Urban Scatopsidae (Diptera) of Los Angeles, California, United States Amorim, Dalton de Souza Brown, Brian V. Insect Systematics and Diversity 2020 2020-01-31 4 1 1 1 41 9HS9D Amorim & Brown, 2020 [818,972,629,652] Insecta Scatopsidae Ectaetia Animalia Diptera 3 4 Arthropoda species betzi sp. nov.  ( Figs. 1, 15, and 28–30) (Zoobank LSID: urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act: 5480EDA3-6D34-42FF- B48F-AB2FEFBF8AA8)   Diagnosis.Antenna with 10 flagellomeres. Proepimeron high, undivided, anterior spiracle on dorsal half of sclerite. Posterior tibia distally expanded, compressed. R 5ending before mid of wing, running quite separate from C, strongly curved. CuP clearly present, setae on CuA and CuP. Aedeagus coiled, longer than body length.   Material Examined.  Holotype ♂, United States, California, Riverside Co., Riverside, 33.984°N 117.313°W, BioSCAN site 47,  1–8 September 2016, Malaise trap,  375 m, Coll. Justin Betz, BioSCAN sample 18411 (on slide) ( LACM).   Description. Male( Fig. 1). General body color dark brown. Body length, 2.38 mm. Head( Fig. 28). Ovoid, higher than long; holoptic, eye-bridge large, about 8 facets wide; eye with small ommatotrichia, not densely setose; all ommatidia of similar size; three ocelli, lateral ocelli much larger than mid ocellus, separated from eye-bridge by more than their own width. Occiput with fine setae distributed irregularly on occiput, a sensillum midway between ventral margin and vertex; frons between eye-bridge and base of antennae bare; frontoclypeus short, with fine setae at dorsal half. Labella well-developed, setose. Maxillary palpus small, shorter than labella, slender, covered with scattered setae, with an apical sensory pit. Postmentum laterally compressed at base, with a pair of lateral arms widening towards apex. Antenna reaching about half of thorax; scape and pedicel short; 10 flagellomeres covered with scattered fine setulae, no sensilla; flagellomeres 1–9 wider than long, distal flagellomere club-shaped, about twice the length of previous flagellomere. Thorax( Fig. 29). Scutum only slightly longer than wide; rather sparsely covered with fine setae, about 16 strong supra-alars. Antepronotum and proepimeron finely setose; spiracle on dorsal half of proepimeron, no separate spiracular sclerite, spiracle closer to anterior margin, setae restricted to area dorsal and posterior to spiracle. Anepisternum with fine setae along antero-dorsal margin,katepisternum with few setae on antero-dorsal corner. Mesepimeron with two setae on postero-dorsal area. Two setae on dorsal margin of meron, three fine subspiracular setulae; metepisternum well-developed, bare. Legs. Coxae brown, femora, trochanters brownish yellow, femora yellowish brown on basal half, particularly lighter on foreleg, brown on distal half; tibiae and tarsi brown, yellowish close to tip. Fore femur slightly bulging, hind tibia club-shaped, widening towards apex ( Fig. 31). No tibial spurs, hind tibia with a row of slightly elongate distal setae.Tarsi with first tarsomere about twice the length of second tarsome. Tarsal claws slender, curved, no teeth; empodium well-developed. Wing( Fig. 30). Wing extending to beyond tip of abdomen, 1.40 mmlong, 0.60 mmwide. All cells with microtrichia, no macrotrichia on wing membrane, dorsal macrotrichia on anterior veins, and on CuA and CuP. Wing length/h-R1 length, 2.9; WL/R 1-R 5length, 7.6; h-R5 length/WL, 0.45. Sc entirely absent, Hu hardly identifiable; first sector of Rs oblique, r-m absent, base of M 1 + 2fused to R 5(rmf) for a distance about twice the length of first sector of Rs; M 1, M 2, M 4reaching wing margin, CuA and CuP not reaching margin; CuA gently curved towards posterior margin at proximal third. Haltere dark brown. Abdomen( Fig. 15). Tergites dark brown, sternites brown. Tergite 3 and 4 more slender than tergites 2 and 5. Pretergite 2 present, bare. Sternite 1 not sclerotized, sternite 2 trapezoid, posterior margin much wider than anterior margin; sternites 3–8 wide. Sternite 8 wide and short, posterior margin clearly emarginated; spiracle 8 at membrane; tergite 8 about as long as wide. Terminalia( Fig. 32). Gonocoxites short, widely separated, each gonocoxite with a pair of short digitiform inner distal projections, inner projection with some setulae distally, external margin distally only slightly produced beyond base of gonostyli; sternite 9 well-developed fused to gonocoxites, with a pair of ventral projections; gonostyli displaced medially, subquadrate, with few setulae distally; parameres long, flattened, extending well beyond distal margin of tergite 9; sperm pump attached to terminalia; aedeagus wide at base and a coiled extension longer than the body length; tergite 9 small, subquadrate, setose, placed quite distally dorsally in the terminalia. Cerci absent.   Figs. 1–6.Habitus. 1.  Ectaetia betzi sp.nov., male holotype. 2.  Psectrosciara gonzalezae sp.nov., female paratype. 3.  Scatopse notata(Linnaeus), female. 4.  Aztecatopse huertai sp.nov., female paratype. 5.  Swammerdamella marginataCook, male. 6.  Swammerdamella marginataCook, female.   Figs. 7–10.Habitus. 7.  Coboldia fuscipes(Meigen), male (black arrow indicates the diagnostic tergite 8 spatulate projection). 8.  Coboldia fuscipes(Meigen), female. 9.  Quateiella quatei(Cook), male. 10.  Quateiella quatei(Cook), female.  Female.Unknown.   Distribution. United States, southern California.   Etymology.This species is named after Justin Betz, citizen scientist participating in the BioSCAN project, responsible for trap in BioSCAN site 47, to whom we kindly acknowledge the effort and the dedication.   Remarks.  Ectaetiais not a particularly species-rich genus among the scatopsids. Two species of the genus have been recorded for the United States:  E. clavipesLoew, which has Holarctic distribution, and  E. gracilisMcAtee—the typelocality of this latter species is Washington, DC, but it is not recognizable based on the original description ( Cook 1963).  Ectaetia betzican be clearly differentiated from  E. clavipesby the very short C and by the sclerites of the male terminalia ( Freeman 1985). One single male of this species was collected in site 47 (Riverside), in September 2016during BioSCAN Phase II, at the extreme eastern range of the project. The BOLDSystems website has 142 sequenced specimens of  Ectaetiagathering in four clusters, one of which with 134 specimens(http:// boldsystems.org/index.php/Public_SearchTerms?query= Ectaetia[tax]). 2618789621 2016-09-01 2016-09-08 2016-09-01 LACM Coll. Justin Betz United States of America Riverside Co. 375 33.984 Riverside 72 -117.313 3 4 1 1 California holotype