Limnellia abbreviata Harrison, new combination

Limnellia abbreviata (Harrison), new combination (Figs. 24–27) Scatella abbreviata Harrison 1976: 136.­ Horning 1977: 35 [ecology].­ Mathis 1989: 649 [Australasian/Oceanian catalog].­ Mathis and Zatwarnicki 1995: 270 [world catalog]. Diagnosis. This species is distinguished from congeners by the fol...

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Main Authors: Mathis, Wayne N., Zatwarnicki, Tadeusz, Marris, John W. M.
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: Zenodo 2004
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6272951
https://zenodo.org/record/6272951
id ftdatacite:10.5281/zenodo.6272951
record_format openpolar
institution Open Polar
collection DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology)
op_collection_id ftdatacite
language unknown
topic Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Arthropoda
Insecta
Diptera
Ephydridae
Limnellia
Limnellia abbreviata
spellingShingle Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Arthropoda
Insecta
Diptera
Ephydridae
Limnellia
Limnellia abbreviata
Mathis, Wayne N.
Zatwarnicki, Tadeusz
Marris, John W. M.
Limnellia abbreviata Harrison, new combination
topic_facet Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Arthropoda
Insecta
Diptera
Ephydridae
Limnellia
Limnellia abbreviata
description Limnellia abbreviata (Harrison), new combination (Figs. 24–27) Scatella abbreviata Harrison 1976: 136.­ Horning 1977: 35 [ecology].­ Mathis 1989: 649 [Australasian/Oceanian catalog].­ Mathis and Zatwarnicki 1995: 270 [world catalog]. Diagnosis. This species is distinguished from congeners by the following characters: Wing brachypterous; small shore fly, body length 1.35 mm, body dark brown with grayish mottling, generally densely microtomentose. Description. Head: Head ratio 0.69; mesofrons and fronto­orbits dark brown to grayish brown anteromedially; parafrons grayish brown; ocellar, both verticals and single fronto­orbital seta well developed and subequal; 2–3 lateroclinate setulae and a proclinate anterior setula that is slightly larger than other fronto­orbital setulae; inner vertical seta inserted anterior of outer seta. Scape and pedicel gray brown; 1 st flagellomere yellowish orange; arista without hair­like, dorsal branches, length subequal to combined length of pedicel and 1 st flagellomere. Face golden to grayish brown; face bearing 2 lateroventroclinate setae and 5 ventroclinate setae along peristomal margin; parafacial gray. Eye ratio 0.88; gena­to­eye ratio 0.08; gena with 1 large, posterior seta and 2–3 setulae anterior and posterior on postgena. Palpus blackish brown. Thorax: Mesonotum mostly dark brown; with medial gray to whitish stripe on posterior 2 / 3 of scutum, slightly enlarged just before scutellum; 2 gray, elongate spots on anterior 1 / 3 between acrostichal and dorsocentral tracks and 1 elongate spot along dorsocentral track between setae; posterior apex of scutellum grayish; posterior notopleural seta at elevated insertion compared to anterior seta; postpronotum and posterior portion of notopleuron, extending onto supra­alar area, gray; pleurae mostly brown but dorsal margin of anepisternum and especially of katepisternum gray; only 1 anepisternal seta toward dorsum of posterior margin and 1 katepisternal seta. Wing (Fig. 27) brachypterous, extended posteriorly to posterior margin of 2 nd abdominal tergite. Legs with femora and tibiae blackish brown; basal 2 tarsomeres yellowish, apical 2–3 becoming increasingly more brownish distally. Abdomen: Tergites mottled, mostly brown with gray spots or longitudinally linear marks, becoming increasingly grayer on more posterior tergites; tergites 3–5 with medial gray area and with gray surrounding brown spot just laterad of midline. Male terminalia (Figs. 24–26): Epandrium in ventral view (Fig. 24) broadly oval, lateral margins almost parallel sided, ventral margin broadly emarginate into which surstyli are based, evenly setulose; cerci with ventral angle more acute than dorsal angle but otherwise hemispherical, more setulose toward medial