Scatophila variofacialis Sturtevant and Wheeler
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.5487.1.1 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:50AC1672-FC20-4502-8D8A-4BCAE95F719B |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.13287166 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03D187B7-3A6F-7B13-FF4E-F9A95357FD53 |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Scatophila variofacialis Sturtevant and Wheeler |
status |
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15. Scatophila variofacialis Sturtevant and Wheeler View in CoL
Figs. 110 View FIGURE 110 , 130–138 View FIGURES 130–133 View FIGURES 134–136 View FIGURES 137–141
Scatophila variofacialis Sturtevant and Wheeler 1954: 199 View in CoL .— Wirth 1965: 759 [ Nearctic catalog].— Zatwarnicki 1987: 295 [checklist].— Zatwarnicki and Mathis 1994: 364 [phylogeny; noctula group].— Mathis and Zatwarnicki 1995: 287 [world catalog].
Diagnosis.—This species is distinguished from congeners by the following combination of characters: Small to moderately small shore flies, body length 1.80–2.20 mm.
Head ( Figs. 130–133 View FIGURES 130–133 , 137 View FIGURES 137–141 ): Mesofrons and fronto-orbits tan to brown. Face of ♂ brown, slightly protuberant at ventral margin, with an elongate, medial depression bordered by dense curly setulae, especially laterally; face of ♀ with some subshiny luster. Gena moderately short, slightly more than half height of basal flagellomere; gena-to-eye ratio 0.24–0.25.
Thorax ( Figs. 137–138 View FIGURES 137–141 ): Mesonotum ( Fig. 137 View FIGURES 137–141 ) mostly brown with grayish stripes along setal tracks; scutum mostly brown with variable pattern of linear gray areas medially and anterolaterad of acrostichal tracks; a posteromedial, prescutellar spot; a medial, gray stripe; presutural dorsocentral setae lacking. Wing ( Figs. 138 View FIGURES 137–141 ) with moderate pattern of white spots; veins R 2+3 and R 4+5 shallowly undulate near white spots; costal vein ratio 0.24–0.30; M 1 vein ratio 0.59–0.72. Legs dark; male midfemur lacking row of spine-like setulae along posteroventral margin Tarsi often yellowish to brownish red basally.
Abdomen ( Figs. 134–136 View FIGURES 134–136 ): Mostly black, subshiny, with some blackish gray areas basally on tergites 2–4; subshiny. Male terminalia ( Figs. 134–136 View FIGURES 134–136 ): Epandrium in posterior view ( Fig. 134 View FIGURES 134–136 ) generally irregularly round, about as wide as high without measurement of ventrolateral projections, dorsal margin slightly projected dorsad, thereafter sloped ventrolaterally to lateral margins, lateral margins widest at midheight, and at midheight with shallow, rounded bulge, ventrolateral corners with ventral, digitiform projections, ventral margin curved ventrally, tending to be flattened medially, epandrial surface bearing sparsely scattered setulae, more clustered around ventral angle at base of ventrolateral projections; cercal cavity higher than wide, oval, ventral margin pointed ventromedially; cerci in posterior view ( Fig. 134 View FIGURES 134–136 ) hemispherical; aedeagus in lateral view ( Fig. 136 View FIGURES 134–136 ) squarish, only slightly higher than wide, ventral margin broadly rounded, dorsal excavation irregularly V-shaped with a short, thumb-like projection, anterior and posterior corners angulate; in ventral view ( Fig. 135 View FIGURES 134–136 ) squarish, only slightly longer than width, apical margin evenly concave; ventral aedeagal process shallowly C-shaped; phallapodeme in lateral view ( Fig. 136 View FIGURES 134–136 ) with distinct keel, long and rounded apically, extension toward base of aedeagus slightly longer and more robust, extension to postgonite tapered, shorter than opposite extension, in ventral view ( Fig. 135 View FIGURES 134–136 ) shallowly Y-shaped with lateral extensions capitate apically, width of “Y” about nearly twice length; postgonite in lateral view ( Fig. 136 View FIGURES 134–136 ) generally irregularly V-shaped, dorsal arm rectangular, posterior apex robustly digitiform, ventral arm parallel sided, narrow, shallowly curved; neohypandrium in lateral view ( Fig. 136 View FIGURES 134–136 ) narrow, parallel sided, deeply curved strap.
Type Material.—The holotype male of Scatophila variofacialis is labeled “Carson, Wash[ington]. 8-6-51 [6 Aug 1951][handwritten]/M.R. Wheeler/ HOLOTYPE Scatophila variofacialis Stvt & Whlr [pink]/6687 TYPE [dark pink; number handwritten].” The holotype is double mounted (glued to a paper point), is in good condition, and is deposited in the ANSP (6687).
