Sinorhagio daohugouensis, Zhang, Kuiyan, Yang, Ding & Ren, Dong, 2006

Zhang, Kuiyan, Yang, Ding & Ren, Dong, 2006, The first snipe fly (Diptera: Rhagionidae) from the Middle Jurassic of Inner Mongolia, China, Zootaxa 1134, pp. 51-57 : 55-56

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.171918

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6491135

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/FE791843-FF86-CE73-FEAC-BC34093D0F3D

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Sinorhagio daohugouensis
status

sp. nov.

Sinorhagio daohugouensis View in CoL sp. nov. (Figs. 3–4)

Description. Female body length 10.1 mm, wing length 8.0 mm, wing width 2.9 mm.

Head subround in lateral view, length about 1.0 mm; vertex with row of short setae. Antenna bare and long, slightly shorter than head; scape obscure, pedicel nearly square, flagellum long, roughly 7 times as long as pedicel; nearly spine­like, tapering toward tip (but segmentation obscure in the specimen) (Fig. 3). Proboscis long and thick, subequal to head height; palpus partially preserved.

Thorax black. Only one acrostichal seta on mesonotum preserved. Most legs visible with pubescence. Hind tibia with 1 spur, spur of mid tibiae not preserved; first tarsomere of mid and hind legs distinctly longer than following tarsomeres. Hyaline wing: Pterostigma present. C vein with short setulae. Sc ending at middle of wing. Crossvein h located at middle of cell c and slightly distal of the origin of Rs. Vein R2+3 long, straight apically; vein R5 ending slightly beyond wing tip. Rs nearly as long as trunk of R4+R5. Relative lengths of R5 and trunk of R4+R5 about 2: 1. Veins M1 and M2 convergent basally at cell d; vein CuA1 present and arising from cell bm, crossvein m­cu short. CuA2 longer than 1/2 of cell bm. Mouths of cell sc, cell r1 and cell r2+3 subequal in width; mouth of cell r4 much narrower than that of cell r2+3. Cell r4 longer than cell m1. Cell br (= basal radial) longer than cell bm. Cell d slender, crossvein r­m located nearly at middle of trunk of R4 + R5. Five posterior cells present, all of them open wide. Cell cup closed with a short petiole apically. Anal lobe narrow.

Abdomen long, covered with setulae; narrowing toward tip, with 9 visible segments (segment IX obscure); segment II widest, but boundary of segments I and II obscure in the specimen. Cerci two­segmented (Fig. 4).

Holotype. One almost complete well­preserved body with wings, female, No. CNU­ B­NN2005001 housed in Key Lab of Insect Evolution & Environment Change, Capital Normal University, Beijing, China.

Locality and horizon. Daohugou Village, Shantou township, Ningcheng county, Inner Mongolia, China; Jiulongshan Formation, Middle Jurassic (Aalenian­Bajocian).

Etymology. The species is named after the type locality: Daohugou village ( China).

FIGURES 3–4. Sinorhagio daohugouensis sp. nov. (female). 3. Antenna (excluding scape); 4. apex of abdomen. C1 and C2, segments 1–2 of cercus.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Diptera

Family

Rhagionidae

Genus

Sinorhagio

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