margin; surstyli in ventral view (Fig. 24) somewhat triangular, bearing longer setulae along ventral margin but with several very short setulae apically; aedeagus (shaded) in ventral view (Fig. 25) like a top with base wide and apex pointed, in lateral view (Fig. 26) almost evenly wide although dorsal and ventral margins irregular, with a sub­basal, rounded notch dorsally, apex irregularly incised; phallapodeme in lateral view (Fig. 26) long and narrow, margin irregular, in ventral view (Fig. 25) Tshaped with basal bar shallowly flared, medial arm wider at articulation with base of aedeagus; gonite in lateral view (Fig. 26) wide basally, apical 2 / 3 narrow, slightly curved, apex tapered to rounded point, in ventral view (Fig. 25) apical projection becoming slightly wider apically but with an abruptly tapered, pointed apex; posterior projection forming an arch. Type material. The holotype male is labeled “U. of C[anterbury]. ZOOLOGY DEPT. Loc.: opp. Mollymawk Inlet. SNARES IS. Hab.beating Poa astoni Date: 24 ­I­ 67 [24 Jan 1967] Coll.: P[eter].M.J[ohns] [white; details on locality, habitat, date and collector handwritten] / HOLOTYPE Scatella abbreviata ɗ det. R.A.Harrison [white; handwritten].” The holotype is preserved in alcohol, is in good condition, and is deposited in NZAC. There are also five female paratypes that are preserved in a separate tube of alcohol (NZAC). Other specimens examined. New Zealand. Snares Islands: South side Ho Ho Bay (on damp peat in sooty shearwater run), 11 Jan 1975, C. J. Horning (1 ɗ; NZAC); Sinkhole (drainage area on rock face), J. W. Early (3 ɗ, 7 Ψ; AMNZ). Distribution. Australasian/Oceanian: New Zealand (Snares Islands). Natural history. Horning (1977) reported rearing this species from seepage sites on Snares Islands. Remarks. This is the only known brachypterous species of Limnellia and is distinguished from congeners by the brachypterous wing and structures of the male terminalia (Figs. 24–26). When Harrison (1976) described this species he misinterpreted the number of lateroclinate fronto­orbital setae and thus misidentified the genus. The genus Scatella does indeed have two fronto­orbital setae, but specimens of S. abbreviata, including the holotype, have a single well­developed lateroclinate seta, and thus, Harrison’s statement (1976: 136) “By definition this species is a true Scatella ” is incorrect. Only two genera, Limnellia and Scatophila, of the tribe Scatellini have a single fronto­orbital seta, and species of these two genera with normally developed wings can be distinguished by the length of the costal vein (the costal vein is short in Scatophila, extending only to vein R 4 + 5, and in Limnellia it extends to vein M). With a brachypterous wing and greatly reduced venation, as in this species, this character is impossible to use, and we had to rely primarily on structures of the male terminalia, especially the articulated surstyli at the ventral margin of the epandrium, to make the generic assignment. : Published as part of Mathis, Wayne N., Zatwarnicki, Tadeusz & Marris, John W. M., 2004, Review of unreported shore­fly genera of the tribe Scatellini from the New Zealand subregion (Diptera: Ephydridae) with description of three new species, pp. 1-27 in Zootaxa 622 on pages 19-22, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.158576 : {"references": ["Harrison, R. A. (1976) The Arthropoda of the southern islands of New Zealand (9) Diptera. Journal of the Royal Society of New Zealand, 6 (2), 107 - 152.", "Horning, D. S. (1977) The 1976 - 1977 Snares Island expedition. Insect communities. Pp. 35 - 42. Canterbury University Report.", "Mathis, W. N. (1989) 66. Family Ephydridae. In: Evenhuis, N. L. (Ed.), Catalog of the Diptera of the Australasian and Oceanian Regions. Bishop Museum Press and E. J. Brill, Honolulu and Leiden, pp. 639 - 649.", "Mathis, W. N. and Zatwarnicki, T. (1995) A world catalog of the shore flies (Diptera: Ephydridae). Memoirs on Entomology, International, 4, vi + 423 pp."]}
format Text
author Mathis, Wayne N.
Zatwarnicki, Tadeusz
Marris, John W. M.
author_facet Mathis, Wayne N.
