Cephalops lobatus, Ramos-Pastrana & Marques & Rafael, 2022

Ramos-Pastrana, Yardany, Marques, Dayse Willkenia A. & Rafael, José Albertino, 2022, Cephalops Fallén and Semicephalops De Meyer (Diptera: Pipunculidae) of Colombia, with description of five new species and an updated key to males of the Neotropical species, Zootaxa 5141 (3), pp. 201-226 : 213

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.5141.3.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:F1A19245-2F3F-4F84-91BB-5B5A9FDA6236

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6595615

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/C752F13C-FFC7-485B-FF4E-D4AFFE49285F

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Cephalops lobatus
status

sp. nov.

Cephalops lobatus View in CoL sp. nov.

Figs 62–77 View FIGURES 62–74 View FIGURES 75–77 , 107 View FIGURE 107

Diagnosis. Male. Antenna with scape dark brown, pedicel light brown, postpedicel yellow, the latter slightly acute. Frontal triangle with inconspicuous black callus. Coxae dark brown, trochanters and femora yellow, with short setae ventrally, tibiae yellow. Abdomen brown, tergite 1 sparsely gray-brown pruinose; tergites 2–5 velvety brown anteriorly, shiny posteriorly. Surstyli subsymmetrical, both thickened basally and medially, thin at apices. Apex of phallic guide thin, bearing a small translucent lobe and row of thin setae ventrally. Ejaculatory apodeme pin-shaped, shortened and truncated distally. Phallus trifid, with ejaculatory ducts thickened, two ejaculatory ducts with submedian lateral membranous lobes when seen in ventral view.

Description. MALE (holotype). Body length 3.4 mm. Head ( Figs 62–63 View FIGURES 62–74 ). Eyes contiguous for 22 facets. F, EM, V (mm) = 0.4, 0.6, 0.2. Frontal triangle brown pruinose, with inconspicuous black callus. Face with sides parallel to divergent towards proboscis, with the same length of frons. Postcranium dark brown, gray pruinose laterally, brown pruinose dorsally. Antenna ( Fig. 64 View FIGURES 62–74 ) with scape dark brown with one seta dorsally, pedicel light brown with three setae dorsally and three short setae ventrally; postpedicel yellow, with acute apex. LPP/WPP = 2. Thorax ( Figs 63, 65 View FIGURES 62–74 ). Postpronotal lobe dark brown. Scutum dark brown, brown pruinose. Notopleuron concolorous with scutum, brown pruinose. Scutellum brown, brown pruinose. Scutellum with few tiny, scattered setae and 14 inconspicuous setae along posterior margin. Mesopleuron and mediotergite dark brown, gray-brown pruinose. Wing ( Fig. 66 View FIGURES 62–74 ). Length 8.7 mm. LW/MWW = 3.2; LTC/LFC = 1.6. Membrane slightly brown infuscated, vein r-m located slightly after basal third of upper section of cell dm, anal lobe narrow, cell r 4+5 0.3 times longer than cell dm. Halter light yellow, knob dark brown. Legs ( Fig. 62 View FIGURES 62–74 ). Fore and mid coxae dark brown, hind coxa yellow; trochanters yellow; femora yellow, with short setae ventrally, tibiae yellow; tarsomeres 1–2 yellow, 3–5 brown; pulvilli yellow. Abdomen ( Figs 62–63, 67 View FIGURES 62–74 ). Brown, tergite 1 sparsely gray-brown pruinose, with three yellow and long lateral setae; tergites 2–5 velvety brown anteriorly, shiny posteriorly, with inconspicuous setae; tergites and sternites 6 and 7 as in Fig. 68 View FIGURES 62–74 . Syntergosternite 8 brown, brown pruinose, shorter than tergite 5, with a membranous area large ( Figs 67, 69 View FIGURES 62–74 ). Terminalia ( Figs 68–74 View FIGURES 62–74 ). Epandrium dark brown, surstyli dark brown ( Fig. 69 View FIGURES 62–74 ). Surstyli ( Figs 69–71 View FIGURES 62–74 ) subsymmetrical, almost equal to epandrium length, completely setose; both surstyli thickened basally and medially, thin at apices, left surstylus slightly thinner than right ( Fig. 69 View FIGURES 62–74 ); both surstyli with tips downward directed when seen in lateral view ( Figs 70–71 View FIGURES 62–74 ). Gonopods slightly subsymmetrical ( Fig. 72 View FIGURES 62–74 ). Apex of phallic guide thin, bearing a small translucent lobe and row of thin setae ventrally ( Fig. 73 View FIGURES 62–74 ). Ejaculatory apodeme pin-shaped, shortened and truncated distally ( Fig. 74 View FIGURES 62–74 ). Phallus trifid, with ejaculatory ducts thickened, two ejaculatory ducts with submedian lateral membranous lobes when seen in ventral view ( Fig. 72–73 View FIGURES 62–74 ). FEMALE ( Figs 75–77 View FIGURES 75–77 ). Like male, differing only in the following aspects. Body length 3.9 mm. Eyes dichoptic. Frontal ommatidia larger than adjacent ones. Wing length 5.4 mm. LW/MWW = 3.8. LTC/LFC = 1.3. Ovipositor OL: 0.83 mm, PL: 0.45 mm, B: 0.55 mm; base brown, gray pruinose, piercer yellow, except base light brown, apex shiny, straight ( Figs 76–77 View FIGURES 75–77 ).

