Neostenoptera hawaiiensis Plakidas, Nguyen, and Ferro, 2022

Plakidas, John D., Nguyen, Nhu H. & Ferro, Michael L., 2022, A new species of Neostenoptera Meunier (Diptera: Cecidomyiidae: Winnertziinae) from Hawai‘i, Insecta Mundi 2022 (941), pp. 1-12 : 2-9

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.7168024

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:73D4C822-5C81-4291-9019-2AC0BE96800A

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7169043

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03FBDB79-FFC2-FFCF-2197-2B79F96BFE1A

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Neostenoptera hawaiiensis Plakidas, Nguyen, and Ferro
status

sp. nov.

Neostenoptera hawaiiensis Plakidas, Nguyen, and Ferro , new species

Figures 1–12 View Figures 1–6 View Figures 7–11 View Figure 12 , 16–17 View Figures 16–17 , Map 1

Diagnosis. Adult, body length (measured from head to end of genitalia) male 1.0– 1.2 mm (n = 10); female 1.4–1.6 mm (n = 5). Color: pale translucent-yellow, the eyes are reddish-brown, with one smaller brown spot below each eye; wings teneral, with only veins R1 and CuA1 present and a fringe of long brown setae along the wing margin except for the proximal 1/4 along the wing base ( Fig. 7 View Figures 7–11 ). Neostenoptera hawaiiensis most closely resembles N. appalachiensis but can be distinguished in the following manner. Female antennae with nine flagellomeres, flagellomere 9 shorter and narrower than 8 and with one long dark brown seta distally ( Fig. 4 View Figures 1–6 ), a species defining trait. In contrast, the female flagellum of N. appalachiensis has ten flagellomeres, flagellomere 10 with a short coniform seta distally ( Fig. 15 View Figures 13–15 ). The male of N. hawaiiensis has the ejaculatory apodeme ( Fig. 8–10 View Figures 7–11 ) lightly sclerotized, as long as the aedeagus, with a forked apex, a species defining trait. The tegmen ( Fig. 9–10 View Figures 7–11 ) is lightly sclerotized laterally and extends to the height of the aedeagus. In contrast, the ejaculatory apodeme of N. appalachiensis has a tubular apex and the tegmen does not reach the full height of the aedeagus ( Fig. 14 View Figures 13–15 ).

Description. Adult. Body length (measured from head to end of genitalia) male 1.0– 1.2 mm (n = 10), female 1.4– 1.6 mm (n = 5). Color, pale translucent-yellow. Head. Eyes situated laterally; eye bridge complete, without facets at vertex. Occiput with two setae. Palpus and labellum absent, frons bare. Antennal scape with one seta; pedicel with horizontal rows of microtrichia, no setae. Female flagellum. Flagellum with nine flagellomeres each with two digitate sensoria on flagellomeres 1–8 ( Fig. 4–5 View Figures 1–6 ), flagellomere 1 with two setae on the node, flagellomeres 2–8 with one or two setae on the node; flagellomere 9 shorter and narrower than 8 and with one long dark brown seta distally, a species defining trait. Male flagellum. Flagellum with eleven flagellomeres, flagellomeres 1 and 2 with single digitate sensoria, flagellomeres 3–11 lack sensoria ( Fig. 1–3 View Figures 1–6 ). Thorax and chaetotaxy. Pronotum with four setae, two dorsocentral setae and two dorsolateral setae, one of which is elongated. Lateral sclerites bare except for a fine covering of microtrichia; scutellum non-setose. Wing ( Fig. 7 View Figures 7–11 ): elongate, narrow, with a row of long light brown setae along the entire wing margin except on the proximal 1/4; membrane entirely microtrichose. Vein R1 closely joined to C, reaching the wing margin before midlength; vein R5 absent; vein CuA1 visible near wing base. Halters translucent yellow, with one seta near the base and one seta on the knob. Legs with fore femur inflated distally, mid and hind leg femora slender or only slightly inflated distally; tarsi four-segmented ( Fig. 6 View Figures 1–6 ); tarsal claws falcate, empodium shorter than claws.

