Leptocera dicrofulva, Buck & Marshall, 2009

Buck, Matthias & Marshall, Stephen A., 2009, Revision of New World Leptocera Olivier (Diptera, Sphaeroceridae), Zootaxa 2039 (1), pp. 1-139 : 100-102

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.2039.1.1

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/BB4C084E-FFAC-A75F-0CE0-FC4AFBAAA23C

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Leptocera dicrofulva
status

 

Leptocera fulva View in CoL species group

Species included. L. dicrofulva sp.n., L. fulva (Malloch) , L. insularum sp.n., L. prolixofulva sp.n., L. rhadinofulva sp.n.

Description. Body length 1.8–2.5 mm. Body brown, the following yellow to dirty yellowish brown ( Figs. 230 View FIGURES 230–231 , 3 View FIGURES 2–6 ): at least anterior half of frons, face, gena, antenna (dorsal surface sometimes darker), palpus, sutures of thorax, legs except most of mid coxa. Thorax sometimes with obscure, orange-yellow postpronotal lobes, illdefined dorsocentral stripes in at most anterior third of mesoscutum (fading posteriorly) and lateral spots in front of transverse suture. Wing ( Fig. 10 View FIGURES 10–15 ) greyish hyaline with slight yellowish tinge. Halter white, stem whitish brown. Lower orbital bristle short, 0.5–0.6x as long as upper one ( Fig. 3 View FIGURES 2–6 ). No additional setulae on orbit behind upper orbital bristle. Palpus slender. Arista long-pubescent. Mesonotum thinly pruinose and subshining excluding velvety brown disc of scutellum ( Fig. 9 View FIGURES 7–9 ). Chaetotaxy of mesoscutum more reduced than in other species groups ( Figs. 9 View FIGURES 7–9 , 230 View FIGURES 230–231 ): 3–4 dorsocentral bristles, fourth one from behind, if differentiated, only slightly longer than surrounding hairs; acrostichals completely uniform, short and hair-like except for enlarged prescutellar pair. Fore tarsus with apical tarsomeres slightly wider in male than in female. Mid tibia with lowermost bristle of proximal posterodorsal series short, 0.5–0.6x as long as lowermost bristle of anterodorsal row; bristle above distal dorsal short, shorter than corresponding bristle above distal anterodorsal; posteroapical bristles unequal, ventral one about twice as long as dorsal one, extending about 0.7–0.8x length of distance towards base of ventrobasal metatarsal bristle. Abdominal sternites, especially of male, with conspicuous bluish-green pruinosity. Male sternites 3 and 4 with erect hairs that are more or less recurved.

Male terminalia: Sternite 5 (e.g., Fig. 242 View FIGURES 239–245 ) with field of enlarged microtrichia posteromedially, desclerotized near hind margin; hind margin with a row of enlarged black scales (scales in mid section much shorter than lateral ones). Sternite 8 completely fused with epandrium. Epandrium dark brown, shield-like (wide and shallow), on each side with a fan-like cluster of long bristles above lower margin. Cercus yellow, slender and sparsely haired (e.g., Fig. 240 View FIGURES 239–245 ), in some species divided into dorsal and ventral arms (e.g., Fig. 233 View FIGURES 232–238 ). Anterior section of surstylus flat (lacking distinct ventral lobe), with one long bristle posteriorly, otherwise only with short bristles except in L. dicrofulva sp. n. and L. insularum sp. n. Anterior process of anterior section of surstylus rounded, apical portion bare (devoid of microtrichia), anterior margin finely crenulate, posterior margin with a series 3–4 of short bristles. Posterior section of surstylus elongate, sometimes club-shaped (expanded distally), apical half with one long, curved bristle on inner margin (depending on species either inserted near apex or more or less removed from apex). Apex of surstylus either with stout (sometimes blunt-tipped) or with slender bristles. Postgonite characteristic ( Figs. 267, 268, 271 View FIGURES 267–272 ), without conspicuous bend, lacking posterobasal notch.

Female terminalia: Sternite 7 modified (e.g., Fig. 245 View FIGURES 239–245 ), usually with posteromedian field of enlarged microtrichia and with posteromedian projection (except L. dicrofulva sp.n.). Sternite 8 relatively uniform, trapezoid with narrow, apically rounded posterolateral flaps. Tergite 10 and cerci completely fused to each other, with one pair of long bristles and several shorter hairs. Spermathecae spherical (e.g., Fig. 237 View FIGURES 232–238 ), with short spicules at base, surface finely striate.

Taxonomy. The species of this group are practically identical externally. Fortunately, the most important distinguishing characters of the male and female terminalia can usually be seen without dissection (but with high magnification). Diagnostic are shape and chaetotaxy of the posterior section of the surstylus and cercus in the male, and shape of sternite 7 and chaetotaxy of tergite 10 + cerci in the female.

Biogeography. The L. fulva group is restricted to tropical areas of the Neotropical region (including Caribbean Islands) and adjacent areas (southern Florida). In South America it ranges as far south as northern Argentina.

Phylogeny. This species group is undoubtedly monophyletic as evidenced by the shortened lower orbital bristle, characteristic male cercus, surstylus and postgonite, as well as the field of enlarged posteromedial microtrichia of female sternite 7.

Biology and habitat. Adults are rarely attracted to dung or carrion but are frequently collected in malaise traps, flight intercept traps or by aerial sweeps. Three species have been collected at lights ( L. dicrofulva sp.n., L. fulva , L. rhadinofulva sp.n.). The larvae probably develop in decaying vegetation or in the soil. Mostly distributed in lowlands (usually below 1,500 m), occasionally up to 2,100 m.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Diptera

Family

Sphaeroceridae

Genus

Leptocera

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