Zatwarnicki, Tadeusz
Marris, John W. M.
author_sort Mathis, Wayne N.
title Limnellia abbreviata Harrison, new combination
title_short Limnellia abbreviata Harrison, new combination
title_full Limnellia abbreviata Harrison, new combination
title_fullStr Limnellia abbreviata Harrison, new combination
title_full_unstemmed Limnellia abbreviata Harrison, new combination
title_sort limnellia abbreviata harrison, new combination
publisher Zenodo
publishDate 2004
url https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6272951
https://zenodo.org/record/6272951
long_lat ENVELOPE(9.895,9.895,63.645,63.645)
ENVELOPE(9.914,9.914,63.019,63.019)
geographic New Zealand
Seta
Stripe
geographic_facet New Zealand
Seta
Stripe
genre Snares Islands
genre_facet Snares Islands
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op_doi https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6272951
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spelling ftdatacite:10.5281/zenodo.6272951 2023-05-15T18:20:03+02:00 Limnellia abbreviata Harrison, new combination Mathis, Wayne N. Zatwarnicki, Tadeusz Marris, John W. M. 2004 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6272951 https://zenodo.org/record/6272951 unknown Zenodo http://publication.plazi.org/id/FFDE2F6FDA23FFBF7D07FFA76313FFCD http://zoobank.org/DC1DC389-C4C3-4059-91AF-D6AFC2BC9157 https://zenodo.org/communities/biosyslit https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.158576 http://publication.plazi.org/id/FFDE2F6FDA23FFBF7D07FFA76313FFCD https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.158581 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.169330 http://zoobank.org/DC1DC389-C4C3-4059-91AF-D6AFC2BC9157 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6272950 https://zenodo.org/communities/biosyslit Open Access Creative Commons Zero v1.0 Universal https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/legalcode cc0-1.0 info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess CC0 Biodiversity Taxonomy Animalia Arthropoda Insecta Diptera Ephydridae Limnellia Limnellia abbreviata article-journal ScholarlyArticle Taxonomic treatment Text 2004 ftdatacite https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6272951 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.158576 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.158581 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.169330 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6272950 2022-04-01T12:37:00Z Limnellia abbreviata (Harrison), new combination (Figs. 24–27) Scatella abbreviata Harrison 1976: 136.­ Horning 1977: 35 [ecology].­ Mathis 1989: 649 [Australasian/Oceanian catalog].­ Mathis and Zatwarnicki 1995: 270 [world catalog]. Diagnosis. This species is distinguished from congeners by the following characters: Wing brachypterous; small shore fly, body length 1.35 mm, body dark brown with grayish mottling, generally densely microtomentose. Description. Head: Head ratio 0.69; mesofrons and fronto­orbits dark brown to grayish brown anteromedially; parafrons grayish brown; ocellar, both verticals and single fronto­orbital seta well developed and subequal; 2–3 lateroclinate setulae and a proclinate anterior setula that is slightly larger than other fronto­orbital setulae; inner vertical seta inserted anterior of outer seta. Scape and pedicel gray brown; 1 st flagellomere yellowish orange; arista without hair­like, dorsal branches, length subequal to combined length of pedicel and 1 st flagellomere. Face golden to grayish brown; face bearing 2 lateroventroclinate setae and 5 ventroclinate setae along peristomal margin; parafacial gray. Eye ratio 0.88; gena­to­eye ratio 0.08; gena with 1 large, posterior seta and 2–3 setulae anterior and posterior on postgena. Palpus blackish brown. Thorax: Mesonotum mostly dark brown; with medial gray to whitish stripe on posterior 2 / 3 of scutum, slightly enlarged just before scutellum; 2 gray, elongate spots on anterior 1 / 3 between acrostichal and dorsocentral tracks and 1 elongate spot along dorsocentral track between setae; posterior apex of scutellum grayish; posterior notopleural seta at elevated insertion compared to anterior seta; postpronotum and posterior portion of notopleuron, extending onto supra­alar area, gray; pleurae mostly brown but dorsal margin of anepisternum and especially of katepisternum gray; only 1 anepisternal seta toward dorsum of posterior margin and 1 katepisternal seta. Wing (Fig. 27) brachypterous, extended posteriorly to posterior margin of 2 nd abdominal tergite. Legs with femora and tibiae blackish brown; basal 2 tarsomeres yellowish, apical 2–3 becoming increasingly more brownish distally. Abdomen: Tergites