Culex (Microculex) inimitabilis Dyar & Knab

Harbach, Ralph E. & Wilkerson, Richard C., 2023, The insupportable validity of mosquito subspecies (Diptera: Culicidae) and their exclusion from culicid classification, Zootaxa 5303 (1), pp. 1-184 : 102

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.5303.1.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:DE9C1F18-5CEE-4968-9991-075B977966FE

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.8064269

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/161B87CD-BA56-0A31-FF54-FB77FE255B8C

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Culex (Microculex) inimitabilis Dyar & Knab
status

 

Culex (Microculex) inimitabilis Dyar & Knab View in CoL

subspecies fuscatus Lane & Whitman, 1951 —original combination: Culex (Microculex) inimitabilis fuscatus . Distribution: Brazil, State of Rio de Janeiro ( Lane & Whitman 1951; Lane 1953).

subspecies inimitabilis Dyar & Knab, 1906b View in CoL —original combination: Culex inimitabilis View in CoL . Distribution: Brazil [(Middle Coastal States, São Paulo, Rio de Janeiro, Pará ( Lane 1953)], Colombia, Ecuador, French Guiana, Guyana, Lesser Antilles (includes Grenada, Trinidad and Tobago), Panama, Suriname, Venezuela ( Wilkerson et al. 2021).

The subgenus Microculex has not been dealt with since Lane & Whitman (1951) and Lane (1953), and the species are generally very poorly known. Culex inimitabilis was described from larvae, apparently lost ( Stone & Knight 1957a), that were collected in Trinidad. Howard et al. (1915) reproduced the very brief original description of the larva, provided a more detailed description of the larva and described the adult male and female, which established the currently accepted morphological concept of the species. They did not describe the pupa. Dyar (1928) provided a less detailed description of the female, male and larva, but he also did not describe the pupa

Lane & Whitman (1951) established fuscatus as a subspecies of inimitabilis based on specimens reared from larvae collected in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. The authors, and also Lane (1953), provided brief descriptions of the female, male, pupa and larva of both forms and distinguished fuscatus based on the following differences: Abdominal terga of the adult female without basolateral white spots (present in the type form), siphon 10–12 times longer than the basal width (8–10 times longer in the type form), abdominal terga II–IV of the pupa with somewhat triangular area of dark pigmentation, the broad areas on terga each with a pair of unpigmented spots (dark area of pigmentation on terga III and IV and a pair of unpigmented spots on III in the type form), pupal seta 5-II nearly twice as long as the tergum (slightly shorter than the tergum in the type form). It is interesting that Howard et al. (1915) described the siphon of the larva of inimitabilis as being about 14 times longer than the basal width, and yet, in agreement with Lane & Whitman, Dyar (1928) indicated that the siphon of the type form is 10 times longer than the basal width, which brings into question the value of the siphon index for distinguishing the two forms. That aside, the differences exhibited by adult females and pupae, coupled with the recorded occurrence of both forms in Rio de Janeiro State, suggests that fuscatus and inimitabilis are separate species that exist in sympatry. Therefore, until additional observations may prove otherwise, we believe it is prudent to recognize fuscatus as a separate species: Culex (Microculex) fuscatus Lane & Whitman, 1951 . Culex fuscatus is currently listed as a species in the Encyclopedia of Life.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Diptera

Family

Culicidae

Genus

Culex

Loc

Culex (Microculex) inimitabilis Dyar & Knab

Harbach, Ralph E. & Wilkerson, Richard C. 2023
2023
Loc

fuscatus

Lane & Whitman 1951
1951
Loc

Culex (Microculex) inimitabilis fuscatus

Lane & Whitman 1951
1951
Loc

inimitabilis

Dyar & Knab 1906
1906
Loc

Culex inimitabilis

Dyar & Knab 1906
1906
GBIF Dataset (for parent article) Darwin Core Archive (for parent article) View in SIBiLS Plain XML RDF