Chimarra pectinella, Blahnik & Andersen, 2022

Blahnik, Roger & Andersen, Trond, 2022, New species of the genus Chimarra Stephens from Africa (Trichoptera, Philopotamidae) and characterization of the African groups and subgroups of the genus, ZooKeys 1111, pp. 43-198 : 43

publication ID

https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.1111.77586

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:3FAAEA83-9E81-41A9-9B86-8576F8A1F33A

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/78E8A2D4-C9C6-4C10-8B2E-3F9829E988C8

taxon LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:act:78E8A2D4-C9C6-4C10-8B2E-3F9829E988C8

treatment provided by

ZooKeys by Pensoft

scientific name

Chimarra pectinella
status

sp. nov.

Chimarra pectinella sp. nov.

Fig. 54A-F View Figure 54

Type material.

Holotype. Ghana - Central Reg. ● ♂ (in alcohol); Kakum Forest Reserve; 5°21'N, 1°22'W; 8-15 Nov. 1994; T Andersen leg.; Malaise trap; UMSP 000550061.

Additional material.

Ghana - Central Reg. ● 2♀♀; Kakum Forest Reserve; 5°21'N, 1°22'W; 8-15 Nov. 1994; T Andersen leg.; Malaise trap; ZMBN ● 1♀; same collection data as for preceding; UMSP GoogleMaps .

Diagnosis.

Chimarra pectinella is probably closest to C. lobulata sp. nov., as evidenced by the similarity in the shapes of segment IX and tergum X of both species. Both species also have the dorsal processes of segment IX very narrowly separated mesally. Chimarra pectinella differs in the shape of its inferior appendages, with the setae on the apical margin on almost lobe-like projections, and by having a comb-like row of spines on the dorsal processes of segment IX, which, unlike C. lobulata lack a scabrous surface texture. It also differs in the shorter, smaller, and less ventrally curved apicoventral lobes of the phallobase, and by having a distinct cusp or tooth on the mesal surface of the inferior appendages.

Description.

Adult. Overall color (in alcohol) yellowish brown, head slightly darker, setal warts of head pale, contrasting. Head short (postocular parietal sclerite short). Palps elongate; maxillary palp with 1st segment very short (approximately as long as wide), 2nd segment moderately elongate (~ 3 × 1st, slightly shorter than 3rd), apex with cluster of ~ 8 stiff setae, 3rd segment moderately elongate, 4th segment short (~ ½ length of 2nd), 5th segment very elongate and narrow (slightly longer than 3rd and 4th combined). Forewing length: male, 4.0 mm; female, 4.5-4.8 mm. Forewing forks I, II, III, and V present; hind wing with forks II and V only. Forewing with R1 nearly straight, stem of Rs weakly inflected, basal fork of discoidal cell distinctly enlarged, evenly forked, length of cell slightly> 2 × width, fork I subsessile, fork II sessile, fork III with veins crossed (both forewings of male, possibly aberration, female with normal fork), r crossvein diagonal, intersecting discoidal cell near apical fork, s, r-m, and m crossveins linear and hyaline, both 2A and 3A looped to 1A (2A without apical fork). Hind wing with R1 obsolete (or fused to subcosta), fork II sessile, anal loop small. Forelegs with apical tibial spur short; male with modified tarsal claws, apical three segments of tarsi short and flattened, claws asymmetrical, outer one elongate and twisted.

Male genitalia. Segment VIII moderate in length, tergum slightly longer than sternum, sternum without posteroventral projection. Segment IX, in lateral view, relatively long, narrowed dorsally at approximately level of preanal appendages, ventral margin only slightly expanded, dorsal margin without apodemes, but with paired, elongate, narrow, posteriorly directed processes from posterior margin, each with row of short spines on dorsal margin, apices of processes acute, ventral process absent; as viewed dorsally, with tergum discontinuous mesally, posterior processes proximate mesally, bowed outward, sternum short, subtruncate. Tergum X without evident mesal lobe, lateral lobes divided mesally, moderately elongate and narrow, with narrow, projecting apex; sensilla probably only two on each lobe, one apical and the other preapical. Preanal appendages very small and rounded, inserted membranously (not fused to segments IX or X). Inferior appendage with only weak basal inflection, widened apically, apical margin with short nipple-like projections, each with elongate seta; as viewed caudally, with slight mesal curvature, apex rounded, mesal surface with distinctly sclerotized cusp. Phallic apparatus with phallobase moderately elongate, lightly sclerotized, with usual basodorsal expansion, apparently well anchored within segment by semi-sclerotized periphallic membrane (attached to lateral margin of segment IX), apicoventral margin of phallobase sclerotized and slightly projecting, mesal margin with U-shaped invagination, producing short paired, sclerotized processes; endotheca with very short spine; phallotremal sclerite complex large, composed of relatively elongate rod and ring structure, with lightly sclerotized apical structure.

Etymology.

Chimarra pectinella , used as an adjective and derived from the Latin pecten, a comb, in reference to the row of comb-like spines on the dorsolateral lobes of segment IX in this species.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Trichoptera

Family

Philopotamidae

Genus

Chimarra