Austrothaumalea fredericki Pivar, 2020

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 : 515-518

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.4410957

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/30A95D92-37F9-42DE-9023-6B7889028F91

taxon LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:act:30A95D92-37F9-42DE-9023-6B7889028F91

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Austrothaumalea fredericki Pivar
status

sp. nov.

Austrothaumalea fredericki Pivar sp. nov.

( Figs 3D View FIGURE 3 , 4C View FIGURE 4 , 5C View FIGURE 5 , 8 View FIGURE 8 , 9B View FIGURE 9 )

Type material. Holotype: ♂, glued to point with abdomen in glycerine microvial pinned beneath, labelled: “ CHILE: Region X ( Los / Lagos ) East side Lago / Llanquihue / small falls on road (nr PN/ VPR) 41°08.47′S / 72°35.28′W ~ 100m / 2.xii.2008 GW Courtney/ (CH08-30)”; “ HOLOTYPE / Austrothaumalea / fredericki / Pivar [red label]” ( CNC). GoogleMaps

Recognition. This species is recognized by its cruciate parameres. The lateral, cross-like projections on the paramere are located at mid-length, concealed by the gonocoxal plate (in ventral view) and are much longer than those of A. chilensis .

Description. Male. n = 1. Length 2.8 mm. Colouration ( Fig. 3D View FIGURE 3 ). Head dull, dark brown; pronotum, postpronotum, postpronotal lobe and lateral margins of prescutum yellowish brown; prescutum and mesoscutum shiny, primarily yellow, with pleura yellowish brown; two lateral brown spots above scutoscutellar suture; scutellum and mediotergite shiny, yellow; paratergite yellowish brown; katepisternum mainly yellow, remaining pteropleuron yellowish brown; halter brown; legs pale brown, tarsi darker; abdomen brown; terminalia light 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 clothed in golden setae of uniform length, with sparse long, 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. Fore- and mid legs with tarsomere 4 bilobed; hind tarsi broken, not observed.

Wing. Wing length: 2.9 mm. Lightly infuscate throughout, slightly darker where R 4+5 meets apex; apex rounded; C and posterior wing margin with fringe of microtrichia; Sc incomplete; R 1 and R 1 (+R 2+3) without three weakenings or depigmented gaps; R 1 (+R 2+3) with uniseriate row of microtrichia along entire length, remaining veins bare; R flexed into cell br; R 2+3 crossvein very weak, situated slightly before midpoint of R 1 (+R 2+3); bend in R 4+5 gentle; R 4+5 and M 1 running parallel toward margin; M 1 and M 2 straight; M 4 slightly sinuous; CuA with basal spur shorter than crossvein m-cu.

Abdomen. Abdominal sternite 1 narrow, spectacle-shaped; sternite 2 with slender median sclerite and weakly sclerotized posterior trapezoid, few setae on posterior margin; sternites 3–7 rectangular, weakly sclerotized, setae restricted to posterior third; anterior margin of sternites 5–7 thin, well-sclerotized, sternite 7 arched slightly into preceding segment; sternite 8 triangular, bare, anterior margin well sclerotized, arched strongly into preceding sternite.

Terminalia ( Figs 4C View FIGURE 4 , 5C View FIGURE 5 ). Epandrium trapezoidal from ventral aspect; apical third slightly tapered; posterior margin broad, irregular; lacking pointed posterolateral processes. Hypandrium broad in ventral view, equal to basal width of gonostylus; anterior margin not concave. Gonocoxite broadest at basal third, tapered toward apex, inner margin smooth. Gonostylus about two-thirds length of gonocoxite, distal half strongly curved; broadest basally, gradually tapered to slightly pointed apex. Parameres distally fused, slightly more than half-length of epandrium, cruciform at mid-length, projected ventrally. Gonocoxal plate U-shaped, short, about one-third length of gonocoxite, well sclerotized; lateral arms divergent posteriorly into projections, distal inner margins weakly toothed; membrane extended to middle of paramere, with medial invagination; basally not fused to hypandrium. Cercus weakly sclerotized, situated along midline of epandrium.

Female. Unknown.

Immature Stages. Unknown.

Additional Material Examined. Known only from the holotype.

Distribution. Known only from the type locality in the Southern Andes ( Figs 8 View FIGURE 8 , 9B View FIGURE 9 ).

Etymology. Austrothaumalea fredericki is named in honour of British dipterist Frederick W. Edwards, who was a primary author of the Natural History Museum’s (London) series of books entitled “ Diptera of Patagonia and South Chile ”. Specifically, Edwards was heavily involved in writing the lower Diptera chapters and laid the groundwork for future studies of many families, including Thaumaleidae .

CNC

Canadian National Collection of Insects, Arachnids, and Nematodes

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Diptera

Family

Thaumaleidae

Genus

Austrothaumalea

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