Chelipoda didhami, Published, 2007

Published, First, 2007, The Hemerodromiinae (Diptera: Empididae) of New Zealand II. Chelipoda Macquart, Zootaxa 1537 (1), pp. 1-88 : 49-50

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.1537.1.1

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5088511

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/6A078784-BA54-FF8C-AFFE-FDF61BB2F672

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Chelipoda didhami
status

sp. nov.

31. Chelipoda didhami View in CoL sp. n.

[ Figs. 70 View FIGURES 63–70 , 115, 116 View FIGURES 104–116 ]

Type material. Holotype ♂: New Zealand, South Is. , NN? Castle Rock Hut, 1220m, yellow pan trap in tussock herbfield, 14–16/i/1986, JWE [ NZAC] . Paratypes: 1♂, 3♀, same data as holotype [ NZAC, NMWC] .

Etymology: named in honour of Raphael Didham whose systematic fieldwork has yielded much important information of New Zealand Empididae .

Description. Male: length = 2.0mm.

Head: black dusted greyish, face paler; subspherical, ocellar triangle mid way between antennae and vertex; eyes separated on face by about 0.5X width of scape; ocl stronger than verticals; upo short, more or less congruent with inner vertical (vt1); lpo rather strong, diverging away from posterior eye margin below and merging with scattered bristles of similar strength on lower occiput posteriorly.

Antenna: ( Fig. 116 View FIGURES 104–116 ) brownish on basal segments (pedicel particularly dark); postpedicel rather paler, 6X as long as wide, swollen basally, narrowing abruptly, becoming evenly narrowed in distal 0.8; arista 0.3X as long as postpedicel; scape 1.5X as long as wide with a distinct dorsal seta. Palpi elongate-oval, yellowish with a small distinct apical bristle.

Thorax: ground colour dark reddish brown (possibly blacker in life, the type series is preserved in alcohol and colour may have faded); extremely faint indications of 2 paler stripes on pleura. Dusted grey, scutum with narrow median stripe and wider lateral stripes more shining. All setae black; dc1 very short and spine-like; dc2, dc3, pprn, unp, sa, and sct well developed, lnp smaller.

Legs: yellowish, C 1 with strongly marked stripe anteriorly, apical tarsal segments dusky. C 1 0.9X as long as thorax, only small bristly hairs anteriorly. F 1 as long as C 1, moderately and evenly inflated, widest 0.4–0.5 from base. 2 rows of bristles beneath F 1; a strong av spine 0.3 from base continued basally by weaker bristles and distally by 8–10 rather evenly sized short black denticle-like spines; pv series of spines irregularly linear, rather short, a strong ventral bristle 0.1 from base. T 1 0.85X length of F 1, gently curved, slightly narrowed apically; a linear series of minute black adpressed denticles ventrally; at2 as long as at3.

Wing: with veins brown, membrane faintly darkened; venation simple, cell cup hardly closed, vein A 1 strong about end of CuA 2 but very weak basally.

Abdomen: brown, tergites with weak setae on posterior margins, strongest on segment 5. Terminalia ( Fig. 70 View FIGURES 63–70 ) yellowish brown, reflexed dorsally; hypandrium not fused with epandrium, epandrial lobes separate, rather convex, slightly overlapping hyp below, bearing strong dark posteroapical setae; hypandrium inverted heart-shaped, almost divided into two lobes below, the intervening area between lobes membranous and very weakly chitinized; subepandrial process long, narrow, evenly curving anteriorly on distal part; cerci free, at least apically, with 2 long and several shorter yellowish apical setae; postgonite apically spathulate, virtually transparent and weakly sclerotized; phallus curving, strongly reflexed posteriorly before tip.

Description. Female: similar to male but slightly larger (2- 0–2.5mm). Antenna ( Fig. 115 View FIGURES 104–116 ) with postpedicel much shorter, 3.5X as long as wide, swollen basally, more evenly pointed apically; arista slightly longer than postpedicel. Setae of lower occiput and lpo finer. Thorax with dc1 longer, 0.3X as long as dc2. F 1 rather more inflated, ventral chaetotaxy longer and more numerous particularly in pv series which is also more strictly linearly arranged. Abdominal setae much shorter, strongest basally, not on tergite 5; terminal papillae brown, slender with long pale hairs.

Comments. C. didhami is a dark species in the C. trepida -group with only faint indications of thoracic markings and two rows of setae beneath F 1. Cell cup is closed (although A 1 is very faint basally) and the postpedicel is elongated in both sexes. C. didhami is an alpine species presently known only from a single tussock herbfield in the South Island of New Zealand.

NZAC

New Zealand Arthropod Collection

NMWC

National Museum of Wales

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Diptera

Family

Empididae

Genus

Chelipoda

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