Drosophila mojavensis wrigleyi Castrezana, 2009
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.1080/00222930802610535 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/81628786-FFF3-6D46-FEC2-FD3BCA4F4049 |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Drosophila mojavensis wrigleyi Castrezana |
status |
subsp. nov. |
Drosophila mojavensis wrigleyi Castrezana , new subspecies
( Figure 3D View Figure 3 )
Drosophila mojavensis mojavensis Ruiz, Heed and Wasserman, 1990
Type material
Holotype. Male: California ( USA), Santa Catalina Island, 20 October 2007, V. Carlin-Harris, deposited at the San Diego Drosophila Stock Center collection at the University of California, San Diego, La Jolla, California (acquisition no. 483 from collection CI 1007). Paratypes (same collection data as holotype): 15 males and 15 females deposited at the San Diego Drosophila Stock Center collection (acquisition nos. 484–498 (males) and 499–513 (females)); 10 males and 10 females deposited at the Smithsonian Diptera Collection, United States National Museum of Natural History ( NMNH), Washington, DC.
Diagnosis
Drosophila m. wrigleyi can be distinguished from the other subspecies by the shape of the aedeagus ( Figure 3D View Figure 3 ). Internal margin of aedeagus/external margin of aedeagal apodeme index51.37 (1.35–1.49; n 515); ventral margin of aedeagus/wide aedeagal apodeme index53.97 (3.47–4.27). Ventral margin of aedeagus is almost straight; anterior dorsal margin has a slight depressive curve with small protuberances appearing like a saw with two teeth.
Distribution and host cactus
Currently known only from Santa Catalina Island off the coast of southern California, USA ( Figure 1 View Figure 1 ). Host cactus: prickly-pear ( Opuntia spp. , including O. littoralis ).
Remarks
Fasolo and Krebs (2004) found that D. m. wrigleyi showed significantly greater thermal tolerance than both D. m. sonorensis from southern Arizona (Santa Rosa Mountains) and San Carlos, Sonora, and D. m. baja from Baja California Sur (Ensenada de los Muertos). Fasolo and Krebs (2004) also noted that preliminary mtDNA studies using 16 S rRNA showed D. m. wrigleyi possessed three apparently unique base substitutions compared to flies here assigned to D. m. baja and D. m. sonorensis.
Material examined
External measurements were conducted on 20 males and 20 females from collection CI 1007; internal (genitalia) measurements were conducted on 15 males.
Etymology
Subspecies name suggested by Hocutt (2000) in honor of the Wrigley family, and especially William Wrigley, Jr., for their efforts in protecting Santa Catalina Island.
V |
Royal British Columbia Museum - Herbarium |
CI |
Carnegie Institution of Washington |
NMNH |
Smithsonian Institution, National Museum of Natural History |
S |
Department of Botany, Swedish Museum of Natural History |
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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Genus |
Drosophila mojavensis wrigleyi Castrezana
Pfeiler, E., Castrezana, S., Reed, L. K. & Markow, T. A. 2009 |
Drosophila mojavensis mojavensis
Ruiz, Heed and Wasserman 1990 |