Other Specimens Examined.— UNITED STATES. CALIFORNIA. Alameda: Berkeley Hills (62°16.1'N, 145°23.1'W), 11 Apr 1908 (1♂; USNM) GoogleMaps .
OREGON. Baker: Goose Creek (35 km E Baker City; 44°49.2'N, 117°27.79'W; 825 m), 7 Jun 2006, D. and W. N. Mathis (1♀; USNM) GoogleMaps . Benton: Philomath (1.6 km W; 44°32.4'N, 123°22'W), 29 May 1972, W. N. Mathis (1♀; USNM) GoogleMaps ; Rock Creek (6.5 km SW Philomath; 44°30'N, 123°26.4'W), 29 May 1972, W. N. Mathis (1♂; USNM) GoogleMaps . Josephine : Oregon Caves (42°05.9'N, 123°24.4'W), 27 Jun 1972, W. N. Mathis (1♀; USNM) GoogleMaps . Polk: Helmick State Park (44°46.8'N, 123°14.2'W), 20 Mar 1972, W. N. Mathis (2♂; USNM) GoogleMaps .
WASHINGTON. Clallam: Sequim Bay (48°04.8'N, 123°06.1'W), 3 Sep 1934, A. L. Melander (1♂; USNM) GoogleMaps . Clark: Vancouver (44°37.7'N, 122°40.1'W), 7 Jul 1917, A. L. Melander (1♀; USNM) GoogleMaps . Lewis: Toledo (46°26.2'N, 122°50.5'W), 27 Jun 1935, A. L. Melander (1♂; USNM) GoogleMaps . Okanagan: Twisp (6.5 km E; 48°29.5'N, 120°07.1'W), 19 Jul 1972, W. J. Turner (1♂; USNM) GoogleMaps . Pierce : La Grande (4.8 km N; 46°50.1'N, 122°19.1'W), 4 Aug 1971, W. N. Mathis (1♂; USNM) GoogleMaps . Thurston: Puget (47°08.8'N, 122°47.6'W), 4 Jul 1925, A. L. Melander (2♂; USNM) GoogleMaps . Yakima: Tieton (12.8 km SW; 46°42.1'N, 120°45.2'W; Bear Creek ), 16 Jul 1972, W. J. Turner (1♀; USNM) GoogleMaps .
Type Locality.— United States. Washington. Skamania: Carson (45°43.6'N, 121°49.1'W) GoogleMaps .
Distribution ( Fig. 110 View FIGURE 110 ).— Nearctic : United States (California, Oregon, Washington).
Remarks.—This species is placed in the noctula group.
The quadriguttata Group
Diagnosis.—Medial portion of male face often depressed. Ventral margin of epandrium generally with short, sharp, medial process, sometimes broadly convex ( Figs. 188 View FIGURES 188–190 ); neohypandrium band-like, strongly deflected; postgonite lobate with convex ventral margin; proximal margin arcuately rounded or slightly incised; distal process of postgonite triangular, its apex narrowly pointed, ventral process long and band-like; aedeagus with ventral process, in dorsal view elongate, in lateral view ventral margin slightly rounded or in medial portion nearly straight; distal margin of the dorsal aedeagal opening bears variously developed lobes, which could be acuminate or with lateral processes; phallapodeme in lateral view ( Figs. 190 View FIGURES 188–190 , 201 View FIGURES 199–201 ) deflected before its proximal top, in dorsal view with subapical lateral projections, lobate, surrounding the proximal portion of the aedeagus, remaining portion elongate.
Nearctic species included in the quadriguttata group are: Scatophila arenaria Cresson , S. bipiliaris Sturtevant and Wheeler , S. bisignata Cresson , S. conifera Sturtevant and Wheeler , S. cribrata (Stenhammar) , S. disjuncta Cresson , S. hirsuta Sturtevant and Wheeler , S. mystacina sp. nov., S. picta Sturtevant and Wheeler , S. pulchra Sturtevant and Wheeler , S. rubribrunnea Sturtevant and Wheeler.
This is the most speciose species group in the Nearctic Region with 11 species.
USNM |
Smithsonian Institution, National Museum of Natural History |
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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Scatophila variofacialis Sturtevant and Wheeler
Zatwarnicki, Tadeusz & Mathis, Wayne N. 2024 |
Scatophila variofacialis
Mathis, W. N. & Zatwarnicki, T. 1995: 287 |
Zatwarnicki, T. & Mathis, W. N. 1994: 364 |
Zatwarnicki, T. 1987: 295 |
Wirth, W. W. 1965: 759 |
Sturtevant, A. H. & Wheeler, M. R. 1954: 199 |