Amblypsilpus ventralis, Wang, Jinjing, Zhu, Yajun & Yang, Ding, 2012

Wang, Jinjing, Zhu, Yajun & Yang, Ding, 2012, Two new species of Amblypsilopus Bigot with a key to species from Taiwan (Diptera, Dolichopodidae), ZooKeys 192, pp. 27-33 : 31-32

publication ID

https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.192.3265

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/F68BC1CE-DD32-EB8C-DA6C-D57830AEA8FC

treatment provided by

ZooKeys by Pensoft

scientific name

Amblypsilpus ventralis
status

sp. n.

Amblypsilpus ventralis   ZBK sp. n. Fig. 2

Diagnosis.

1 strong vt. 5 strong dc. 3-4 very short paired acr present only before 1 anteriormost dc. Fore femur with two rows of short v. Mid tarsomeres 4-5 slightly thickened.

Description.

Male.Body length 3.8-3.9 mm, wing length 3.0-3.2 mm.

Head brightly metallic green with pale grey pollen. Hairs and bristles on head black except middle and lower postocular bristles including posteroventral hairs pale yellow; frons with 1 strong vt, anteriorly without hair on posterolateral slope; 1 pvt near end of postocular line. Ocellar tubercle with 2 long strong oc and 2 posterior hairs. Antenna black; pedicel with circlet of short black apical bristles except 1 dorsal bristle and 2 ventral bristles relatively long; first flagellomere nearly trapezoid, nearly as long as wide; arista dorsal, blackish. Proboscis mostly reddish yellow with blackish hairs; palpus brownish yellow with blackish hairs and 2 black bristles.

Thorax brightly metallic green with pale grey pollen. Hairs and bristles on thorax black; 5 long strong dc; 3-4 very short, paired acr present before anteriormost dc; h indistinct, 1 ih, 1 ph, su absent, 2 sa, 1 psa, 2 npl; scutellum with two pairs of sc, basal pair very short and hair-like (about 1/5 of apical pair). Legs yellow except mid and hind coxae brown with yellow apex and tarsi dark brown from tip of fore tarsomere 1 onward. Hairs and bristles on legs black except coxae with pale yellow hairs and bristles. Fore coxa with 3 bristles, hind coxa with 1 brownish yellow exterior bristle. Fore femur thickened with two rows of v on basal 2/3 and narrowed on apical 1/3. Fore tibia ventrally slightly swollen at base, with 4 pv and one row of short dense av hairs, without distinct d; apically with 1 pd and 1 p. Mid tibia with 3 strong ad and 3 weak pd; apically with 1 ad and 1 av. Hind tibia with 4 pd and 2-3 weak pv at middle; apically with 1 ad and 1 av. Hind tarsomere 1 with 1 v at extreme base. Relative length ratio of tibiae and tarsomeres: LI 1.9: 1.7: 0.7: 0.5: 0.3: 0.2; LII 3.2: 2.4: 0.9: 0.6: 0.2: 0.25; LIII 4.0: 1.5: 1.1: 0.6: 0.4: 0.2. Wing nearly hyaline, veins dark brown. Vein M1 basally curved nearly at a right angle. Crossvein m-cu straight, CuAx ratio 1.3. Squama yellow with dark brown margin and with pale hairs. Halter dark yellow.

Abdomen metallic green with thin pollen except venter and hypopygium pale metallic green. Hairs and bristles on abdomen black except those on lateral portion of tergite 1 pale yellow. Male genitalia (Fig. 2): Epandrium wider than long in lateral view; epandrial lobe indistinct. Surstylus slightly thick, apically shallowly furcated. Cercus about two times as long as epandrium, long finger-like, basally thick with subtriangular ventral process. Hypandrium distinctly bent apically, with thin lateral arm.

Female. Unknown.

Type material.

Holotypemale, Taiwan: Wulai, Fushan, Shuiguan Road, 2007. V. 18, Nanyi Cai. Paratype 1 male, same data as holotype.

Distribution.

China (Taiwan).

Remarks.

This species is somewhat similar to Amblypsilopus basalis Yang from Southern China, but can be separated from it by the antenna black, and male cercus as long as the epandrium, with the large ventral process at base. In Amblypsilopus basalis , the antenna is yellow, and male cercus is about two times as long as the epandrium and has the small ventral process at base ( Yang 1997; Yang et al. 2011).

Etymology.

The specific name refers to the fore femur with two rows of short v.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Diptera

Family

Dolichopodidae

Genus

Amblypsilpus