Allodia thudamensis Magnussen

Magnussen, Trude, Soli, Geir E. E. & Kjaerandsen, Jostein, 2019, Allodia Winnertz from the Himalayas, with nine species new to science (Diptera, Mycetophilidae), ZooKeys 820, pp. 119-138 : 130-131

publication ID

https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.820.31618

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:AE3263C7-DFAC-440B-BFBC-24D9B620C16A

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/BC9A90B5-97F1-420F-9468-9E63CCFBA772

taxon LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:act:BC9A90B5-97F1-420F-9468-9E63CCFBA772

treatment provided by

ZooKeys by Pensoft

scientific name

Allodia thudamensis Magnussen
status

sp. n.

Allodia thudamensis Magnussen View in CoL sp. n. Fig. 3C

Diagnosis.

The broad and short dorsal lobe of the gonostylus, possessing a slight hook posterodorsally makes this species distinct. In addition, the median lobe of the gonostylus has six long setae along the posterior edge.

Type locality.

NEPAL: Province no. 1 (Kosi Zone), Sankhuwasabha District, Thudam, 3500-3800 m a.s.l.

Type specimens.

Holotype: male. 3 printed labels: (E. NEPAL) Thudam (3500-3800 m) 27°45'N, 87°31'E --- 27°46'N, 87°33'E / June 24, 1972 H. Shima leg. Kyushu Univ. Col. / TSZD-JKJ-104966, male (KUEC, pinned with genitalia in separate microvial).

Description.

Body length ca. 3.4 mm; wing length 3.3 mm. Colouration. Head and clypeus dark brown. Mouthparts and palpomeres yellow. Antennae brown, with scape, pedicel, and basis of first flagellomere yellow. Scutum brown. Antepronotum yellow. Other lateral sclerites brown. Wings clear without markings. Halteres whitish. Legs yellow. Abdomen brown. Terminalia yellow. Head. Three ocelli present, median ocellus smaller than laterals; lateral ocelli touching eye margin. Head covered with fine trichia. Antennae over twice as long as thorax. Scape and pedicel with small setae on distal third. Flagellomeres cylindrical, densely clothed with fine trichia. First flagellomere twice as long as pedicel. Thorax. Antepronotum with five strong setae. Scutum covered with uniform small, pale setae. A few posterior discal bristles present. Scutellum with two strong bristles and few smaller setae. Laterotergite with five setae. Other lateral sclerites brown. Legs. All tibiae with short setae arranged in rows. Mid tibia with four anterodorsal and 13 posterodorsal setae. Hind tibia with four anterodorsal and seven posterodorsal setae. Wings. Sc short, ending in R. Length of rm slightly longer than stem of posterior fork. Base of anterior fork opposite base of posterior fork. R1 with and R5 without setae. Male terminalia. Tergite IX medially divided, each part rounded, covered with minute trichia, with one long and one short apical bristle. Hypandrial lobe heavily sclerotzed and elongated. Gonostylus with dorsal lobe broad, short with flattened apex, with posterodorsal hook; outer surface with numerous long setae. Median lobe of gonostylus sub-triangular with broad, pointed posterodorsal corner; posterior margin with six strong setae, one small seta on surface of lobe. Ventral lobe of gonostylus club-shaped; with five apical setae. Basal part of gonostylus small, rounded; with multiple short setae. Internal part of gonostylus without projecting process.

Etymology. From Thudam, the type locality, and Latin ending -ensis, belonging to Thudam.

Remarks. Allodia thudamensis resembles two Holarctic species, viz. A. embla Hackman, 1971 and A. anglofennica Edwards, 1921. It can be separated from both these species by the combination of having a subrectangular outline of the dorsal lobe, as opposed to a more sinusoid, skewed shape found in A. embla . A pointed posterodorsal corner of the medial lobe, as opposed to angular cut corner in A. anglofennica . Additionally, A. embla has numerous setae along the posterior edge of the median lobe of gonostylus, while only six strong setae are present in A. thudamensis . The median lobe of the gonostylus is differently shaped in A. thudamensis and A. anglofennica .

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Diptera

Family

Mycetophilidae

Genus

Allodia