specimen). Thorax: cuticle with sparse small granules. Gill ( Fig. 9b View FIGURE 9 ): dorsal filaments shorter; arising from short petioles, branching pattern (2+2)+2+2+1+1; filaments evenly tapered, brown; maximum length 1.3 mm.
Larva (based on 5 last-instar specimens with immature pharate pupal gills). Body ( Fig. 11b View FIGURE 11 ): length 5.4–5.6 mm; mottled dark grey, with paler intersegmental regions; males slightly more yellowish and smaller than females; females darker. Head ( Fig. 13b View FIGURE 13 ): light brown, paler anteriorly; labral fan stalks pale; head spots essentially neutral, slightly positive medially, posterolateral spots slightly negative; width 0.58 mm; length 0.64 mm; distance between antenna bases 0.11 mm; lateral margins convex; ecdysial lines straight, diverging posteriorly, broadly rounded at maximum width; posteromedial edge of apotome darker brown; posterior edge of apotome slightly eroded, cervical sclerites distinct, postocciput not extended to cervical sclerites; distinct brown spot anterodorsal of stemmata. Antenna: total length 0.50 mm; distal article 0.3 times as long as basal articles, subequal in length to labral fan stalk; basal and distal article pale brown, median article pale. Labral fan: stalk clear to pale brown, anterior palatal bar not markedly developed; 33–35 fine rays, 0.63 mm in length, 6–8 rays less substantial; microtrichia fine and elongate, 1.5 time longer than ray width, no distinctive pattern. Postgenal cleft ( Fig. 16b View FIGURE 16 ): deeply V-shaped, slightly concave margins 1.5 times as long as width. Postgenal bridge: 0.3 times as long as cleft depth; genae evenly light brown; elongate ventrolateral muscle scars slightly positive. Hypostoma ( Fig. 18b View FIGURE 18 ): ratio 5.4; overall shape domed; teeth well developed, but not prominent; lateral teeth short, sharp, scalloped medially, directed laterally; sublateral teeth small; paralateral teeth small but obvious; lateral serrations poorly developed; 8 or 9 hypostomal setae per side. Mandible ( Fig. 20b View FIGURE 20 ) preapical and subapical teeth poorly developed; 5 or 6 spinous teeth, gap absent; serration and sensillum fused basally and markedly pointed, blade region concave and smooth. Abdomen: thorax and anterior abdomen subequal in width, expanded gradually posteriorly to maximum width, callipygous; tergites II–V with dorsolateral tubercles increased in size posteriorly. Anal sclerite ( Fig. 22a View FIGURE 22 ). Posterior circlet: directed ventrally; 131 rows of hooks; 21–23 hooks per row (total ca. 2,880).
Additional material examined
Vanua Lava , Tahiti River. S13.84727° E167.52191°, alt. 12.5 m, 28.viii.2004. Coll. D. & R. Craig (immature larvae; DAC) GoogleMaps .
Etymology
In honour of Joseph Banks, botanist on Captain James Cook’s first voyage to the Pacific (1768–1771) and after whom the Banks Islands were named, although he never visited Vanuatu.
Distribution VANUATU: Vanua Lava (Banks Islands).
Comments
This callipygous species is assigned to the tuberculum species subgroup on the basis of the dorsal paired tubercles on the larval abdomen. Larvae differ from others in the group in possessing smaller hypostomal teeth, distinct lateral head-spot pattern and a deeper postgenal cleft. The type habitat of S. banksi larvae is somewhat unusual for a member of
the tuberculum species subgroup in that it was a moderately sized river ( Fig. 23d View FIGURE 23 ), although larvae attach themselves to vegetation in typical fashion.
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.
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