Apetaenus (Apetaenus) litoralis Eaton

Munari, Lorenzo, 2008, Studies on the Canacidae (Diptera), subfamily Apetaeninae. II. A review of the world subgenera of Apetaenus Eaton, with a special reference to the Australian and New Zealand species, Zootaxa 1692, pp. 26-42 : 35

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.180627

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6227826

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/170D8799-3250-5F28-FF25-C941FD1CF8BA

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Apetaenus (Apetaenus) litoralis Eaton
status

 

Subdivision of Apetaenus (Apetaenus) litoralis Eaton View in CoL into subspecies

Eaton’s species is widely distributed in the subantarctic archipelagos, from Macquarie Island, south of New Zealand, to Marion Island, the westernmost island of the Kerguelen Biogeographical Province. After studying this species from various subantarctic sites, I have concluded that this species includes at least three distinct and easily recognizable geographical races, which are herein formally ranked at the subspecific level (see further).

Apetaenus litoralis View in CoL is a flightless, micropterous fly strictly dependant on the nature of the soil microhabitats, like many other terricolous/lapidicolous arthropods, such as spiders and beetles. It is likely that some events of microspeciation can have taken place indeed in those organisms characterized by very scarce vagility, that is with a weak capability of dispersal, rather than in strongly flying insects which are influenced mainly by passive—e.g. storm winds—and active dispersal. Womersley (1937) recorded Apetaenus litoralis Eaton View in CoL from Macquarie Island, the easternmost place in the distribution of this species known, at that time, only from the islands of the Kerguelen Province. Much later, Hardy (1962) stated that the specimens recorded by Womersley in his paper of 1937 belonged indeed to a new species, A. watsoni View in CoL , described by Hardy himself in the same paper of 1962. Indeed both of these authors were right. The former had recognized in the examined specimens the peculiar morphological and chaetotactical traits which noticeably typify Eaton’s species, while the latter noticed that the individuals inhabiting Macquarie Island exhibited some consistent features that allowed separating them from the typical A. litoralis Eaton. After View in CoL dissecting the male postabdomen of specimens of A. litoralis View in CoL from Marion, Crozet, Kerguelen, and Macquarie islands, it was immediately clear to me that all of them belonged to the same species, although they were typified by such external characters that allowed subdividing them into three well differentiated subspecies, namely A. litoralis marionensis View in CoL n. ssp., described herein from Marion Island, A. litoralis litoralis Eaton View in CoL from the numerous other islands of the Kerguelen Biogeographical Province, and A. litoralis watsoni Hardy View in CoL n. stat. from the easternmost Macquarie Island. On the other hand, it should be also stressed that Munari (2007) had already anticipated some doubts about the presumed validity of Hardy’s species.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Diptera

Family

Canacidae

Genus

Apetaenus

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