Ommatius (Pygommatius) vultus, Scarbrough & Marascia, 2003

Scarbrough, Aubrey G. & Marascia, Claudio G., 2003, Revision of Ommatius Wiedemann (Diptera: Asilidae). IV. Pygommatius subgen. nov. with twenty-five Afrotropical species, Zootaxa 228 (1), pp. 1-94 : 60-61

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.228.1.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:AC9F77DE-F702-4620-B756-D753E77FBC73

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5019089

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03A9FF3D-FFE1-FFF0-9D15-5A7AFC9AC5FC

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Ommatius (Pygommatius) vultus
status

sp. nov.

Ommatius (Pygommatius) vultus View in CoL , sp. n.

Figs. 22, 28 View FIGURES 21­28 , 38. 48 View FIGURES 29­38 View FIGURES 39­48 , 226­228 View FIGURES 226­230

Male. As O. litoreus except as follows. Length, body 9.6 mm; wing 7.1 mm. FHWLR 1.0:7.4.

Wing ( Fig. 22 View FIGURES 21­28 ).

Leg: Fore coxa apically with 3 unusually long, thick bristles. Fore femur ( Fig. 28 View FIGURES 21­28 ) basally with 2 unusually long bristles ventrally, 1 of these thick, 1 thin, plus 2 short setae, all yellow. Middle femur with 2 short, thin bristles posteroventrally. Hind femur ( Fig. 38 View FIGURES 29­38 ) with 1 short, thin, brown, preapical, anteroventral seta; 5 peg­like, posteroventral bristles basally plus a row of 5 thin setae beyond, the apical 2 of these unusually long, thin, and bristly; HFWLR 1.0:5.3. Hind tibia ( Fig. 48 View FIGURES 39­48 ) narrow basally, gradually wider to midlength and beyond, preapical constriction absent; a black suboval protuberance apically, inner surface with an elevated low flange.

Abdomen: Sternites 4­6 with a similar pattern of bristles as in O. litoreus .

Terminalia ( Figs. 226­228 View FIGURES 226­230 ): Epandrium 2 branched; apex of dorsal branch round, surface rugose; ventral branch forked. Gonostylus apically truncate. Gonocoxite with a prominent flange. Aedeagal sheath normal. Hypandrium with apex narrow, angular, pointed; numerous short bristles present apically; surface with minute grooves and ridges.

Female. Unknown.

Specimen examined: Holotype ♂, TANZANIA: Gonja / v.1958 / J. D. Phipps / B. M. 1962­453 ( BMNH).

Distribution. Known only from its type locality in Tanzania.

Etymology. Latin, vultus , meaning similarity, referring to this species likeness to O. litoreus .

Remarks. Ommatius vultus is similar to O. litoreus but differs in the 3 unusually long fore coxal bristles, the 2 long ventral bristles on the fore femur ( Fig. 28 View FIGURES 21­28 ), the flat, peg­like bristles on the hind tibia ( Fig. 38 View FIGURES 29­38 ), the shape of the hind tibia ( Fig. 48 View FIGURES 39­48 ), and the combined characters of the terminalia ( Figs. 226­228 View FIGURES 226­230 ).

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Diptera

Family

Asilidae

Genus

Ommatius

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