Tipula (Emodotipula) yaoluopingensis, Men, 2015

Men, Qiu-Lei, 2015, Report on crane flies of the genus Tipula (Diptera: Tipulidae: Tipulinae) from Anhui Province, China, Acta Entomologica Musei Nationalis Pragae 55 (2), pp. 797-810 : 798-801

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.5758020

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:1D639585-7BD8-45E7-9997-955A8F671BCA

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03C687C3-FFC5-9B65-F847-FC61FD2FFBE0

treatment provided by

Marcus

scientific name

Tipula (Emodotipula) yaoluopingensis
status

sp. nov.

Tipula (Emodotipula) yaoluopingensis View in CoL sp. nov.

( Figs 1 View Figs 1–3 , 4–13 View Figs 4–13 )

Type locality. China, Anhui Province, Yaoluoping National Nature Reserve, 31°2’N, 116°5’E.

Type material (3 JJ). HOLOTYPE: CHINA: J, ‘ China: Anhui Province,Yuexi County, Yaoluoping National Nature Reserve, 1000 m, 15. Viii. 2013, Qiulei Men coll. / HOLOTYPE [red] J, Tipula (Emodotipula) yaoluopingensis sp. n. Men det., 2013’. PARATYPES: CHINA: 2 JJ, same data as the holotype. All paratypes bear the following label: ‘ PARATYPE [yellow] J, Tipula (Emodotipula) yaoluopingensis sp. n. Men det., 2013’.

Diagnosis. Antenna with scape and pedicel light yellow, flagellum blackish brown; prescutum gray with four dark gray stripes; wings subhyaline, R 1+2 entire, petiole of cell m 1 distinctly shorter than discal cell; abdominal tergites with lateral and median dark stripes, sternites uniformly yellow, hypopygium brownish black; tergite nine with two finger-shaped processes at hind margin medially.

Description. Male (n = 3). Body length 13.2–13.4 mm, wing 16.5–16.7 mm, antenna 4.6–4.8 mm.

Rostrum yellow with lateral sides blackish brown, nasus light yellow, palpi dark brown, surface of rostrum densely covered with black setae. Antenna relatively long, bent backward extending to first abdominal segment, scape and pedicel light yellow, flagellum blackish brown, verticils black, slightly shorter than coordinate segments. Head yellow, vertex with median stripe, gradually narrowed directed cephad.

Pronotum grey with one median and two lateral brown areas. Prescutum ( Fig. 4 View Figs 4–13 ) grey with four dark grey stripes, median two narrowly separated by greyish line in middle, connected apically; lateral stripes bordered by black on inner margins. Scutum grey, each lobe with two dark grey areas. Scutellum and postnotum dark grey with black median line. Pleura brownish grey, variegated by dark brown on anepisternum, meron, and ventral half of katepisternum. Halter with stem yellow, knob dark brown. Legs with coxae and trochanters yellow, femora yellow with black tips; tibiae and tarsi dark brown. Wings ( Fig. 1 View Figs 1–3 ) subhyaline, cells c and sc slightly darker than ground color; stigma black; Rs slightly tinged with dark brown at branch point, wing-apex and outer margin of wing suffused with dark brown, R 3, branch point of Rs, r-m, m-m, petiole of cell m 1, branch point of CuA, and middle point of A 1 suffused with dark brown as illustrated in Figure 1 View Figs 1–3 . Venation: Rs relatively long, curved in basal two fifths, R

1+2

entire, discal cell relatively broad, petiole of cell m

1

distinctly shorter than discal cell.

Abdomen yellow, tergites with lateral and median dark stripes, sternites uniformly yellow, hypopygium brownish black. Hypopygium with tergite nine and sternite nine fused ( Figs 5–6 View Figs 4–13 ); sternite eight relatively widened in lateral view, produced into a rounded apex medially, slightly sunken in lateral angles ( Figs 6–7 View Figs 4–13 ); tergite nine with narrow notch medially, apically divided into two finger-like processes, densely covered with blackened spinulae at apex, many long hairs located on surface of tergite nine ( Figs 5–6 View Figs 4–13 ); outer gonostylus boomerang-shaped, apically covered with blackened spinulae, with a row of blackened spinulae on ventral side ( Figs 5, 8–9 View Figs 4–13 ); inner gonostylus with two black beaks on ventral and dorsal sides, near dorsal beak with small black spinous process, near ventral beak with cone-shaped process, lobe projecting from ventral margin densely covered with long hairs ( Fig. 10 View Figs 4–13 ); aedeagal guide bell-shaped ( Fig. 11 View Figs 4–13 ); aedeagus elongate, slender, acute apically ( Fig. 12 View Figs 4–13 ).

Semen pump with compressor apodeme fan-shaped, slightly depressed medially, with ridge in the middle, forming 90° angle with posterior immovable apodeme ( Figs 12–13 View Figs 4–13 ). Posterior immovable apodeme distinctly longer than compressor apodeme, gradually narrowed to apex in lateral view ( Fig. 12 View Figs 4–13 ). Anterior immovable apodeme gradually narrowed to apex ( Fig. 12 View Figs 4–13 ).

Female. Unknown.

Differential diagnosis. Tipula (Emodotipula) yaoluopingensis is the second species in this subgenus recorded in Mainland China. The new species was compared to another species, T. (E.) multisetosa , from mainland China and several other related regional species based on published descriptions and illustrations, and it is mostly similar to the Indian species Tipula (Emodotipula) hemmingseni Alexander, 1968 in the colors of body and legs, the boomerang- -shaped outer gonostylus, and the similar arrangement of beaks on inner gonostylus. It can be easily separated from the latter by hind margin of tergite nine with a pair of finger-shaped processes medially and without cushion as illustrated in Figure 5 View Figs 4–13 (tergite nine with a pair of bifid processes, more ventrally with a pair of lateral blackened cushions in T. (E.) hemmingseni as described by ALEXANDER 1968: 358).

Etymology. The specific epithet is an adjective composed of the noun ‘ yaoluoping ’ with Latin suffix ‘- ensis ’, referring to the type locality of this new species.

Distribution. China (Anhui) based on current records.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Diptera

Family

Tipulidae

Genus

Tipula

Darwin Core Archive (for parent article) View in SIBiLS Plain XML RDF