Chelipoda australpina, Published, 2007
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.1537.1.1 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5088509 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/6A078784-BA4B-FF8D-AFFE-FD0618D7F590 |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Chelipoda australpina |
status |
sp. nov. |
30. Chelipoda australpina View in CoL sp. n.
[ Fig. 15 View FIGURES 12–15 ]
Type material. Holotype ♂: New Zealand, South Is. , NC, Arthurs Pass, Kellys Ck., Nothofagus fusca forest, 28/xi/1977, ES [ NZAC] . Paratypes: 1♂, 4♀, same data as holotype. The male paratype is greatly damaged, lacking its head .
Etymology: the specific epithet refers to the type locality in New Zealand’s Southern Alps.
Description. Male: length 3.0mm (dry specimens). Similar to C. oblata , differing as follows.
Head: with a few strong setae behind patch of fine pile on lower occiput; mouthparts blackish brown; Scape fully 2X as long as wide, postpedicel with longish hairs rather than fine pile, arista minutely pilose (as in C. oblata ).
Thorax: ground colour of mesonotum uniformly dirty orange brown; pleura uniformly yellow, unstriped; rather thinly dusted grey, no dust stripes; mesonotal bristles black, dc2, dc3, unp, pprn, sa and sct strongly developed; dc1 absent; ph well developed but weaker than pprn.
Legs: similar yellow colour as pleura, becoming darker distally; C 1 0.7–0.8X as long as thorax, rather wide basally, narrowing slightly distally with 3 short distinct yellow bristles basally in front which are longest basally and merge with line of fine hairs beyond base. F 1 about as long as C 1, 1 very strong and 1 rather weaker yellowish bristle at base and series of distinct black pv bristles becoming shorter distally; an av series of about 17 small black bristles becoming somewhat denticle-like distally and in front of this a further series of erect anteriorly directed fine yellowish hairs becoming longer distally and ending abruptly 0.7 from base. T 1 as long as F 1, constricted to 0.5 maximum width on distal 0.2 where there are 2–3 short, black ventral spines; a linear series of minute and very inconspicuous adpressed denticles ventrally. Tarsi with at1 bearing short spines ventrally; at2 similar length as at3. Legs otherwise simple lacking remarkable chaetotaxy.
Wing: with simple venation, veins brown, membrane clear, Sc faint ( R 2 +3 ending abruptly before tip in paratype ♂); vein A 1 very weakly present about end of CuA 2 and continued basally as a very faint darkening of membrane; costal bristle strong, three rather weaker but distinct setae on C between costal bristle and junction of C with R 1 .
Abdomen: pale ventrally, black dorsally becoming yellowish apically; tergites with strong but sparse yellowish hairs especially on posterior margins; sternites more weakly haired. Terminalia ( Fig. 15 View FIGURES 12–15 ) yellow; hypandrium separate from and not overlapped by epandrium; epandrial lobes separate, quadrate, very small with long brownish setae above and behind; hypandrium produced posteriorly, bearing very long yellowish setae apically; cerci free, very long with whole of tip exposed above epandrium and covered with long bristly hairs; subepandrial process strongly sclerotized, large, broad, apically pointed; phallus rather broad, reflexed anteriorly near base and posteriorly near tip.
Description. Female: similar to male, differing as follows. F 1 with av and pv hairs and bristles more even sized, less denticle-like apically. T 1 shorter, 0.9X as long as F 1, not constricted distally, lacking subterminal black spines, ventral denticles rather larger and more conspicuous; at1 and at2 with shorter bristles. Wings simple, no supernumerary bristles on C between costal bristle and junction of C with R 1. Abdomen with terminal papillae narrow bearing shortish hairs.
Comment s. C. australpina is allied to C. oblinita and C. oblata but with the thorax unstriped and dc3 strong. Males have T 1 constricted distally. It is known only from Nothofagus fusca forest at the type locality, Arthurs Pass, South Island.
NZAC |
New Zealand Arthropod Collection |
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.