Heteropterna (Heteropterna s. str.) fanjingshana Wang et Huang, 2021

Wang, Qingyun, Qi, Lei, Wu, Hong & Huang, Junhao, 2021, Two new species of Heteropterna Skuse, 1888 (Diptera: Keroplatidae) from China, Zootaxa 4985 (2), pp. 277-284 : 281-283

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4985.2.11

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:95D71E11-58AA-4BEF-910A-1A91DEF88DA0

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5055910

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03AC2835-FA02-137E-FAC5-FF5CAEE5DA71

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Heteropterna (Heteropterna s. str.) fanjingshana Wang et Huang
status

sp. nov.

Heteropterna (Heteropterna s. str.) fanjingshana Wang et Huang View in CoL sp. n.

( Figs 3–4 View FIGURE 3 View FIGURE 4 )

Diagnosis. This new species is similar to H. septemtrionalis (Okada) by having similar antennae with the last four flagellomeres yellowish white. It can be recognized by the wing having medial hyaline spot oblique outward, and the internal lobe of gonostylus apically straight in ventral view ( Figs 4g, i–k View FIGURE 4 ). In H. septemtrionalis , the wing has a medial hyaline spot oblique inward, and the internal lobe of gonostylus apically hooked in ventral view ( Matile, 1990: Figs 586–587).

Type material. Holotype. Male, CHINA: Guizhou Province, Mt. Fanjing (27.95° N, 108.77° E), 840 m, 5.VI.2020, coll. Zhenghai Yang, slide no. FJS-10-28. GoogleMaps

Description. Male ( Fig. 3 View FIGURE 3 ). Body length (without antennae) 5.3 mm. Wing length 3.4 mm. Length of terminalia 0.5 mm.

Head ( Figs 4a–b View FIGURE 4 ) dark brown. Compound eyes ( Fig. 4a View FIGURE 4 ) hemispheric, making up most area of head, covered with dense pubescence superficially. Three ocelli ( Fig. 4b View FIGURE 4 ) lying between upper edges of eyes, arranged in an inverted triangle, with median ocellus at a slightly lower position, lateral ocelli about three times as median one in diameter. Mouthparts ( Fig. 4a View FIGURE 4 ) reduced, palpus two-segmented and setose, labrum ligulate, labellum has bushy setae laterally.Antenna ( Fig. 4c View FIGURE 4 ) pectinate and laterally compressed, about 1.5 times length of head width; scape and pedicel subtrapezoid, with setae dorsally and ventrally; flagellum 14-segmented and comb-like, covered with serried microtrichia laterally, with countable setae dorsally and ventrally; flagellomeres 1–10 brown (except 7th segment yellowish white laterally), flagellomeres 11–14 yellowish white, with last segment pale brown terminally.

Thorax ( Figs 4d–f View FIGURE 4 ) brown. Anepisternum dark brown and subtriangular, bare. Mesonotum brown; medial stripe dark brown, narrowly bandlike, reaching to posterior 2/5. Scutellum dark brown, subrectangular. Mediotergite yellowish brown and subtriangular, medial membrane inverted triangular. Laterotergite brown and subelliptical. Halter length 0.5 mm; stem translucent, with distal half bearing setae anteriorly; knob dark brown, oval.

Wing ( Fig. 4g View FIGURE 4 ) pale brown, covered with thick microtrichia superficially, outer and posterior margin with short cilia. Fuscous stripe along costa, approaching to 2/7 width of wing, stretching from base to end of costa. Medial hyaline spot irregular extending from end of Sc outward to middle of R, apical hyaline spot extending from end of R 2+3 obliquely inward to bottom margin of stripe. Veins brown to dark brown, with two rows of microsetae on C, and a row of microsetae on R 1, R 2+3 and R 4+5. Vein C terminate at 2/5 of R 4+5 -M 1. M 1 and M 2 weaker than other veins, with M 1 ending at outer margin, and M 2 ending far from outer margin. CuA curved backward at midpoint. False vein next to CuA, with free end. Vein r-m degenerated.

Legs ( Fig. 3 View FIGURE 3 ) yellowish white to dark brown. Hind leg dark brown, except femora yellowish white interiorly, with thick setae. Fore and mid legs damaged, only with fuscous coxae left.

Abdomen ( Fig. 4h View FIGURE 4 ) brown, with dense setae dorso-ventrally. Tergites pale brown. Sternites dark brown, with paired suboval hyaline spots from sternites 2 to 4 on each segment.

Terminalia ( Figs 4i–k View FIGURE 4 ) brown. Tergite 9 subtrapezoidal, shallowly concave at posterior margin. Cercus subtriangular, setose dorsally. Gonocoxites with posterior 1/3 weakly sclerotized along median line; posterior protuberance horn-shaped, covered with intensive setae ventrally. In ventral view external lobe of gonostylus finely digitate, obtuse terminally, slightly shorter than width of gonocoxite, with dense bristles outside; internal lobe of gonostylus horn-like, about 2/3 length of external lobe, with setae inside and long bristles outside. In lateral view dorsal lobe of gonostylus enlarged dorsad at middle, with thick setae superficially.

Female. Unknown.

Etymology. This species is named after Mt. Fanjing, the collection site of type specimen; noun in genitive case.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Diptera

Family

Keroplatidae

Genus

Heteropterna

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