Type material. HOLOTYPE. Male: COLOMBIA, Boyacá, SFF[Santuario de Fauna y Flora] Iguaque, El Níspero , 0538’N/7331’W, 2730 m [eters], 07–21.xii.2001, P. Reina leg (1 ♂ IAvH) (photographed specimen). PARATYPES. idem 13–28.x.2001, “M2476 (1 ♂, 1 ♀ LEUA) (photographed specimen); idem, 28.x.–14.xi.2001, “M2483 (1 ♀ IAvH) . Holotype with left wing mounted on microslide with Canada balsam. Left antenna and terminalia placed in a microvial with glycerin, both pinned along the specimen.

Etymology. From the Latin lobatus (= lobed), the specific epithet refers to the two ejaculatory ducts of the phallus having submedian lobes laterally.

Geographical distribution. Colombia (Boyacá) ( Fig. 107 View FIGURE 107 ).

Habitat. The specimens were collected in the Santuario de Fauna y Flora Iguaque reserve, where the vegetation is composed of cloud Andean forests of the Oriental Cordillera of the Northeast region of Colombia.

Taxonomic notes. Cephalops lobatus sp. nov. runs to C. amapaensis Rafael, 1990 in the couplet 14 of the key presented by Rafael (1990). It differs from C. amapaensis in the yellowish brown postpedicel ( Fig. 64 View FIGURES 62–74 ) [versus yellow postpedicel in C. amapaensis ( Fig. 19 View FIGURES 17–29 )]; fore and mid coxae dark brown, hind coxa yellow (versus fore coxa yellow to brown, mid and hind coxa light brown); tergites 2–3 without shiny black spot posterolaterally ( Figs 62–63, 67 View FIGURES 62–74 ) (versus tergites 2–3 with shiny black spot posterolaterally); apex of phallic guide with ventral margin sinuous, without rigid lobes laterally ( Fig. 73 View FIGURES 62–74 ) [versus apex of phallic guide with ventral margin straight and two rigid lobes laterally, figure 6 presented by Rafael (1990)]; ejaculatory apodeme shortened, truncated distally ( Fig. 74 View FIGURES 62–74 ) [versus ejaculatory apodeme funnel-shaped, figure 7 presented by Rafael (1990) and ( Fig. 29 View FIGURES 17–29 )]; phallus trifid, with ejaculatory ducts thickened ( Fig. 73 View FIGURES 62–74 ), two ejaculatory ducts with submedian lobes laterally when seen in ventral view ( Fig. 72 View FIGURES 62–74 ) [versus phallus with ejaculatory duct long clearly differentiated, without submedian lobes laterally when seen in ventral view ( Figs 27–28 View FIGURES 17–29 )].

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Diptera

Family

Pipunculidae

Genus

Cephalops

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