Porismus McLachlan, 1867

Winterton, Shaun L., Martins, Caleb Califre, Makarkin, Vladimir, Ardila-Camacho, Adrian & Wang, Yongjie, 2019, Lance lacewings of the world (Neuroptera: Archeosmylidae, Osmylidae, Saucrosmylidae): review of living and fossil genera, Zootaxa 4581 (1), pp. 1-99 : 43-44

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4581.1.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:20A9776D-AE5F-41BC-A35B-0C5E42EDFE48

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5631465

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03C47176-FFA9-8D1F-7AD2-01D4FCF69025

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Porismus McLachlan, 1867
status

 

Porismus McLachlan, 1867 View in CoL View at ENA

(Figs 24–26)

Type species. Osmylus strigatus Burmeister, 1839: 184 (by monotypy).

Diagnosis. Wings with highly distinctive contrasting colour pattern; wings ovoid; body glossy black with head bright orange; RP with numerous crossveins irregularly arranged; CuA and CuP strongly sinuous in both wings, branching near wing margin in FW; HW CuA with few dichotomous branches; female forecoxa with 11–15 short pedicellate setae and a prominent preapical process on dorsal surface; female tergite 9 strongly produced posteroventrally; sternite 8 with posterior end forked and with two small setose lobes; spermathecae rounded.

Comments. Commonly called the ‘pied lacewing’ this highly distinctive species is placed in a separate subfamily based on a series of autapomorphies features in the wings such as the branching pattern of medial and cubital veins, lack of gradate series crossveins and multiple sc-r crossveins. Porismus strigatus is associated with Eucalyotus trees during the autumn months in eastern Australia when adults have been observed ovipositing under tree bark; larvae are sub-corticolous on these trees and not associated with riparian habitats ( Winterton et al., 2017). Krüger (1913) erected Porisminae along with Eidoporisminae as separate subfamilies based on distinctive venational characters, and although the male and female abdominal sclerites and genitalic morphology reflect a close relationship with Stenosmylinae , their status as separate subfamilies is maintained (discussed in New, 1983b). Winterton et al. (2017 a,b) also concluded that Porisminae was closely related to Eidoporisminae and Stenosmylinae , consistent with previous proposals ( Esben-Petersen, 1917, Kimmins, 1940, New, 1983b), but relationships amongst the three subfamilies were inconclusive.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Neuroptera

Family

Osmylidae

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