Aztecatopse diabolica ( Duda 1928 ) Haenni & Huerta & Ch-, 2014

Haenni, Jean-Paul & Huerta, Herón, 2014, The identity of Scatopse diabolica Duda, 1928, with description of a new genus from Mexico (Diptera, Scatopsidae), Revue suisse de Zoologie 121 (2), pp. 249-260 : 254-259

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.5828707

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:2B04B236-BE52-4072-8848-4B376E68CCC3

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/AB0F87C6-2F79-3B55-758A-9524993A078F

treatment provided by

Carolina

scientific name

Aztecatopse diabolica ( Duda 1928 )
status

comb. nov.

Aztecatopse diabolica ( Duda 1928) View in CoL , comb. n. Figs 2-16

Scatopse diabolica Duda, 1928: 285 View in CoL , figs 15 (3 hypopygium), 16 (3 wing).

Rhegmoclemina (Rhegmoclemina) diabolica . – Cook, 1967: 3.

Quateiella diabolica . – Amorim, 2008: 12.

MATERIAL STUDIED: Type material: the first author has examined 3 males syntypes labelled respectively “ MB 5.III.24 / Chapingo Garten”, “ diabolica n.sp. 3 det. Duda” [in Duda’ handwriting], “ Syntypus ”; “ MB 58 30.5.24, Chapingo”, “ S. diabolica n.sp. ”, “ Syntypus Zool. Mus. Berlin ”, “ Scatopse diabolica Duda, 1928 3 Lectotype, des. Haenni & Huerta 2008 ”, “ Aztecatopse diabolica (Duda) , det. J.-P. Haenni 2008”; “ MB 222” 23.IV.1924 [?], “diabolica 3”, “ Syntypus ”, all deposited in ZMB. These three specimens are micropinned and double mounted. The first two are well preserved while the third is in a poorer state of conservation. The second specimen is here designated as lectotype and has been labelled accordingly.

OTHER MATERIAL: 4 33, 8 ♀♀, Mexico: Estado de México, Otumba, loc. Coyotepec, 2530 m, 19º 39’ 09.3’’ N; 98º 45’ 25.7’’ W, 12.IV-4. GoogleMaps V.2007, Malaise Trap , D. Hernández Zetina leg. , CAIM / MHNN (partly in alcohol, partly slide mounted). – 13, 1♀, same data except 24.V-14. VI.2007. – 233, 1♀, same data except 5-26. VI.2007. – 2♀♀, same data except 4-13.X.2007 . – 13, same data except 23.I-13.II.2008 , all in CAIM.

DIAGNOSIS: Males of A. diabolica are readily distinguished by the shape of tergite 7, bearing posteriorly a pair of pointed and somewhat upcurved lateral projections (Figs 8, 14) and by the ventrally projected, plough-like genital capsule Aztecatopse diabolica ( Duda, 1928) . (2) Head, ♀, lateral view. (3) Antenna, 3. (4) Thorax, ♀, lateral view. (5) Spiracular sclerite, 3. (6) Wing, 3. (7) Tip of hind tibia, 3. (2-7: Coyotepec) (Photographs Herón Huerta).

(Figs 13, 16). Females are distinguished by the shape of sternite 8, triangular with a deep and narrow U-shaped median incision densely beset with long pilosity (Fig. 12).

DESCRIPTION

Male: A shining brownish-black species in general colour; body length 1.5- 1.75 mm (in pinned material, nearly 3 mm long in distended material in alcohol), wing length 2 mm. Head shining black, higher than long, antennae (Fig. 3) longer than head height, 8 flagellomeres, first rather quadrate, the following twice as wide as long, each bearing a whorl of setae, last flagellomere rounded, as long as 2 preceding ones, bearing 3 whorls of setae; palpi elongate, reniform, apically pointed; labella nearly as long as palpi. Thorax. Notum narrow, much longer than wide, covered with dense short pilosity, with well-marked row of 9-12 supraalar setae, scutellum with a row of 12-14 elongate marginal setae; anterior spiracular sclerite setose, with a well-marked anterodorsal pointed projection, spiracle large, not longer than high (Fig. 5); pleural setae: 14-18 anepisternal, in upper anterior corner of sclerite, 9-11 subalar, 5-8 subspiracular, no epimeral. Wing (Fig. 6) 2 mm long, membrane with dense microtrichia; no macrotrichia on membrane except for usual row along posterior margin; R 4+5 reaching costa beyond middle of wing, and slightly beyond level of fork of M; M fork nearly twice as long as stem, with fork gradually widening towards wing margin; second costal section shorter than first, false vein present between M 2 and CuA 1; CuA 2 smoothly angled near middle, reaching wing margin obliquely. Halteres brown, bearing row of 4-5 setae on stem; legs concolorous with body, tarsi somewhat lighter, especially the posterior ones; comb of setae on posteroapical part of hind tibia well developed (Fig. 7); first tarsomere of posterior leg longer than second. Abdomen with tergites and sternites shining. Tergites with pilosity much reduced on anterior segments, becoming denser on posterior segments. Tergite 2 with well defined sublateral lunula-like pretergites. Sternite 1 unsclerotized, 2 to 7 normally sclerotized, regularly beset with pilosity and micropilosity; segment 7 with a narrow anterior ring of sclerotization joining tergite and sternite; tergite 7 long, pilose, bearing posteriorly paired lateral, somewhat upcurved pointed projections (Figs 8, 13, 14), more heavily sclerotized on posterior third, except for oval median zone close to posterior margin; apparent sclerotized concave inner fold well developed, but its relation with tergite 7 not fully clear; sternite 7 nearly entirely devoid of micropilosity, broad, slightly emarginate anteriorly, rounded laterally, with deep complex W-shaped posterior emargination (Fig. 14); genital capsule (Figs 9, 15-16) elongate, epandrium prolonged into broadly triangular, ploughlike projection, somewhat reminiscent in shape of that in Quateiella ; gonocoxites fused to epandrium, prolonged into pair of apico-lateral, spatulate, pilose lobes; aedeagus long and thick, pilose apically; parameres elongate, narrow, Y-shaped, bearing median, ventrally directed, apically pilose process; aedeagus with sperm-duct enlarged, pilose apically (Figs 10, 16); sperm pump elongate, large, with comparatively small vesica.

