Oxysarcodexia confusa Lopes, 1946

Souza, Carina Mara De, Pape, Thomas & Thyssen, Patricia Jacqueline, 2020, Oxysarcodexia Townsend, 1917 (Diptera: Sarcophagidae) - a centennial conspectus, Zootaxa 4841 (1), pp. 1-126 : 43

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4841.1.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:F55A3BE7-673C-4D46-9FC4-D5B5C7041DC0

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4405719

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/038287D4-BB3B-5D7A-97E0-0BFBFDC63DF7

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Oxysarcodexia confusa Lopes, 1946
status

 

Oxysarcodexia confusa Lopes, 1946 View in CoL

( Figs 82–84 View FIGURES 79–89 )

Oxysarcodexia confusa Lopes, 1946b: 96 View in CoL ; Brazil, Rio de Janeiro, Miguel Pereira. Holotype male, female allotype, 29 male paratypes and 7 female paratypes in MNRJ.

Diagnosis. Male. Length 7.0–9.0 mm. Postocular plate with golden pollinosity. Ocellar bristles well developed. Thorax with golden pollinosity, contrasting with the silvery pollinosity of the abdomen; T5 normally without golden pollinosity, in a few cases a pale golden pollinosity can be present laterally. Two well-differentiated posterior and 1–3 smaller anterior post-sutural dorsocentrals. Apical scutellar bristles absent. Legs brownish. T3 with 2 pairs of lateral marginal bristles, T4 with 1 pair of median marginal and 3 pairs of lateral marginal bristles. ST5 with deep median cleft with margins almost parallel and with pilosity. Cercus straight in lateral view, with expanded obliquely cut apex and dorsal subapical barb. Cercus with bristles ventrally absent only on middle portion. Cerci with distal third as broad as middle part in posterior view; parallel and with a distinct constriction mid length. Pregonite and postgonite both with expanded base, gradually narrowing smoothly to apex; unicolorous. Distiphallus with smooth ventroapical margin, rounded apex and straight dorsal outline. Vesica symmetrical, with rounded median projection of main branch; distal lobes reduced, rounded, partially membranous, with spines on both dorsal and ventral surfaces.

Remarks. A detailed comparison of the male terminalia of O. confusa and the sympatric species O. avuncula , O. diana and O. parva , with which it is frequently confused, was made by Silva & Mello-Patiu (2008). The distiphallus of O. confusa ( Fig. 83 View FIGURES 79–89 ) is very similar in lateral view to that of O. molitor ( Curran & Walley, 1934) ( Fig. 189 View FIGURES 182–191 ), differing by the morphology of the median area, spinous in O. molitor (ventral view), and by the structure of the lateral and median styli ( Lopes 1975c). The lateral stylus of O. confusa has a rounded base, short apex, and spines; and the median stylus is larger than the lateral one and has pilosity in its basal area ( Silva & Mello-Patiu 2008). The lateral stylus of O. molitor is curved and larger than the median stylus ( Lopes 1975c). See also remarks under O. comparilis . The female of O. confusa has an undivided T7 ( Tibana & Mello 1985). The first, second and third larval instars were described by Lopes & Leite (1986), Leite & Lopes (1987), and Lopes & Leite (1987), respectively.

Distribution. NEOTROPICAL. Argentina (Misiones), Brazil (Amazonas, Mato Grosso, Mato Grosso do Sul, Minas Gerais, Paraná , Rio de Janeiro, Santa Catarina , São Paulo).

Biology. This species has been collected from human feces, chicken viscera, mouse, pig and fish carcasses, rotten squid, and rotten bananas mixed with yeast or brown sugar ( Lopes 1973b; Dias et al. 1984c; Mendes & Linhares 1993; Vairo et al. 2014; Dufek et al. 2016). It has been reared from human feces under natural conditions; in the laboratory it has been reared on agar and powdered milk for 24h, then transferred to meat to complete development ( Lopes 1973b). In a study on the synanthropy of flesh flies from Curitiba, Brazil, Ferreira (1979) collected O. confusa using a trap baited with fish, chicken liver and human feces, observing that this species was rarely associated with inhabited areas. Dufek et al. (2016) considered it to be hemi- and non-synanthropic in Argentinean wetlands.

Type material examined. Holotype ♂: [ Brazil] INS.OSW.CRUZ N.-10.802. / M. PEREIRA EST. RIO H. S. LOPES -6.933 CULT. N. 78 / Holotype / Oxysarcodexia confusa [no italics] sp. n. Lopes. det 1944 / MNRJ 2237 View Materials [typed vertically on left side of label] [ MNRJ] // paratype ♂: [ Brazil] Est. Exp. Loreto 1936. VI Dr. A. Ogloblin / Paratype / Oxysarcodexia confusa [no italics] sp. n. Lopes. det 1944 [ MNRJ] // paratype ♂: [ Brazil] S. Paulo— Cantareira Serra L. Trav. F. Q. 30.VIII.935 / Paratype / Oxysarcodexia confusa sp.n. Lopes—det 1944 [ MNRJ] .

Other material examined. [ ♂] Petrópolis, Tq; E. do Rio, Brasil, H. S. Lopes, 2.69 / Oxysarc. confusa, Lop. , ♂, Det. H. S. Lopes / NRM-DIPT 0014285 [ NRM] // [♂] [ Brazil] IGUASSÚ, Paraná XII-941, Com. E. N. V. / NRM-DIPT 0014287 [ NRM] // [♂] Taquara, Petrópolis, E. do Rio, Brasil / H. S. Lopes, 16.II.75 / Oxysarcodexia confusa, Lopes. Det. H. S. Lopes [ NHMD] .

MNRJ

Museu Nacional/Universidade Federal de Rio de Janeiro

NRM

Swedish Museum of Natural History - Zoological Collections

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Diptera

Family

Sarcophagidae

Genus

Oxysarcodexia

Loc

Oxysarcodexia confusa Lopes, 1946

Souza, Carina Mara De, Pape, Thomas & Thyssen, Patricia Jacqueline 2020
2020
Loc

Oxysarcodexia confusa Lopes, 1946b: 96

Lopes, H. S. 1946: 96
1946
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