mottled, mostly brown with gray spots or longitudinally linear marks, becoming increasingly grayer on more posterior tergites; tergites 3–5 with medial gray area and with gray surrounding brown spot just laterad of midline. Male terminalia (Figs. 24–26): Epandrium in ventral view (Fig. 24) broadly oval, lateral margins almost parallel sided, ventral margin broadly emarginate into which surstyli are based, evenly setulose; cerci with ventral angle more acute than dorsal angle but otherwise hemispherical, more setulose toward medial margin; surstyli in ventral view (Fig. 24) somewhat triangular, bearing longer setulae along ventral margin but with several very short setulae apically; aedeagus (shaded) in ventral view (Fig. 25) like a top with base wide and apex pointed, in lateral view (Fig. 26) almost evenly wide although dorsal and ventral margins irregular, with a sub­basal, rounded notch dorsally, apex irregularly incised; phallapodeme in lateral view (Fig. 26) long and narrow, margin irregular, in ventral view (Fig. 25) Tshaped with basal bar shallowly flared, medial arm wider at articulation with base of aedeagus; gonite in lateral view (Fig. 26) wide basally, apical 2 / 3 narrow, slightly curved, apex tapered to rounded point, in ventral view (Fig. 25) apical projection becoming slightly wider apically but with an abruptly tapered, pointed apex; posterior projection forming an arch. Type material. The holotype male is labeled “U. of C[anterbury]. ZOOLOGY DEPT. Loc.: opp. Mollymawk Inlet. SNARES IS. Hab.beating Poa astoni Date: 24 ­I­ 67 [24 Jan 1967] Coll.: P[eter].M.J[ohns] [white; details on locality, habitat, date and collector handwritten] / HOLOTYPE Scatella abbreviata ɗ det. R.A.Harrison [white; handwritten].” The holotype is preserved in alcohol, is in good condition, and is deposited in NZAC. There are also five female paratypes that are preserved in a separate tube of alcohol (NZAC). Other specimens examined. New Zealand. Snares Islands: South side Ho Ho Bay (on damp peat in sooty shearwater run), 11 Jan 1975, C. J. Horning (1 ɗ; NZAC); Sinkhole (drainage area on rock face), J. W. Early (3 ɗ, 7 Ψ; AMNZ). Distribution. Australasian/Oceanian: New Zealand (Snares Islands). Natural history. Horning (1977) reported rearing this species from seepage sites on Snares Islands. Remarks. This is the only known brachypterous species of Limnellia and is distinguished from congeners by the brachypterous wing and structures of the male terminalia (Figs. 24–26). When Harrison (1976) described this species he misinterpreted the number of lateroclinate fronto­orbital setae and thus misidentified the genus. The genus Scatella does indeed have two fronto­orbital setae, but specimens of S. abbreviata, including the holotype, have a single well­developed lateroclinate seta, and thus, Harrison’s statement (1976: 136) “By definition this species is a true Scatella ” is incorrect. Only two genera, Limnellia and Scatophila, of the tribe Scatellini have a single fronto­orbital seta, and species of these two genera with normally developed wings can be distinguished by the length of the costal vein (the costal vein is short in Scatophila, extending only to vein R 4 + 5, and in Limnellia it extends to vein M). With a brachypterous wing and greatly reduced venation, as in this species, this character is impossible to use, and we had to rely primarily on structures of the male terminalia, especially the articulated surstyli at the ventral margin of the epandrium, to make the generic assignment. : Published as part of Mathis, Wayne N., Zatwarnicki, Tadeusz & Marris, John W. M., 2004, Review of unreported shore­fly genera of the tribe Scatellini from the New Zealand subregion (Diptera: Ephydridae) with description of three new species, pp. 1-27 in Zootaxa 622 on pages 19-22, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.158576 : {"references": ["Harrison, R. A. (1976) The Arthropoda of the southern islands of New Zealand (9) Diptera. Journal of the Royal Society of New Zealand, 6 (2), 107 - 152.", "Horning, D. S. (1977) The 1976 - 1977 Snares Island expedition. Insect communities. Pp. 35 - 42. Canterbury University Report.", "Mathis, W. N. (1989) 66. Family Ephydridae. In: Evenhuis, N. L. (Ed.), Catalog of the Diptera of the Australasian and Oceanian Regions. Bishop Museum Press and E. J. Brill, Honolulu and Leiden, pp. 639 - 649.", "Mathis, W. N. and Zatwarnicki, T. (1995) A world catalog of the shore flies (Diptera: Ephydridae). Memoirs on Entomology, International, 4, vi + 423 pp."]} Text Snares Islands DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology) New Zealand Seta ENVELOPE(9.895,9.895,63.645,63.645) Stripe ENVELOPE(9.914,9.914,63.019,63.019)