Bregmosina howdeni, Marshall, Stephen A., 2013
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.3641.3.5 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:E5849A06-1F26-47ED-91E4-433A1F57B0BE |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6165134 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/039B878E-442A-9C0D-DFE6-FE44FE0D3F88 |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Bregmosina howdeni |
status |
sp. nov. |
Bregmosina howdeni View in CoL new species
Fig. 22 View FIGURES 18 – 22
Description. Externally as described for B. obunca . Size 2.0 mm.
Male abdomen: Sternite 4 extensively overlapping sternite 5 but otherwise unmodified. Sternite 5 as illustrated for B. obunca ( Fig. 18 View FIGURES 18 – 22 ); pale medially, made up almost entirely of two long lobes and their broad bases, lobes as long as rest of sternite and pointed and incurved distally. Posteromedial point of sternite 5 weakly ridged. Ventral part of sternite 6 narrow but unmodified. Cerci separate, elongate-rectangular. Surstylus elongate, mostly parallel sided but ending in a weakly bilobed club. Postgonite canopener-shaped, circular distal notch about as broad as anterodistal lobe. Basiphallus with a prominent hook-like epiphallus. Distiphallus narrow, distal dorsal surface bilobed and with a conspicuously spiked surface.
Type material. Holotype (male, DEBU). ECUADOR. Pichincha Province, 47 km S Sto Domingo, Rio Palenque Biological Station, 17–25.ii.1979, S.A. Marshall. Paratype: ECUADOR. Rio Palenque Biological Station, 30.iv–5.v. 1987, 160 m, primary rain forest Malaise trap, L. Coote and B. Brown (1Ƥ, ROM 870002).
Comments. This species is closely related to B. obunca , known from Guyana and Costa Rica. Both type specimens were collected in one of the few remaining patches of primary rainforest in the western lowlands on the Pacific side of the Ecuadorian Andes. This species joins a growing list of fly taxa known only from the remarkable Rio Palenque Biological Station, a reserve now threatened as an increasingly isolated island of forest in a sea of intensive agriculture.
Etymology. Bregmosina howdeni is a patronym in honour of my MSc supervisor, coleopterist Henry Howden. Dr. Howden organized the 1979 trip to Rio Palenque during which I collected this and many other species still known only from Rio Palenque.
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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