Male abdomen and chaetotaxy. Tergites and sternites membranous; tergite 1 with two lateral setae; tergites 2–7 with two setae situated anteriorly and posteriorly, and two closely approximated trichoid sensillae; tergite 8 ( Fig. 8 View Figures 7–11 ) with two setae and two trichoid sensillae. Sternite 1 without setae; sternites 2–7 with four setae and two closely approximated trichoid sensillae; sternite 8 with two setae and two trichoid sensillae. Sternite 9 extending to the height of the gonocoxites with a few setae along the posterior margin ( Fig. 11 View Figures 7–11 ). Tergite 9 ( Fig. 8 View Figures 7–11 ) with four setae at the posterior lateral margins, no trichoid sensillae; cercus bilobed, longer than tergite 9; hypoproct (sternite 10) not discernable. Gonocoxites fused along the anterior margin, covered with microtrichia and a few setae situated distally. Gonostyli about 2.75× longer than wide, covered with setulae, sparsely covered with setae, the inner margin with longer, stouter hair-like setae forming a light comb of hairs. Ejaculatory apodeme ( Fig. 8–10 View Figures 7–11 ) lightly sclerotized, as long as aedeagus, with forked apex, a species defining trait. Tegmen ( Fig. 9–10 View Figures 7–11 ) lightly sclerotized laterally extending to the height of the aedeagus.

Female abdomen and chaetotaxy. Tergites and sternites 1–7 similar to male. Tergites 8 and 9 with two anterior and two posterior setae; tergite 10 imperceptible; sternite 8 without setae; sternite 9 bilobed each lobe with seven setae; sternite 10 (hypoproct) bilobed with three setae per side. Cercus two-segmented ( Fig. 12 View Figure 12 ), disticercus shorter than basicercus, with horizontal rows of microtrichia and two short dorsal setae located at the distal corners. Two circular dark brown sclerotized spermathecae at level of tergites 7 and 8.

Larva and pupa. Unknown.

Type material. Holotype male, labeled: USA: Hawaii, Honolulu Co., GPS 21.63094 -158.04771; Waimea Arboretum & BG. 17-23 April 2018; C-MĀIKI Institute, dead wood emergence, A-2-1. Deposited in USNM. GoogleMaps

Designated paratypes ( Table 1). All specimens have label data: USA: Hawai‘i, Honolulu Co., Waimea Arboretum and Botanical Garden, C-MĀIKI Institute, dead wood emergence. Specific emergence dates and sample code numbers are associated with appropriate specimens.

Species concept. The concept of “species” is a human-induced attempt to generalize and simplify a complex and cluttered natural world. J. B. S. Haldane (1956) put it more eloquently: “The concept of a species is a concession to our linguistic habits and neurological mechanisms”. Our concept of species is also a concession to the shortness of a human life in relation to the length of evolutionary time. As such, a “unified” or “universal” species concept may not exist and it’s reasonable to expect future workers will bring about new species concepts or refine old ones. The validity of the species described herein will be assessed and reassessed by future workers whether we explicitly state which species concept is being invoked. Despite these drawbacks there may be some utility in stating outright that the Morphological Species Concept (sensu Mayden 1997) was used when defining this species.

Etymology. The specific name, hawaiiensis , is Latin meaning “from Hawai‘i ”, in reference to the collection site in Waimea Arboretum, Honolulu Co., Hawai‘i.

Bionomics. Specimens were collected using an emergence chamber from dead wood 1–4 cm in diameter. The dead wood samples were sequestered in emergence chambers during March when presumably only larvae were present. The peak of adult emergence was during April and May, with a few more specimens emerging into August. Specimens of Neostenoptera sp. reported by Evenhuis et al. (2018) were collected April, May, August, and September from yellow sticky boards, suggesting that they were also present as adults throughout the summer and flew.

USNM

Smithsonian Institution, National Museum of Natural History

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Diptera

Family

Cecidomyiidae

Genus

Neostenoptera

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