Costatrichia santosi Harris and Armitage, 2019
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.3673491 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:B2EA9141-6419-4A1A-85CC-BCE190C17802 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3688194 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/17184D65-FFAB-650B-52BE-FD82FBB27B06 |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Costatrichia santosi Harris and Armitage |
status |
sp. nov. |
Costatrichia santosi Harris and Armitage , new species
Fig. 7 View Figure 7
Diagnosis. Costatrichia santosi appears to be most similar to a cluster of species, including C. devestiva Thomson and Armitage , C. dietrichi Thomson and Armitage , C. falsa Santos, Takiya and Nessimian , and C. zopilote Holzental and Harris , all of which have stout spines projecting from posterior processes on abdominal segment VIII. These species are separated by the location of these processes, the number of spines and their thicknesses. Santos et al. (2016) suggested that C. falsa and C. zopilote should be transferred to the genus Leuotrichia based on similarities in the male reproductive structures and molecular data for C. falsa , but also mentions that such a move may be premature pending more analyses of all Leucotrichiini genera. Pending more studies of the Leucotrichiini , we are leaving the species mentioned above in Costatrichia , while acknowledging the closeness of the species in the cluster above. The new species appears closest to C. dietrichi and C. devestiva based on the pair of spines from segment VIII, but in C. dietrichi these spines originate from one process, and of the spines in C. devestiva , only the dorsal most originates from a posterior process. Like C. falsa and C. dietrichi , the phallus of C. santosi has a pair of thickened spines apically, but the posterior spines of segment VIII in C. falsa are more similar to those of C. zopilote , one of which is much longer than those seen in C. zopilote .
Male. Length 2.1–2.4 mm. Head unmodified, with 3 ocelli, antennae with 18 segments, scape and first flagellar segment elongate, color brown in alcohol. Abdominal segment VII annular with acute, ventromesal process, anteriorly with sclerotized ridge. Segment VIII with posterior margin divided into a pair of elongate lateral processes, each bearing a long, thickened seta, dorsomesal process longer than ventromesal, with elongate seta thinner than that on the ventromesal process, short spine at base of insertion, anteriorly with numerous sharp spines, ventromesal process short with elongate seta thickening apically, narrow, acute process posteroventrally; in dorsal and ventral views, segment elongate with setal-bearing processes lateral in position, outer process much longer than inner process. Segment IX with anterolateral margin rounded, posterolateral margin shallowly concave with dorsal and ventral sclerites, posterolateral process bearing several apical setae; in dorsal view anterior margin concave, posterior margin with dorsal sclerite knoblike, anterior and posterior margins shallowly incised; in ventral view posterior margin incised mesally and laterally. Tergum X square, with dorsal posterior lobe; dorsally with lateral margins sclerotized, posteriorly triangular. Inferior appendage square, with narrow, setal-bearing process posteriorly; in ventral view sinuate on margins, setal-bearing processes laterad. Phallus apex in dorsal view with pair of thin, elongate sclerites distally which taper anteriorly; in lateral view apical sclerite dorsal in position and crescent-shaped, basal supports thin and lacking basal loop.
Female. Unknown.
Type material. Holotype, male— Panama, Bocas del Toro Province, Quebrada Rambala, near Rambala Jungle Lodge , 3.74 km SSE Rambala, 8.91627°N and 82.15469°W, 120 m, Malaise trap, February 6–12, 2017, E. Carlson GoogleMaps . Paratypes. Same information as holotype, 7 males; GoogleMaps ibid., but December 21–31, 2016, 2 males GoogleMaps ; ibid., November 15–20, 2016, 1 male GoogleMaps ; ibid., March 31–April 11, 4 males GoogleMaps ; ibid., October 7–9, 2016, 2 males; GoogleMaps ibid., tributary to Quebrada Rambala , 134 m, January 22, 2015, E. Carlson, 4 males ( SCH) .
Etymology. We take great pleasure in naming this species for our colleague Allan Paulo Moreira Santos for his many contributions to the study of Neotropical microcaddisflies.
SCH |
Museum zu Allerheiligen |
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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