Claustropyga auriculata Hippa, Vilkamaa & Mohrig

Claustropyga auriculata Hippa, Vilkamaa & Mohrig Fig. 3 A, B Claustropyga auriculata Hippa, Vilkamaa & Mohrig, 2003: 488. New record. CANADA, Yukon Territory, North Fork Pass, Ogilvie Mts. 4100 ’, 21.VI. 1962, P. J. Skitsko, 1 male (CNC). Discussion. C. auriculata was previously known only f...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Vilkamaa, Pekka, Hippa, Heikki
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:unknown
Published: 2007
Subjects:
Online Access:https://zenodo.org/record/6237142
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6237142
Description
Summary:Claustropyga auriculata Hippa, Vilkamaa & Mohrig Fig. 3 A, B Claustropyga auriculata Hippa, Vilkamaa & Mohrig, 2003: 488. New record. CANADA, Yukon Territory, North Fork Pass, Ogilvie Mts. 4100 ’, 21.VI. 1962, P. J. Skitsko, 1 male (CNC). Discussion. C. auriculata was previously known only from the type material: the holotype male from Russia, Yamal Peninsula, and a paratype male from USA, Alaska. Among Nearctic species, C. auriculata (Fig. 3 A, B) resembles C. aperta (Fig. 2 E, F) and C. simplicis (Fig. 2 A, B). It differs from C. aperta e.g. by having a wholly setose intercoxal lobe, without a non-setose medial stripe; by having most of the lateral setae of gonostylus longer than the gonostylar megasetae, as long as the gonostylus is wide instead of much shorter; by having a sharp tooth at the lateral margin of tegmen instead of a more rounded prominence; and by having the lateral margin of the tegmen between the base of the apodemes and the tooth straight or slightly convex and converging towards the apex of tegmen, not concave and parallel. The single Nearctic specimen has five, the Palaearctic holotype six, gonostylar megasetae. In the Nearctic specimen of C. aperta, the number is 10 and in the Palaearctic type material it is 9. C. auriculata differs from C. simplicis by having four gonostylar megasetae instead of 10; by having the megasetae much longer, nearly half the width of the gonostylus instead of only nearly one-third; by lacking a non-setose medial stripe on the intercoxal lobe; and by lacking a distinct narrow lobe medially at the posterior margin of the tegmen. In addition, the tegmen is more triangular and its lateral tooth/lobe smaller. Published as part of Vilkamaa, Pekka & Hippa, Heikki, 2007, Review of the Nearctic Claustropyga Hippa, Vilkamaa & Mohrig (Diptera, Sciaridae) with the description of three new species, pp. 53-68 in Zootaxa 1552 on pages 57-60, DOI:10.5281/zenodo.178159