Ommatius (Pygodactalyus) fluvius, sp. n.
Figs. 9, 40, 126133
Male. As O. comosus except as follows. Length, body 11.7 mm; wing 7.5 mm. Head: FHWR 1.0:11.4. Palpus entirely brown. Scape and pedicel brownyellow dorsally and medially, yellow elsewhere.
Thorax: Scutellum brown; scattered yellow setae. Pleuron yellow with narrow black triangle extending across anepisternum and katepitergite, triangle widest dorsally.
Wing (Fig. 9): Narrow apex and posterior margin dense microtrichose. Cell r 4 with R 5 slightly convex medially. Apex of cell m 3 perpendicular to axis of wing, near rm.
Leg: Hind trochanter brownyellow posteriorly and dorsally, yellow anteriorly; 1 short, peglike bristle present. Fore and middle femora yellow, apex anteriorly and dorsally brownyellow. Fore femur (see O. brevicornis, Fig. 23) with a ventral row of 78 unusually thick, yellow bristles. Middle femur ventrally with only long, thin, yellow setae. Hind femur (see O. comosus, Fig. 31); HFWLR 1.0:5.7. Hind tibia (Fig. 40) slightly calflike, apex and middle wider than base; anterior, preapical constriction and abundant, erect, brown setae present on basal half.
Abdomen: Mostly brown to yellow brown, with thin brown tomentum and brown setae; wide lateral margins of tergites 14 yellow with yellow tomentum with yellow setae; tergite 4 with a thin fringe of 78 yellow bristles on apical half of lateral margin; apical margin of tergites 68 with apical margin produced medially. Sternites 13 yellow, sternite 4 yellowishbrown medially; sternites 4 and 5 with 2 admedial stripes of erect, brown setae, those on sternite 4 short with nearly parallel sides, pencillike, those on 5 longer with pointed apices; sternite 6 brown setose with 23 erect, admedial setae on basal half, setae otherwise shorter and decumbent. Sternite 8 with brown bristles along apical margin.
Terminalia (Figs. 126130): Ventral lamellae with raised median carnia. Epandrium with only 2 obvious branches, dorsal branch wide, dorsal apical corner pointed; ventral branch narrower, slightly longer than dorsal branch, apex asymmertically bifid with stout bristles. Gonocoxite with minute setae in large sockets.
Female. Differs from male as follows. Length, body 12.2 mm; wing 9.5 mm. Head: Face ventrally with thick brown or yellow bristles; FHWR 1.0:10.6. Pedicel and scape brown. Occiput with brown postocular bristles extending to midlateral margin of eye. Thorax: Pleuron with meron partly brown. Leg: Brown color darker than in male. Unusual vestiture of legs and calflike shape of hind tibia absent. Fore and middle femora brown on apical third anteriorly and apical half dorsally; middle femur with yellow and brown posteroventral setae. Hind femur brown on apical half, extending dorsally and ventrally to or near base; 2 well defined ventral rows of 45 long, thin, brown bristles; abundant, short, bristles present posteriorly; thin ventral and posterior setae absent; HFWLR 1.0:5.7. Fore and middle tibiae with narrow apex brown; all bristles tibiae and tarsi brown. Abdomen: Tergites with long, thin brown bristles along apical margin; unusual vestiture of male absent. Tergite 9 about as long as cercus. Terminalia (Figs. 131133): Three spermathecae present, narrow with sides gradually tapered to apex; duct basal, slightly lateral in position. Apical margin of sternite 8 triangular, sides oblique with a prominent notch laterally; cuticle medially thin with a deep narrow groove extending to apical margin; apical corner with 34 thick bristles.
SPECIMENS EXAMINED. Holotype ♂, allotype ♀, GABON: Museum Paris / Congo Ogoové / Sam Kita / R . Ellenberger 1910, (MNHN). Paratype: GABON: 1 ♀, Museum Paris / Ogoové / Lambaréné / R . Ellenberger 1911, (MNHN) .
Distribution. Known only from the type locality in Gabon.
Etymology. Latin fluvius, for ‘of or belonging to a stream or river’, referring to the species being found along the Ogoové River.
Remarks. The male of O. fluvius is easily distinguished from congeners by the unique terminalia (Figs. 126133), the sparse, yellow, fringe of bristles on the lateroapical half of tergite 4, and the sparse, erect, admedial setae on the basal half of sternite 6. The long tergite 8 and deep lateral notch of sternite 8 (Fig. 133) distinguish the female.