Austrothaumalea apicalis Edwards, 1930

Pivar, Robert J., Sinclair, Bradley J. & Moulton, John K., 2020, Revision of the South American species of Austrothaumalea Tonnoir (Diptera Thaumaleidae), Zootaxa 4853 (4), pp. 509-526 : 512-514

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4853.4.2

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:948793DC-3873-4C14-8239-E30ED790E56A

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4410953

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/038F6D29-FFCA-FFA5-85DB-FA72FBE313A2

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Austrothaumalea apicalis Edwards
status

 

Austrothaumalea apicalis Edwards View in CoL

( Figs 3A View FIGURE 3 , 4A View FIGURE 4 , 5A View FIGURE 5 , 6A View FIGURE 6 , 7A View FIGURE 7 , 8 View FIGURE 8 )

Austrothaumalea apicalis Edwards, 1930: 113 View in CoL .

Other references: Stone, 1966: 1 (catalogue); Arnaud, 1977: 284 (distribution); Theischinger, 1986: 316 (phylogenetic discussion); Sinclair, 2008b: 12 ( fusca View in CoL species group).

Type material examined. Holotype: ♀, minuten pinned with right wing mounted on plastic card, pinned beneath specimen, abdomen mounted in resin, labelled: “Bariloche./ 1.xii.1926.”; “ Austrothaumalea / apicalis Edw./ F.W. Edwards / det. 1930.”; “ Argentina:/ Terr. Rio Negro./ F. & M. Edwards. / B.M. 1927 – 63.”; “HOLO-/ TYPE [white label with red margin]”; “ NHMUK010210687 View Materials ” ( BMNH) . Paratype: same label data as holotype (1♀, BMNH) .

Recognition. The only described species of South American Austrothaumalea with posterior epandrial projections (also present in some Australian species). This feature, along with the more rounded apex of the paramere and concave posterior margin of the gonocoxal plate distinguish it from A. spatulata . Austrothaumalea apicalis is similar to A. fredericki , with both having darkened wing tips and yellowish body colour.

Redescription. Male. n = 1. Length 2.1 mm. Colouration ( Fig. 3A View FIGURE 3 ). Head dull, dark brown; pronotum and postpronotum brown; postpronotal lobe brown; prescutum with lateral margins brown; mesoscutum uniformly yellowish brown, shiny; scutellum and mediotergite pale brown, shiny; pteropleuron brown with ill-defined darker markings; halter yellowish brown; legs pale brown, apices of femora and tarsi darkened; abdomen dark brown; terminalia brown.

Head. Eyes above antennae broadly joined, barely exposing frons above antennae. Flagellomeres 1–3 expanded, subquadrate; 1 as long as 2 and 3 combined; flagellomeres 4–10 thin, cylindrical, becoming progressively more elongate. Vertex with yellow setae of uniform length, with a few longer, black orbital setae.

Thorax. Pronotal setae longer than scutal setae. Scutum clothed dorsally in short setulae; notopleural, supra-alar and postsutural setae long, black. Pteropleuron bare. All legs with tarsomere 4 bilobed.

Wing. Wing length: 2.7 mm. Lightly infuscate throughout except for distinct dark, apical spot encircling apex of R 4+5 and M 1 ( Fig. 3A View FIGURE 3 ); apex broadly rounded; C and posterior wing margin with fringe of microtrichia; Sc incomplete; R 1 and R 1 (+R 2+3) without weakenings or depigmented gaps, with uniseriate row of microtrichia along entire length, remaining veins bare; R flexed into cell br; R 2+3 crossvein very weak or absent, at most a faint infuscation, situated slightly beyond midpoint of R 1 (+R 2+3); bend in R 4+5 gentle; R 4+5 and M 1 running parallel toward wing margin; M 1 and M 2 straight; M 4 slightly sinuous; CuA with basal spur shorter than crossvein m-cu.

Abdomen. Abdominal sternites 1–4 not observable due to dissection; sternites 5–6 rectangular, weakly sclerotized, anterior margin well sclerotized, setae restricted to posterior third; sternite 7 rectangular, a few setae on posterior third, weakly sclerotized, anterior margin well sclerotized, arched slightly into preceding sternite; sternite 8 crescent-shaped, bare, weakly sclerotized except for anterior margin slightly more sclerotized and arched slightly into preceding sternite.

Terminalia ( Figs 4A View FIGURE 4 , 5A View FIGURE 5 ). Epandrium trapezoidal from ventral aspect; apical half tapered; posterior margin narrow, slightly indented, with single small tooth-like projection from posterolateral margin. Hypandrium broad in ventral view, wider than basal width of gonostylus; anterior margin not concave. Gonocoxite broadest basally, inner margin nearly parallel, smooth. Gonostylus shorter than gonocoxite, basal quarter straight then gently curved medially; broadest at basal quarter, apical three-quarters uniform in width; apex truncate. Parameres distally fused, three-quarters length of epandrium; expanded irregularly toward apex. Gonocoxal plate weakly sclerotized, apical third tapered, posterior margin slightly concave with posterolateral projection on each corner; nearly half-length of gonocoxite; basally not fused to hypandrium. Cercus weakly sclerotized, situated along midline of epandrium.

Female. n = 1. Similar to male except as follows: Length: 2.3 mm. Abdomen: Tergites 8–9 noticeably more sclerotized than preceding segments; only anterior margin of sternite 7 well sclerotized. Terminalia ( Figs 6A View FIGURE 6 , 7A View FIGURE 7 ): Hypogynial valve not projected beyond tergite 9; posterior margin rounded with shallow cleft in ventral view; densely setose. Tergite 9 rectangular in lateral view, wider than tergite 8, lacking lateral projections. Sternite 9 (genital fork) thin, rod-shaped, posteriorly divided into two triangular-shaped sclerites; distal margin of lateral arms extended beyond hypogynial valve, arms nearly meeting along midline, golf club-head shaped in lateral view. Hypoproct arched, thin medially. Cercus rounded, projected slightly posterodorsally; bearing numerous setae. Spermathecal ducts not observed.

Immature Stages. Unknown.

Additional Material Examined. ARGENTINA: Rio Negro: Bariloche , XI-1926, R . & E. Shannon , USNMENT 01115807 (1♂, USNM); CHILE: Region X (Los Lagos): Casa Pangue, Llanquihue , XII-1926, R . & E. Shannon, USNMENT01115806 (1♀, USNM) .

Distribution. Known from adjacent localities on the Chile-Argentina border in the southern Andes ( Fig. 8 View FIGURE 8 ).

Remarks. Edwards (1930) did not describe the male specimen. Alan Stone identified the male specimen herein treated as A. apicalis (year not specified on determination label), but he never formally described it. Since it was collected in the same region as the holotype female, and it is uniquely distinct from all other described males, we also have identified it as the putative male.

The holotype date label reads “.xi- 1.xii.1926 ”, with “.xi-” scratched out with pencil.

R

Departamento de Geologia, Universidad de Chile

USNM

Smithsonian Institution, National Museum of Natural History

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Diptera

Family

Thaumaleidae

Genus

Austrothaumalea

Loc

Austrothaumalea apicalis Edwards

Pivar, Robert J., Sinclair, Bradley J. & Moulton, John K. 2020
2020
Loc

Austrothaumalea apicalis

Edwards, F. W. 1930: 113
1930
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