Leptoconops (Brachyconops) californiensis Wirth and Atchley
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.6391684 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:CBD29188-143B-44DF-BE21-1654D50D8621 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/E8511E53-FFCF-EF6F-6A8A-FDD6FD4AF930 |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Leptoconops (Brachyconops) californiensis Wirth and Atchley |
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Leptoconops (Brachyconops) californiensis Wirth and Atchley View in CoL
( Fig. 8 View Figures 3–8 )
Leptoconops (Brachyconops) californiensis Wirth and Atchley, 1973: 16 View in CoL (subgenus Brachyconops Wirth and Atchley View in CoL ; designated L. californiensis View in CoL as type species; key; female, male; fig. female antenna, palpus, hind tarsomere 5, wing, spermathecae, hind tibial comb, fore tarsomeres 1–2, male palpus, antenna, hind tarsomere 5, genitalia; California). Mullens et al. 1997a (biology; discussion of relationship to other Leptoconops View in CoL subgenera; California, Sonora). Turner and Olson 2005 (biology; fig. adult female; Arizona).
Diagnosis. ( Table 13) Head and thorax blackish, abdomen mostly yellow with a little brown; femora and tibiae dark brown; tarsomeres pale; eyes bare; palpal segment 3 sensory pit as deep as wide, broadening internally on female (as in Fig. 11 L View Figures 9–15. 9 . knowltoni). Female: antenna with 12 flagellomeres; fore tarsomeres 1–2 with stout black ventral spines; claw with basal tooth; two ovoid spermathecae, third absent; cerci short, wider than long. Male: outer tarsal claw with basal process ~0.7 as long as claw; tergite 9 evenly tapering to pair of small submedian lobes and prominent widely separated fingerlike apicolateral processes, which are ~4× longer than wide and separated by a distance ~0.6 their length (as in Fig. 14 L View Figures 9–15. 9 . werneri); aedeagus a single median rodlike sclerite between basal portion of gonocoxites; distal sclerite of paramere ~5× longer than wide, apex bifurcate with thin medial point and shorter caudal point.
Distribution. Sandy deserts of Southern California, Arizona, Sonora.
Adult behavior. Leptoconops californiensis has been collected feeding on lizards inhabiting desert dune ecosystems during 0900–1200 hours of March, April, May, and October, though humans “in close proximity to the lizards” were not attacked ( Mullens et al. 1997a). Hosts were the zebra-tailed lizard ( Callisaurus draconoides Cope , Phrynosomatidae ), Coachella Valley fringe-toed lizard ( Uma inornata Cope , Phrynosomatidae ), Mojave fringe-toed lizard ( U. scoparia Cope , Phrynosomatidae ), flat-tailed horned lizard ( Phrynosoma mcallii Hallowell , Phrynosomatidae ) ( Mullens et al. 1997a), Yuman Desert fringe-toed lizard ( U. rufopunctata Cope , Phrynosomatidae ) ( Mullens et al. 1997a; Turner and Olson 2005), desert iguana ( Dipsosaurus dorsalis Baird and Girard , Iguanidae ), and desert horned lizard ( Phrynosoma platyrhinos Girard , Phrynosomatidae ) ( Turner and Olson 2005).
Symbionts. Wiesenborn (2003) collected eight male and eight female L. californiensis from flowers of the rare parasitic dune-inhabiting Pholisma sonorae (Torrey ex Gray) Yatskievych (Boraginaceae) during 0600–2000 hours from 18 April to 4 May. Collection period air temperatures were 28–39 °C. No other pollinators were observed before 24 April, and 11 of the 16 specimens had substantial P. sonorae pollen loads, suggesting the midge is a critical pollinator for the imperiled plant and should be conserved.
Subgenus Holoconops Kieffer
Holoconops Kieffer, 1918: 135 (as genus).
Microconops Kieffer, 1921: 108 View in CoL (as genus).
No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.
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Leptoconops (Brachyconops) californiensis Wirth and Atchley
Phillips, Robert A. 2022 |
Leptoconops (Brachyconops) californiensis
Wirth WW & Atchley WR 1973: 16 |
Holoconops
Kieffer JJ 1918: 135 |