Kempynus crenatus Adams, 1971

Martins, Caleb Califre, Ardila-Camacho, Adrian & Aspöck, Ulrike, 2016, Neotropical osmylids (Neuroptera, Osmylidae): Three new species of Isostenosmylus Krüger, 1913, new distributional records, redescriptions, checklist and key for the Neotropical species, Zootaxa 4149 (1), pp. 1-66 : 54-56

publication ID

https://doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.4149.1.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:3C009047-18B7-4C79-9C22-6D7659AA533B

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6053652

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/A94487F7-E178-FF8A-FF68-2A8AFBEC5CB8

treatment provided by

Plazi (2016-08-09 06:56:42, last updated 2024-11-26 04:30:26)

scientific name

Kempynus crenatus Adams, 1971
status

 

Kempynus crenatus Adams, 1971 View in CoL

( Figs. 37 View FIGURE 37 , 38 View FIGURE 38 )

Kempynus crenatus Adams, 1971: 45 View in CoL , figs. 1, 2a, c, e–h (wings, male genitalia, female terminalia and genitalia). Refs. Adams (1971), Penny (1977), Ardila-Camacho & Noriega (2014). Holotype female, MCZ.

Type-locality. Chile: Ñuble , Cordilleras Chillán, Las Trancas, 12 Km E. Recinto, 36°51’S −71°37’W, 800 m, 1~ 10.x.1964, Leg. L.E.Peña.

Material examined. “ Argentina: Neuquén, Pucará , 30 Nov. 1959, F. H. Walz col.” (1♀ NMNH).

Distribution ( Fig. 43 View FIGURE 43 ). Chile (Ñuble); Argentina (Neuquén).

Principal characteristics. Head pale with articulating areas of antennal sockets dark, their border confluent with frontoclypeal triangle; anterior spots to anterior tentorial pits dark; borders of ocelli and vertex dark brown; antennae pale brown. Pronotum brown with four dark spots; mesonotum brown with dark spots, prescutum with four dark spots. Legs brown; mid- and forefemur with a pair of subapical dark marks; hind femur pale; tarsi pale brown, except for dark brown apical tarsomere; female procoxa laterally with many short setae arising from protuberant bases. Wings with rounded tips, membrane irregularly stained with grayish-brown suffusions and amber spots, veins mainly brown with some regions pale yellow, pterostigma barely perceptible ( Fig. 36 View FIGURE 36 B); forewing with dark spots around the wing margin and along anterior radial trace, MP2 fork basal of union of CuA and CuP; hindwing diffusely smoky, mainly in the distal half; nygmata dark brown.

Male ( Figs. 38 View FIGURE 38 A, B). Ninth gonocoxites elongated, crescent-shaped in lateral view with some setae at apex; ninth gonapophysis elongate tapering towards the apex; complex of tenth gonocoxites C-shaped in lateral view with two processes. Hypandrium internum elongated with winglike lobes fused on the midline ( Adams 1971).

Female ( Figs. 38 View FIGURE 38 C, D). Eighth sternite with numerous setae on anterior apex, posterior lobes are short and rounded; spermathecae slightly bent with basal portion spherical ( Adams 1971).

Adams, P. A. (1971) Variation and geographic distribution in some Argentine and Chilean Osmylidae, with a new species of Kempynus (Neuroptera). Bulletin of the Southern California Academy of Sciences, 70, 45 - 49.

Ardila-Camacho, A. & Noriega, J. A. (2014) First record of Osmylidae (Neuroptera) from Colombia and description of two new species of Isostenosmylus Kruger, 1913. Zootaxa, 3826 (2), 315 - 328. http: // dx. doi. org / 10.11646 / zootaxa. 3826.2.2

Penny, N. (1977) Lista de Megaloptera, Neuropteras e Raphidioptera do Mexico, America Central, Ilhas Caraibas e America do Sul. Acta Amazonica, 7 (Supplement), 1 - 161.

Gallery Image

FIGURE 36. Holotype of Kempynus digoniostigma Oswald, 1994, female. A) Habitus lateral; B) Terminalia, lateral view; C) Genitalia, ventral view; D) Labels. ect (ectoproct), gcx VIII (eighth gonocoxite), gcx IX (ninth gonocoxite), gph VIII (eighth gonapophysis), gph IX (ninth gonapophysis), T VIII (eighth tergite), T IX (ninth tergite). Photos provided by Oliver Flint and Karolyn Darrow (National Museum of Natural History (NMNH), Washington, D. C., USA) (B and C after Oswald 1994, modified).

Gallery Image

FIGURE 37. Kempynus crenatus Adams, 1971. A) Habitus dorsal; B) Wings. Photos provided by Oliver Flint and Karolyn Darrow (National Museum of Natural History (NMNH), Washington, D. C., USA).

Gallery Image

FIGURE 38. Genitalia of Kempynus crenatus Adams, 1971. A) Hypandrium internum; B) Male genitalia, lateral view; C) Female genitalia, ventral view; D) Spermatheca. gcx VIII (eighth gonocoxite), gcx IX (ninth gonocoxite), gcx X (tenth gonocoxite), gph VIII (eighth gonapophysis), gph IX (ninth gonapophysis). (A – D after Adams 1971, modified).

Gallery Image

FIGURE 43. Distribution of Neotropical Osmylidae species. 1) white star, I. contrerasi; cross, Isostenosmylus sp.; red star, I. bifurcatus n. sp.; white triangle, I. septemtrionalandinus; white circle, I. fasciatus; red triangle, I. irroratus n. sp. 2) asterisk, I. nigrifrons; cross, I. morenoi; red circle, I. julianae n. sp.; star, I. fusciceps; white circle, I. fasciatus. 3) circle, I. pulverulentus; red star, G. adspersus. 4) white star, K. digoniostigma; white circle, K. tjederi; green circle, K. falcatus; red triangle, K. crenatus; cross, Ph. caprorum.

NMNH

Smithsonian Institution, National Museum of Natural History

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Neuroptera

Family

Osmylidae

SubFamily

Kempyninae

Genus

Kempynus