Lissimas Enderlein, 1922

Mackerras, I. M., Spratt, D. M. & Yeates, D. K., 2008, Revision of the horse fly genera Lissimas and Cydistomyia (Diptera: Tabanidae: Diachlorini) of Australia, Zootaxa 1886 (1), pp. 1-80 : 9-10

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.1886.1.1

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/D95287EC-243A-FFAC-FF73-F98B902EFC59

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Lissimas Enderlein
status

 

Genus Lissimas Enderlein View in CoL

Lissimas Enderlein, 1922: 350, 1925: 336 View in CoL ; Mackerras 1962 b: 106, figs 7–8, 10 (as subgenus of Cydistomyia View in CoL ), 1964: 101, figs 37–43; Daniels 1989; 291; Trojan 1998: 72; Bickel & Elliot, 1998 -2005: 11. Type species. Lissimas fenestratus Enderlein View in CoL , by monotypy. [Sulawesi (as Celebes)].

Paracanthocera Enderlein, 1923: 545, 1925: 333 ; Oldroyd 1949: 331 (removed from Enderlein’s tribe Acanthocerca into his Diachlorini View in CoL where it runs to Lissimas View in CoL ); Mackerras 1959: 165, 1962: 105 (as subgenus of Cydistomyia View in CoL ), 1964: 101 (as synonym of Lissimas View in CoL ). Type species. Acanthocera australis Ricardo View in CoL , by monotypy. [North Queensland].

Diagnosis. Essential features that distinguish this genus from Cydistomyia are banded eyes; shape and usually length of antennae; presence of either a pouting, shiny subcallus or a bulging, shiny face; body form rather Chrysops -like; and general resemblance between less clearly differentiated species and those distinguished by more definite characteristics of the head or pattern of wings.

Description. Female. Eyes bare, usually (perhaps always) banded. Frons medium (index 3.5–5.0), slightly convergent to slightly divergent, usually dark, often more or less shiny; ocellar tubercle absent or rudimentary; callus large, spear- or wedge-shaped; subcallus pouting, more or less thinly tomentose, sometimes completely shiny; parafacials medium to narrow, thinly tomentose; face normal and tomentose, or more or less bulging and shiny; antennae relatively long and slender, usually longer than thickness of head, scape cylindrical and usually more than 2X as long as wide; palpi usually slender to medium, sometimes slightly shiny; proboscis short and stout. Thorax and legs normal. Wings often with conspicuous pattern; R 4 strongly curved, but usually without appendix. Abdomen elongate, usually parallel-sided; terminal segments dorsoventrally compressed; sternite 8 usually with wide, shallow gonapophyses. Small to medium sized (10–15 mm), narrow-bodied, smooth, usually rather ornate.

Male. The three known males differ so markedly that it is not possible to frame a satisfactory diagnosis. Lissimas moestus Szilady from the Celebes [= Sulawesi] (one specimen) was described as having eyes with the area of larger facets not sharply demarcated; ocellar tubercle narrow and deeply sunken; antennal scape bell-shaped and almost 2X as long as wide; palpi slender, of unusually primitive form; and R 4 without appendix. Lissimas australis from northern Qld (two specimens), has the enlarged upper facets sharply demarcated from the small lower ones by the size contrast and the presence of a green to greenish blue band; ocellar tubercle not visible; antennal scape cylindrical and more than 2X as long as wide; palpi short and almost globular; R 4 with inconstant rudimentary appendix .

A key to the species of Lissimas was provided by Mackerras (1964: 102–103).

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Diptera

Family

Tabanidae

Loc

Lissimas Enderlein

Mackerras, I. M., Spratt, D. M. & Yeates, D. K. 2008
2008
Loc

Paracanthocera

Mackerras, I. M. 1962: 105
Mackerras, I. M. 1959: 165
Oldroyd, H. 1949: 331
Enderlein, G. 1925: 333
Enderlein, G. 1923: 545
1923
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