Sinosciapus Yang, 2001

Yang, Ding & Zhu, Yajun, 2011, Sinosciapus from Taiwan with description of a new species (Diptera, Dolichopodidae), ZooKeys 159, pp. 11-18 : 11-12

publication ID

https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.159.2252

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/B9513767-5E43-A911-A6FD-C653FFCFF7E7

treatment provided by

ZooKeys by Pensoft

scientific name

Sinosciapus Yang, 2001
status

 

Genus Sinosciapus Yang, 2001

Sinosciapus Yang, 2001: 432. Type species: Sinosciapus tianmushanus Yang, 2001 (monotypy).

Diagnosis.

Eyes in both sexes narrowly separated, frons and face rather narrow (face less than 1/2 as wide as one eye, frons narrower than one eye). Vt strong. Clypeus apically separated from inner margin of eyes. Cheeks of females posteriorly with 1 black spine-like bristle. First flagellomere subtrapezoid or semicircular; arista subapical, slightly shorter than width of head. 5 strong dc, anterior 3 dc somewhat shorter; 5-7 irregularly paired acr very short and hair-like; scutellum with two pairs of strong sc, basal pair 2/3 as long as apical pair. Fore coxa with 3 bristles in male, with 3-4 spine-like bristles and many short spine-like bristles on inner surface in female. Wing: m-cu straight. Male genitalia rather small with well developed cercus like in Condylostylus .

Remarks.

Sinosciapus is an Asian genus, with three known species from subtropical or tropical forests of Southwest China and South China (Fig. 5). It is similar to Amblypsilopus in following points: arista rather short, shorter than head width; tibial chaetotaxy often weak, especially in males; m-cu usually straight. But it can be separated from the latter by the following features: eyes in both sexes narrowly separated, frons and face rather narrow (frons narrower than one eye); both sexes with strong vt; lateral sc strong, about 2/3 as long as apical one; fore tarsomere 5 with 1 elongated spine-like claw. In Amblypsilopus , the eyes in both sexes are widely separated, the frons and face are rather wide (frons wider than one eye), the male vertex has vt weak or lost; the lateral sc is always reduced to the weak hairs or lost; the claws on fore tarsomere 5 are normal ( Bickel 1994; Yang et al. 2011).

Key to world species (males) of the genus Sinosciapus

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Diptera

Family

Dolichopodidae