Female: Body 2.4 mm (somewhat longer in alcohol-preserved distended specimens), wing 1.9 mm. Similar to male in morphology and coloration, but palpi somewhat shorter and less pointed apically (Fig. 2). Thorax (Fig. 4). Terminalia: tergite 7 (Fig. 11) with posterior margin slightly emarginate medially, narrowly more sclerotized than rest of tergite; sternite 7 (Fig. 11) with posterior margin weakly undulate, with well-sclerotized rounded inner fold; tergite 8 long, bearing pair of basal submedian spiracles, entire, only weakly emarginate posteriorly; sternite 8 a triangular plate with deep and narrow U-shaped median incision densely beset with long pilosity (Fig. 12); tergite 10 divided into pair of short triangular sclerites; genital furca present, weakly sclerotized; spermatheca oval-rounded.

Bionomics. In the original description Duda (1928) mentions that the material collected by Dampf was swept in different localities in Central Mexico from plants along a brook and along a drainage ditch, and in fallow land. In the recent 2007-08 survey A. diabolica was caught by Malaise trap in an arid environment dominated by Agavaceae and Cactaceae ( Fig. 1 View FIG ). The flight-period covers January to June and October.

Aztecatopse diabolica ( Duda, 1928) View in CoL (8) Tergite 7, 3. (9) Genital capsule, 3, ventral view. (10) Genitalia 3, lateral view, with tip of aedeagus. (11) Pregenital segment 7, ♀ (sternite left, tergite right). (12) Sternite 8, ♀, ventral view. (8-12: Coyotepec) (Photographs Herón Huerta).

DISTRIBUTION: Known till now only from four localities in a small region of

Estado de México.

DISCUSSION: The species was thoroughly described and figured by Duda (1928) in the catch-all genus Scatopse , but it has not been collected again until now. The species was included in Rhegmoclemina (Rhegmoclemina) in the Catalogue of Aztecatopse diabolica ( Duda, 1928) , 3 (13) Lectotype 3, tip of abdomen, lateral view. (14) Pregenital segment 7, 3 (tergite left, sternite right). (15) Genital capsule, 3, ventral view. (16) Genital capsule, 3, lateral view. (13: Chapingo, 14-16: Coyotepec). Abbreviations: Ae = aedeagus; Ep = epandrium; Gx = gonocoxite; Gx ap = gonocoxal apodeme; Pa = paramere; S9 = sternite 9) [drawings by Mathieu Rapp (13) and Herón Huerta (14-16)].

Neotropical Scatopsidae View in CoL by Cook (1967) although it obviously does not present the typical S-curved CuA 2 of this genus and of most Rhegmoclematini, as can easily be seen on the figure of the wing by Duda (1928: fig. 16). More recently Amorim (2008) transferred S. diabolica View in CoL to Quateiella View in CoL within the Swammerdamellini, probably on the basis of the ventrally directed beak-like projection of the male genital capsule and of the wing venation as figured by Duda (1928). However, the well-developed sternites 2-4 (absent in Quateiella View in CoL ) and the general structure of the genital capsule clearly exclude the species from this genus.

MB

Universidade de Lisboa, Museu Bocage

ZMB

Museum für Naturkunde Berlin (Zoological Collections)

V

Royal British Columbia Museum - Herbarium

CAIM

Collection of Aquatic Important Microorganisms

MHNN

Musee d'Histoire Naturalle

VI

Mykotektet, National Veterinary Institute

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Diptera

Family

Scatopsidae

Genus

Aztecatopse

Loc

Aztecatopse diabolica ( Duda 1928 )

Haenni, Jean-Paul & Huerta, Herón 2014
2014
Loc

Quateiella diabolica

AMORIM, D. 2008: 12
2008
Loc

Rhegmoclemina (Rhegmoclemina) diabolica

COOK, E. F. 1967: 3
1967
Loc

Scatopse diabolica

DUDA, O. 1928: 285
1928
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