Masarygus palmipalpus Reemer

Reemer, Menno & Stahls, Gunilla, 2013, Generic revision and species classification of the Microdontinae (Diptera, Syrphidae), ZooKeys 288, pp. 1-213 : 102-103

publication ID

https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.288.4095

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:F361EF98-AF30-4073-AA8F-ECD0254EFC22

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/596FD7FE-BBBE-4990-B2C9-4658FFBF0C05

taxon LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:act:596FD7FE-BBBE-4990-B2C9-4658FFBF0C05

treatment provided by

ZooKeys by Pensoft

scientific name

Masarygus palmipalpus Reemer
status

sp. n.

Masarygus palmipalpus Reemer View in CoL   ZBK sp. n. Figs 140-146

Type specimens.

HOLOTYPE. Adult male. PERU. Label 1: "PERU. Madre de Dios, Rio / Tambopata, Sachavacayoc Centre / 12°51' S– 69°22'W. Mal. trap / 28-30.X.2008. Leg. J.T. Smit". Coll. RMNH (preliminary deposition, to be transferred to relevant Peruvian collection later).

Diagnosis.

This is the only known species of Microdontinae in which the antenna of the male is furcate into five branches.

Description (based on holotype).

Adult male. Body size: 4 mm.

Head. Head unusually flat. Face wide: occupying about 3/4 of head width in frontal view; somewhat concave laterally; yellow; yellow pilose, except black pilose laterally on dorsal 1/2. Gena yellow; yellow pilose. Oral margin not produced; oral opening barely visible; mouth parts undeveloped. Frons brown; black pilose; very short; distance between frontal ocellus and antennal fossa shorter than height of antennal fossa. Vertex blackish brown medially, yellow laterally; black pilose; ocelli arranged almost in a straight line, with frontal ocellus weakly developed, much smaller than the other two. Occiput yellow; black pilose dorsally, yellow pilose ventrally. Eye bare. Antennal fossa about 1,5 times as wide as high. Antenna black; black pilose; ratio of scape:basoflagellomere approximately as 1:8; pedicel very short. Basoflagellomere furcate into five branches, four of which about equally long, the fifth branches off from one of the other at about ¼ from the base of the segment, with a length of about 2/5 of the other branches. Arista absent.

Thorax. Mesoscutum black, except narrowly pale yellow along margins; black pilose. Postpronotum pale yellow; bare. Postalar callus pale yellow; black pilose. Scutellum black; black pilose; semicircular; without calcars; flat, appearing even slightly concave; smooth and shining along margins, dull dorsally due to micropunctation; black pilose. Anepisternum pale yellow along dorsal margin, brown otherwise; with sparse long black pile, also ventrally; without sulcus. Other pleurae yellowish to brown; bare (also without microtrichia). Calypter pale yellow. Halter pale yellow with greyish margin.

Wing: Hyaline; microtrichose, except bare on cell sc and basal 1/4 of cell cup.

Legs: Front and mid leg pale yellow, except dark brown on basal 3/4; black pilose. Hind leg dark brown, except fifth tarsomere yellow; black pilose. Front coxa exceptionally long: about 4/5 of length of femur, longer than tibia; pale brown; bare. Other coxae and trochanters shorter; pale brown; very sparsely black pilose.

Abdomen. Strongly flattened dorsoventrally. Tergite 1 blackish; black pilose; medially interrupted by the whitish antetergite, which is almost entirely fused with the tergite. Tergites 2 and 3 whitish, except black on lateral 1/5, the black part most narrow at posterior margin; black pilose. Tergite 4 black, except for a pair of whitish, submedian, oval maculae at posterior 1/2. Sternite 1 whitish; bare. Sternite 2 whitish; yellow pilose. Sternite 3 whitish, except for lateral dark brown, round macula at anterior 1/2, of about 1/4 of tergite width; yellow pilose, except black pilose anteromedially. Sternite 4 whitish, except for pair of dark brown, oval maculae, almost confluent medially; black pilose anteriorly, yellow pilose posteriorly. Male genitalia as in Fig. 146.

Female. Unknown.

Etymology.

The specific epithet (noun in apposition) is composed of the Latin words palma (hand) and palpus (feeler, here interpreted as antenna). The name refers to the hand-like antenna of the male of this species.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Diptera

Family

Syrphidae

SubFamily

Microdontinae

Genus

Masarygus