Trichomyia nebulicola, Ibáñez-Bernal, Sergio, 2004

Ibáñez-Bernal, Sergio, 2004, Notes on the known species of Trichomyia Haliday of Mexico, with the establishment of a synonymy and the description of a new species (Diptera: Psychodidae), Zootaxa 523, pp. 1-14 : 8-13

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.157714

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3504343

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/2F071170-FF90-D064-FEBC-FD36FE378E4E

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Trichomyia nebulicola
status

sp. nov.

Trichomyia nebulicola View in CoL sp. nov. Ibáñez­Bernal

( Figs. 21–35 View FIGURES 21 – 28 View FIGURES 29 – 35 )

Diagnosis. Male easily distinguishable by the triangular outline of the gonocoxite with the external lobular projection and concave internal margin, the gonostyle bifid and composed of a dorsal triangular mandible­like portion and a ventral portion strongly curved mesally to form a long slender sickle­like projection with apex basally directed and bearing a short basal tooth ( Fig. 27 View FIGURES 21 – 28 ); in the female by the pyramidal­truncate lobe of the subgenital plate, where the lateral margins converge toward the apex, and the posterior margin is trilobate with each lobe triangular ( Fig. 35 View FIGURES 29 – 35 ).

Male description ( Figs. 21–28 View FIGURES 21 – 28 ). Head slightly wider than long, 0.81 as high as wide, subcircular in frontal view; vertex slightly elevated; vertex and frontal area regularly covered with setae alveoli and four pairs of transparent sensilla smaller than the setae alveoli near the midline; supraocular row of large alveoli irregular; fronto­clypeus with a patch of setae alveoli ( Fig. 21 View FIGURES 21 – 28 ). Palpus with 4 palpomeres, the first two divided by a clear line and both with a patch of sensory rods on internal surface; palpomere proportions: 1.00: 0.83: 1.11: 2.00 ( Fig. 22 View FIGURES 21 – 28 ). Antennal scape subcylindrical, pedicel subspherical and slightly longer than scape ( Fig. 23 View FIGURES 21 – 28 ); flagellum with 13 pyriform and symmetric unrecessed flagellomeres, progressively decreasing in length toward the apex; each flagellomere, with a pair of long gently curved digitate ascoids that reach the basal portion of the succeeding article ( Fig. 23 View FIGURES 21 – 28 ). Apical flagellomere with a small rounded apiculus, its base very constricted ( Fig. 24 View FIGURES 21 – 28 ). Thorax: Upper posterior portion of anepisternum with a patch of numerous seta alveoli, separated from each other by about one diameter of alveolus. Wing as long as 2.46 its width, basal cells infuscated; Sc marked by infuscation with only one or two setae alveoli; R1 originates at same level than R2+3+R4 fork; radial fork basal from wing center but apical to median fork; R4 ending just behind wing tip; base of M2 obsolete but nearly touching M1; CuA2 ending distad to radial fork ( Fig. 25 View FIGURES 21 – 28 ). Terminalia ( Figs. 26– 27 View FIGURES 21 – 28 ) with gonocoxites fused together above aedeagus by a relatively narrow bridge, laterally expanded as a rounded posteriorly directed lobe, with the apex projected behind the base of gonostylus; as a consequence of the development of the gonocoxite lobe, the gonostylus may originate very close to the midline ( Fig. 28 View FIGURES 21 – 28 ); gonostylus complex and bifid; the dorsal portion mandible­like and very sclerotized, with acute short apex directed toward the midline, the ventral portion strongly curved mesally and forming a long slender sicklelike projection with apex basally directed and bearing a short basal tooth ( Figs. 27, 28 View FIGURES 21 – 28 ). Aedeagus simple and clear, parallel sided with truncate apex; basal apodeme more slender and about 0.8 as long as aedeagus, with base nearly globular and well differentiated. Parameres with basal portion broad and laminar, internally following the lateral margin of aedeagus as far as middle of the structure, abruptly turned forward as a gentle curve to finish as a sickle­like projection with apex directed toward the midline ( Fig. 28 View FIGURES 21 – 28 ). Epandrium slender and nude. Surstylus slightly longer than basal width, internally folded in apical half to form a triangular crease, lacking specialized structures ( Fig. 26 View FIGURES 21 – 28 ). Tenth tergite long and digitate ( Fig. 26 View FIGURES 21 – 28 ).

