Culicoides calexicanus Wirth and Rowley

Phillips, Robert A., 2022, Culicoides Latreille and Leptoconops Skuse biting midges of the southwestern United States with emphasis on the Canyonlands of southeastern Utah (Diptera: Ceratopogonidae), Insecta Mundi 2022 (907), pp. 1-214 : 102-103

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.6391684

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:CBD29188-143B-44DF-BE21-1654D50D8621

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6391780

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/E8511E53-FFBB-EF14-6A8A-F91CFDFDFCFF

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Culicoides calexicanus Wirth and Rowley
status

 

Culicoides calexicanus Wirth and Rowley View in CoL

( Fig. 90 View Figures 88–93 , 144, 221, 223, 275, 285)

Culicoides calexicanus Wirth and Rowley, 1971: 156 View in CoL (numerical characters; key; female, male; fig. female antenna, palpus, eye separation, spermathecae, male genitalia, parameres; California). Wirth et al. 1985: 26 (numerical characters; fig. female wing).

Diagnosis. ( Tables 14, 15) Wing pattern distinct and extensive; r 2 dark; prominent distal pale spots in r 3, m 1, m 2; scutellum yellowish, lighter than the brown scutum; fore and often hind tarsomeres with apical spines; spermathecae unequal by ~1.1, necks shorter than wide; ventral apodeme of gonocoxite simple; gonostylus about evenly curved, not abruptly bent, entire lateral contour convex; aedeagus V-shaped, median process tapering to tip ~0.2 as wide as basal arm spread; parameres separate, with abrupt ventro-lateral bend at ~0.8 and sharp tip often with divergent apical spines.

Distribution. California, Nevada, Utah (Grand, Washington counties, new state record). Evidently, C. calexicanus is an uncommon but wide-ranging species, having been reported by Wirth and Rowley (1971) from near sea level in Imperial County, California, and from ~ 2300 m elevation in the Humboldt Mountains of Elko County, Nevada.

Adult behavior. The mandibular and lacinial teeth on the female indicate it feeds on vertebrate blood; and the CO 2 - baited trap collection of the male suggests that males may seek hosts to find females for mating. Its week 14 collection datum in Table 5 is from Imperial County, California, a much warmer climate, representing much earlier activity than in Utah or Nevada .

Remarks. Some of the Palmerae group females that were not identified to species may be C. calexicanus . See C. palmerae and species C remarks.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Diptera

Family

Ceratopogonidae

Genus

Culicoides

Loc

Culicoides calexicanus Wirth and Rowley

Phillips, Robert A. 2022
2022
Loc

Culicoides calexicanus

Wirth WW & Dyce AL & Peterson BV & Roper I. 1985: 26
Wirth WW & Rowley WA 1971: 156
1971
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