Didicrum letitiae Omad

Omad, Guillermo, 2014, Two new species of Didicrum Enderlein (Diptera, Psychodidae, Psychodinae) from Argentinean Patagonia, Zootaxa 3794 (4), pp. 565-574 : 568-571

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.3794.4.7

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:CE8DD2DA-3F05-46D2-90D1-6F6DF3BDE6FA

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6126939

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/3D742A32-3159-FF9C-FF65-FAC0C101F8F7

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Didicrum letitiae Omad
status

sp. nov.

Didicrum letitiae Omad View in CoL , sp. nov.

( Figs. 14–27 View FIGURES 9 – 14 View FIGURES 15 – 21 View FIGURES 22 – 23 View FIGURES 24 – 29 )

Description. Male ( Figs. 15–22 View FIGURES 15 – 21 View FIGURES 22 – 23 ). Head: ( Fig. 15 View FIGURES 15 – 21 ): about as long as broad (without considering the mouthparts), oval in frontal view; interocular suture inverted V-shaped, eye bridge with 3 rows of facet separated by 3.5–4 facet diameters; frons below eyes broad, with a single setae alveoli patch emarginated below eye-bridge without dorsal extension,with 2–3 setae between eye-bridge; clypeal region broad with a single patch of uniformly distribuited alveoli ( Fig. 15 View FIGURES 15 – 21 ); palpus long ( Fig. 17 View FIGURES 15 – 21 ) about as long as the head, 0.58 the length of the antenna, palpal formula 1.0: 1.4: 1.6: 2.4; mouthparts short, 0.25 times the length of the head; labella bulbous, with long spiniforms setae on anterior part and some shorts ones on the distal portion; Antenna short, 0.3 times as long as wing; scape about 2 times the length of the subspherical pedicel ( Fig. 18 View FIGURES 15 – 21 ); with 14 flagellomere, flegellomere 1–2 barrel shaped, flagellomere 3–11 flask-shaped, terminal 3 flagellomere reduced ( Fig. 19 View FIGURES 15 – 21 ), apical one with apiculus as long as the node; ascoids small with 4 branches, ascoids absents from flagellomere 1 and from las three.

Thorax. Wing ( Fig. 16 View FIGURES 15 – 21 ): 2.2 times as long as broad; Sc ending beyond the level of base of R5, R2+3 not attached to R4; R5 ending beyond wing tip.

Terminalia. ( Figs. 20–23 View FIGURES 15 – 21 View FIGURES 22 – 23 ): hypandrium hardly visible; gonocoxite longer than gonostylus with strong spiniform setae uniformly distributed; anterior gonocoxal apodeme plate-like, nearly triangular ( Fig. 20 View FIGURES 15 – 21 ), not touching at middle; gonostylus short, 0.7 times the length of the gonocoxite, with a patch of setae alveoli at the external margin of the base; gonostylus wide at base tapering to the point, slightly curved, ending with a very small hook, with small spiniform setae over the surface ( Fig. 20 View FIGURES 15 – 21 ).

Distiphallus about as long as the basiphallus, wide at base, tapering at the end ( Figs. 20, 21 View FIGURES 15 – 21 ); basiphallus broad, nearly quadrate; Aedeagus composed by three rami, two overlapping (one dorsal and one ventral) and one lateral. Dorsal ramus long, 1.2 times the length of the ventral ramus, hardly sclerotized, nearly straight, with slight undulation before apex; ventral ramus shorter than dorsal ramus, broad at base and curved, with acute apex slightly curved; the lateral ramus short than the previous ones, straigth, ending in a bulb covered with small projections like teeth ( Figs. 20, 21 View FIGURES 15 – 21 ); pair of parameres presents, each one on the internal side of the gonocoxite, short, 0.66 the length of the gonostylus; epandrium nude, 0.8 the length of the distiphallus, with anterior margin reinforced, posterolateral angles rounded, posterior margin concave; tergum 10 small ( Fig. 22 View FIGURES 22 – 23 ), rounded, dome-shaped, pubescence; sternum 10 tongue-shaped, longer than broad and nearly as long as the epandrium; surstylus long, 3 times the length of the gonostylus, slightly curved, with strong spiniform setae all over its surface, with one rounded tenacula on the apex ( Fig. 23 View FIGURES 22 – 23 ).

Measurements. Head high: 0.40, width: 0.39; mouthparts length (from clypeus inferior border to apex of labellum): 0.10; palpus length: 0.49; antenna length: 0.83; wing length: 2.20, width: 1.00; epandrium length: 0.13; surstylus length: 0.35; tenaculum length: 0.05; gonostylus length: 0.11; gonocoxite length: 0.15; aedeagus length: dorsal ramus: 0.16, ventral ramus: 0.13; paramere: 0.09.

Female. ( Figs. 24–29 View FIGURES 24 – 29 ). Similar to male except for the following characteristics. Head ( Fig. 24 View FIGURES 24 – 29 ): antenna nearly 2 times the length of the head, with flagellomeres barrel-shaped, ascoids very small, with 5 branches ( Fig. 28 View FIGURES 24 – 29 ) (a few with 4 branches), flagellomere 1 without ascoids ( Fig. 27 View FIGURES 24 – 29 ); palpal formula: 1.0: 1.2: 1.4: 2.0. Palpus ( Fig. 26 View FIGURES 24 – 29 ) and wing ( Fig. 25 View FIGURES 24 – 29 ) as figured. Postabdomen ( Fig. 29 View FIGURES 24 – 29 ): subgenital plate oval, posterior margin well defined; hypovalve with external margin curved and divergent apex rounded with internal margin nearly straigth, space between them nearly triangular; chitinous arch coinciding with the limit of hypovalve pubescence, ending triangular; longitudinal and lateral struts well developed, genital ducts with striations over lobs ( Fig. 29 View FIGURES 24 – 29 ); cercus two times long as the subgenital plate, wide at the base, then tapering toward the distal portion.

Measurements. Head length: 0.40, width: 0.41; mouthparts (from clypeus inferior border to apex of labellum): 0.12; antenna length: 0.76; palpus length: 0.45; wing length: 2.30, width: 0.99; subgenital plate length: 0.15; cercus length: 0.30.

Material examined. ARGENTINA. Río Negro, Nahuel Huapi National Park, Mallin Los Patos (41º 15’ 48.6’’ S, 71º 17’ 50.3’’ W, 1020 m asl), Malaise trap, 10–20.xii.2006, Garré and Montes de Oca, leg. 1 ♂ (holotype); 1 ♂ (paratype); 1 ♀ (paratype); Nahuel Huapi nacional Park, Laguna Mercedes, Isla Victoria (40º 52’ 43.4’’ S, 71º 34’ 41’’ W, 899 m asl), Malaise trap, 3–21.i.2008, Garré and Montes de Oca, leg. 1 ♂ (paratype); 1 ♀ (paratype).

Etymology. The specific epithet letitiae is in honor of Leticia Pafundi, the beloved wife of the author.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Diptera

Family

Psychodidae

Genus

Didicrum

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