Cacaohelea, Wirth & Grogan, 1988
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.5438.1.1 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:2CD64E2C-D575-463F-A8F4-390662DDC9E2 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/5875621C-FF4A-29AA-FF3F-B050FBC876BB |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Cacaohelea |
status |
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- Female abdomen with sternite 7 very short. Borkent & Picado (2008: character 7) described this feature, unique within the family. Some other Ceratopogonidae have sternite 7 somewhat shorter than either sternite 6 or 8 (e.g. Downeshelea , Bothamia , some Stilobezzia , Fanthamia , Bothahelea , Echinohelea ) but not to the degree present in Cacaohelea . Cacaohelea also has a large segment 8, with a ratio of sternite 8/7 of 5.0 or more. Others with a long sternite 8 have a maximum ratio of 3.5 (see character 135).
- Female with the medial portion of sternite 9 with enlarged, heavily sclerotized, ridged cuticle. This may be a partial reversal to the plesiomorphic condition in Ceratopogonidae (see character 140) but more likely is a distinctive, new modification.
- Female with one dark and one pale spermatheca. Most other Ceratopogonidae and Culicomorpha (other than extant Thaumaleidae ; the fossil Mesothaumalea fossilis Kovalev appears to have two pigmented spermathecae ( Kovalev 1989)) have darkly pigmented spermathecae, some genera of Ceratopogonidae have pale spermathecae (e.g. some Atrichopogon , some Stilobezzia ) but never in combination of dark and pale. The feature, therefore, is unique within the infraorder. However, it is important to recognize that numbers of genera in early lineages ( Table 4) have only one spermatheca and so cannot be adequately compared.
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