Antocha (Antocha) spiralis Alexander, 1932

Lv, Hanhuiying, Sun, Juan, Wang, Ning, Yang, Ding & Zhang, Xiao, 2023, New species and records of the genus Antocha Osten Sacken (Diptera, Limoniidae) from Tibet, China with a key to species in Qinghai-Tibet region, ZooKeys 1156, pp. 53-69 : 53

publication ID

https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.1156.86786

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:0EA9E43B-A5BF-4232-A297-B341861E835D

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/B06A36D1-F7C3-5E45-8623-85090E10E985

treatment provided by

ZooKeys by Pensoft

scientific name

Antocha (Antocha) spiralis Alexander
status

 

Antocha (Antocha) spiralis Alexander View in CoL

Figs 6 View Figure 6 , 7 View Figure 7

Antocha (Antocha) spiralis Alexander 1932: 389 (original description).

Material examined.

China • 9 ♂♂ 1 ♀; Tibet Autonomous Region, Bayi District, Pailong ; 30°01'25"N, 95°00'32"E; 2003 m a.s.l.; 20 June 2018; Liang Wang leg.; CAU GoogleMaps .

Diagnosis.

Antocha (A.) spiralis can be recognized by thorax having no stripes, wing without stigma, basal section of M3 about one and half times as long as m-m, posterior margin of tergite 9 having shallow, median emargination and slightly curved, blackened in distal 2/3 of outer gonostylus. Aedeagal complex with interbase nearly U-shaped; paramere apically slender and twisted into a spiral; inner branch of paramere with bifid tip.

Description.

Male. Body length 4.5-5.5 mm, wing length 5.0-6.0 mm, antenna length 1.0-1.2 mm.

Head (Fig. 6b View Figure 6 ). Black with brown setae. Antenna brown, with dark brown pedicel. Scape cylindrical; pedicel and flagellomeres oval; terminal two segments slender. Rostrum yellow; palpus light brown; setae on rostrum and palpus brown.

Thorax (Fig. 6c View Figure 6 ). Pronotum brown. Prescutum and presutural scutum dark brown, without stripe. Postsutural scutum brownish yellow in middle; scutal lobes each with brown spot. Scutellum brown with middle of base brownish yellow. Mediotergite dark brown, with middle brownish yellow. Pleuron brown (Fig. 6a View Figure 6 ). Legs with fore and mid coxae brown; hind coxa yellow; trochanters yellow with side edges brown; femora brownish yellow to brown; remaining segments dark brown. Wing light brown, without stigma; anal angle nearly right-angled (Fig. 6d View Figure 6 ). Veins brown. Venation: Sc ending before fork of Rs, at about 5/6 of Rs; basal section of R5 about 1½ times as long as r-m; m-cu shortly before fork of M, distance approximately 1/4 its own length; basal section of M3 about 1½ as long as m-m; cell m1 longer than cell dm. Halter pale.

Abdomen. Tergites 1-6 brown, tergites 7 and 8 dark brown. Sternites 1-6 brownish yellow to light brown; sternites 7 and 8 dark brown.

Hypopygium (Figs 6e View Figure 6 , 7 View Figure 7 ). Posterior margin of tergite 9 with broad and shallow emargination (Fig. 7a View Figure 7 ). Gonocoxite nearly cylindrical with brown setae (Figs 6e View Figure 6 , 7 View Figure 7 ). Outer gonostylus slightly curved; base yellowish brown; distal 2/3 blackened, narrowing towards obtuse apex. Interbase nearly U-shaped, distal part flattened and oval (Figs 6e View Figure 6 , 7 View Figure 7 ). Paramere with rod-shaped base; apical part slender and twisted into spiral; tip sharp. Inner branch of paramere with tip bifid; outer tooth longer than inner one (Figs 6e View Figure 6 , 7 View Figure 7 ). Aedeagus with two projections near tip (Figs 6e View Figure 6 , 7 View Figure 7 ).

Female. Body length 4.5-5.5 mm, wing length 5.0-6.0 mm. Generally similar to male by body coloration.

Ovipositor (Fig. 6f View Figure 6 ). Tergite 10 brownish yellow, with brown base. Cercus yellowish brown, with base darker, slender, and curved; tip raised and tapering. Hypogynial valve yellow, reaching approximately middle of cercus.

Distribution.

China (Sichuan, Tibet), India.

Remarks.

In China, this species was previously only known in Sichuan and is now recorded in Tibet for the first time. For descriptions and illustrations of this species, also see Alexander (1932) and Markevičiūtė et al. (2019, 2021). Both A. (A.) spiralis and A. (A.) bella from China have the twisted structure of the hypopygium. In A. (A.) spiralis , the apical part of the paramere is slender and twisted into a spiral, and the tip of the inner branch of the paramere is bifid (Figs 6e View Figure 6 , 7 View Figure 7 ), while in A. (A.) bella , the tip of the inner branch of the paramere is twisted ( Markevičiūtė et al. 2019).

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Diptera

Family

Limoniidae

Genus

Antocha

Loc

Antocha (Antocha) spiralis Alexander

Lv, Hanhuiying, Sun, Juan, Wang, Ning, Yang, Ding & Zhang, Xiao 2023
2023
Loc

Antocha (Antocha) spiralis

Alexander 1932
1932