Cephalosphaera munchiquensis, Ramos-Pastrana & Marques & Rafael, 2022

Ramos-Pastrana, Yardany, Marques, Dayse W. A. & Rafael, José Albertino, 2022, Cephalosphaera Enderlein and Neocephalosphaera De Meyer (Diptera: Pipunculidae) of Colombia, with description of nine new species and an updated key to their Neotropical species, Zootaxa 5178 (4), pp. 301-333 : 303-305

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.5178.4.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:6E706C39-8F42-4050-8792-0423F4267D2B

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7037009

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/41113E13-FF80-FFD9-FF12-91774F2BB17F

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Cephalosphaera munchiquensis
status

sp. nov.

Cephalosphaera munchiquensis View in CoL sp. nov.

Figs 1–13 View FIGURES 1–13 , 129 View FIGURE 129

Type material. HOLOTYPE ♂: COLOMBIA, Cauca, PNN[Parque Nacional Natural] Munchique, Sector La Romelia , 238’N / 7654’W, 2640 m [eters], Malaise, 27.vii.–09.viii.2004, H. Pino leg. “M4969 (1♂, IAvH) (photographed specimen) . Holotype with left wing mounted on microslide with Canada balsam. Right antenna and terminalia were placed in a microvial with glycerin, both pinned along the specimen. (hind legs lost).

Diagnosis. Coxae dark brown; trochanters yellow; femora yellow except mid femur with a small spot light brown dorsoapically; tibiae dark yellow. Abdomen dark brown, tergite 1 gray pruinose. Surstyli subsymmetrical totally covered in setae, stout basally, thin apically. Apex of phallic guide thickened at the base, thin apically, with a row of fine setae ventrally. Phallus trifid, stout, with ducts distinctly separated only in distal 1/3, somewhat coiled.

Description. MALE (holotype). Body length 4.5 mm. Head ( Figs 1–2 View FIGURES 1–13 ). Eyes contiguous for 16 facets. F, EM, V (mm) = 0.3, 0.6, 0.4. Frons gray pruinose. Postcranium black, brown pruinose dorsally, gray pruinose ventrally. Antenna ( Fig. 3 View FIGURES 1–13 ) with scape dark brown, with one strong seta; pedicel dark brown with two long setae ventrally; postpedicel light yellow, with acuminate apex. LPP/WPP = 3.7. Labellum brown. Thorax ( Figs 1–2, 4 View FIGURES 1–13 ). Postpronotal lobe brown. Scutum dark brown, yellow pruinose. Notopleuron concolorous with scutum, gray pruinose. Scutellum dark brown, yellow pruinose. Mesopleuron and mediotergite dark brown, gray pruinose. Wing ( Fig. 5 View FIGURES 1–13 ). Length 7.5 mm. LW/MWW = 3.4; LTC/LFC = 1.3. Membrane light brown infuscated; third section costal shorter than the length of fourth; vein r-m located after the basal third of the upper section of the cell dm; vein M 2 short; dm-m/M 2 = 3.9; section between cell dm and vein M 2 greater than vein dm-m; vein dm-m slightly curved. Halter light brown. Legs ( Figs 1–2 View FIGURES 1–13 ). Coxae dark brown; trochanters yellow; femora yellow except mid femur with small spot slightly brown dorsoapically; with a row of ventral spines and a row of long and fine yellow setae posterodorsally; tibiae dark yellow; tarsomeres 1–2 yellow, 3 and 5 slightly brown; pulvilli brown. Abdomen ( Figs 1–2, 6 View FIGURES 1–13 ). Dark brown, tergite 1 with seven stout black setae laterally; tergites 1–5, brown pruinose laterally; tergites and sternites 6 and 7 as in Fig. 7 View FIGURES 1–13 . Syntergosternite 8 brown, brown pruinose, shorter than tergite 5, with membranous area occupying less than half of syntergosternite 8 in dorsal view, not reaching the epandrium ( Fig. 8 View FIGURES 1–13 ). Terminalia ( Figs 7–13 View FIGURES 1–13 ). Epandrium brown, surstyli light brown ( Figs 8–9 View FIGURES 1–13 ). Surstyli ( Figs 8–11 View FIGURES 1–13 ) subsymmetrical, shorter than the length of epandrium, totally covered in setae, thickened at the base, thin apically, both surstyli with tips downward directed when seen in lateral view ( Figs 10–11 View FIGURES 1–13 ). Apex of phallic guide stout basally, tapering apically, with a row of fine setae ventrally ( Fig. 12 View FIGURES 1–13 ). Ejaculatory apodeme funnel-shaped ( Fig. 13 View FIGURES 1–13 ). Phallus trifid, stout, with ducts distinctly separated only in distal 1/3, somewhat coiled ( Fig. 12 View FIGURES 1–13 ).

FEMALE. Unknown.

Geographical distribution. Colombia (Cauca) ( Fig. 129 View FIGURE 129 ).

Etymology. The specific epithet refers to the type locality, Munchique, National Natural Park, Colombia; probably the word Munchique comes from the indigenous language Chibcha which refers to the highest mountain, the mountain that holds many secrets.

Habitat. The specimen was collected with Malaise trap at ground level. The vegetation of the collection site corresponds to Andean forest of the Pacific region of Colombia.

Taxonomic notes. Cephalosphaera munchiquensis sp. nov. runs to C. guanacastensis Rafael & Menezes, 1999 in the couplet 11 of the key presented by Souza & Ale-Rocha (2009). It differs from C. guanacastensis in having all coxae dark brown (versus fore coxa yellow, mid and hind coxa brown in C. guanacastensis ); surstyli extensively covered by setae ( Figs 8–9 View FIGURES 1–13 ) [versus surstyli bare dorsally, figure 2.F, presented by Souza & Ale-Rocha (2009)]; apex of phallic guide with a row of fine setae ventrally ( Fig. 12 View FIGURES 1–13 ) [versus apex of phallic guide without a row of fine setae ventrally, figure 3.F, presented by Souza & Ale-Rocha (2009)]; phallus trifid, with ejaculatory ducts thin and distinctly separated only in distal 1/3, somewhat coiled ( Fig. 12 View FIGURES 1–13 ) [versus phallus shortened stout and with two additional branches, giving the false impression of being five ejaculatory ducts, figure 3.F, presented by Souza & Ale-Rocha (2009)].

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Diptera

Family

Pipunculidae

Genus

Cephalosphaera

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