Measurements. Head height: 0.379 ±0.014 (0.36–0.40) n=6; head width: 0.3853 ±0.016 (0.38–0.42) n=6; palpus length: 0.170 ±0.006 (0.160–0.176) n= 5; antenna length: 1.114 ±0.032 (1.08–1.14) n=3; wing length: 1.690 ±0.065 (1.61–1.77) n=6; wing width: 0.678 ±0.031 (0.63–0.72) n=6; R2+3+R4: 0.093 ±0.003 (0.090–0.096) n=6; R2+3: 0.753 ±0.073 (0.616–0.832) n=6; gonocoxite length (from base to lobe apex): 0.108 ±0.014 (0.09–0.13) n=6; gonostylus length (dorsal portion): 0.053 ±0.002 (0.048–0.056) n=6; surstylus length: 0.097 ±0.002 (0.094–0.100) n=6.

Female description ( Figs. 29–35 View FIGURES 29 – 35 ). Same as male, except for the following characteristics: palpomere proportions: 1.0: 0.83: 1.25: 2.5 ( Fig. 32 View FIGURES 29 – 35 ); antenna and ascoids as figured ( Figs. 29–31 View FIGURES 29 – 35 ). Anepisternum with setae alveoli along posterior margin separated by more than two alveoli diameters. Wing as long as 3X its width ( Fig. 33 View FIGURES 29 – 35 ). Terminalia as figured ( Figs. 34–35 View FIGURES 29 – 35 ); subgenital plate with setae alveoli evenly distributed over the surface, the apical lobe pyramidal, truncate, ending in three triangular projections of which the median is the largest, and bearing 16–18 marginal, simple and long setae; lateral margins of apical lobe convergent toward the apex ( Fig. 35 View FIGURES 29 – 35 ). Internal sclerotizations in the form of two external ear­shaped laminae and a pair of internal rods finely striated over most of their surface, except the external margin; internal rods slightly wider at base, with a short sclerotization at external margin near the apex connecting the subgenital plate, and proximally in contact with the plate that gives rise to the pair of spermathecal ducts; basal spermathecal apodeme “T”­shaped ( Fig. 34 View FIGURES 29 – 35 ). Spermathecal duct annulated, slightly increasing in diameter towards apex; duct ending in a cylindrical structure which is reinforced by a well sclerotized ring and a dome­shaped structure ( Fig. 34 View FIGURES 29 – 35 ). Tergite 9 nude at middle. Cercus short and nearly rounded in lateral view ( Fig. 35 View FIGURES 29 – 35 ).

Measurements (n=1). Head height: 0.37; head width: 0.40; antenna length: 0.92; palpus length: 0.14; wing length: 1.57; wing width: 0.52; R2+3+R4: 0.07; R2+3: 0.67; subgenital plate length: 0.14; cercus length: 0.12.

Material examined. Holotype male: Mexico, Veracruz, Xalapa Municipality, Xalapa, Fraccionamiento Coapexpan, 15–16, February­2000. Malaise trap at night (18:00–08:00 hr), S. Ibáñez­Bernal, col. Allotype female: same data as holotype; Paratypes: 5 males: same data as holotype. Holotype, allotype and 2 male paratypes deposited in IEXA collection, Xalapa, Veracruz, Mexico, 3 male paratypes deposited in Los Angeles County Museum of Natural History, California, USA. All specimens slide­mounted with Euparal.

Etymology. From Latin nebulosa, mist, and alicola, inhabitant, reflecting that this species was captured in a cloud forest of central Veracruz, Mexico.

Comments. The male of T. nebulicola is easily distinguished by the gonopod, specifically by the gonocoxite externally projected as a blunt lobe and the internal margin somewhat concave which gives the structure a triangular appearance in dorso­ventral view ( Fig. 27 View FIGURES 21 – 28 ), and by the gonostylus complex formed by two branches, one shorter, compact and triangular, and the other with a very sharp and slightly curved projection with a basal blunt tooth ( Figs. 27, 28 View FIGURES 21 – 28 ). The female of this species is very similar to T. brevitarsa , and can be distinguished only by the shape of the apical lobe of subgenital plate that has the lateral margins convergent toward the apex ( Fig. 35 View FIGURES 29 – 35 ). The internal sclerotizations are extremely similar in both species, as well as the spermathecal ducts ( Fig. 34 View FIGURES 29 – 35 ).

It is expected that the strong similarity of the female of T. nebulicola with that of T. brevitarsa , the subgenotype of Trichomyia (Opisthotrichomyia) , should be consistent in the case of males. Yet, the male of T. nebulicola lacks one of the two synapomorphies proposed by Bravo (2001) (the presence of a setae­bearing internal lobe of the gonocoxite).

Thus, there is no need to assign the species to any extant subgenera until more information becomes available.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Diptera

Family

Psychodidae

Genus

Trichomyia

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