Neopleurophora brachytarsus, Ament & Amorim, 2013
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.3657.1.1 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:D3E95FDE-9836-474B-89E5-3575C82DD307 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5267056 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/039287F2-FFEE-FFBE-FF42-227CCA4FD2FB |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Neopleurophora brachytarsus |
status |
sp. nov. |
Neopleurophora brachytarsus View in CoL , sp. nov.
( Figs. 120–123 View FIGURES 120–123 , 186 View FIGURES 160–195 , 224 View FIGURES 196–233 , 308–309 View FIGURES 308–311 )
Diagnosis (males). Short foremetatarsus (length/width ratio, 3.0). Epandrial medial process large, bifurcated into an apically round left process and a pointed right process; hind tibia with one anterodorsal and three posterodorsal setae.
Material examined. Holotype ♂, FRENCH GUIANA: Regina: Kaw Mtn. Patawa , 4.55ºN, 52.17ºW, i.2006, Malaise trap, 300 m, J.A. Cerda col ( LACM). GoogleMaps
Description. Male. Body length, 2.8 mm. Head. Frons dark brown, pubescent, without median furrow. Flagellomere 1 light brown, pubescent, oval. Arista pre-apical, pubescent. Palpus yellowish-brown; one lower genal and two upper genal setae. Thorax. Scutum brown, pleural sclerites yellowish-brown; anepisternum setulose dorsally, with one long seta; scutellum brown, with medial and posterior areas gray. Legs yellowish-brown, hind femur brown at apex. Forefemur with ventral row of four strong setae near apex. Foretibia with one dorsal seta at basal third and an anterodorsal row of strong setae. Foremetatarsus short (length/width ratio, 3.0). Midtibia with one anterodorsal and one posterodorsal setae at basal third ( Fig. 186 View FIGURES 160–195 ). Hind femur swollen (height/length ratio, 0.43). Hind tibia with one anterodorsal and three posterodorsal setae ( Fig. 224 View FIGURES 196–233 ). Wing. Costa 0.47 of the wing length, other wing features as for the genus. Halter yellowish-brown. Abdomen. Tergites brown, with lighter posterior band. Hypopygium yellowish-brown ( Figs. 120–123 View FIGURES 120–123 ). Epandrial medial process large, bifurcated into an apically rounded left process and a pointed, ventrally curved right process. Epandrial right posterior margin with subepandrial setulose process. Hypandrium left lobe large; right lobe narrow. Hypoproct with four setae. Phallus ( Figs. 308–309 View FIGURES 308–311 ). Basiphallus with thin, dorsal process. Core plate flattened, bilobed. Epiphallus with transparent scales, connected to the right arm at the left of phallus. Ventral plate well developed, apically bifurcated into the secondary scaled process and a mesal scaled lobe, both bearing an adjacent sclerotized spine.
Female. Unknown.
Geographic distribution. Known only from the type-locality in northern French Guiana.
Etymology. The specific epithet brachytarsus corresponds to the combination of the Greek root brachys (short) and the word tarsus, referring to the short foremetatarsus, and should be treated as a noun in apposition.
Comments. Neopleurophora brachytarsus is considerably similar to N. diffusa and N. ceratopyga . These three species share the thin, dorsal process in the basiphallus and a phallic ventral plate with two scaled processes, each process bearing an adjacent sclerotized spine. N. brachytarsus can be differentiated from these species by the presence of four setae in the hypoproct and the epandrial medial process not as large and curved as in N. diffusa and N. ceratopyga .
LACM |
Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County |
No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.
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