Alepia santacruz, Ježek & Pont & Martinez & Mollinedo & Insad & Ibba, 2011
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.5327358 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03ADBA4E-FFB9-DE2B-FE67-F87C6559980C |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Alepia santacruz |
status |
sp. nov. |
Alepia santacruz View in CoL sp. nov.
( Figs. 59–78 View Figs View Figs View Figs )
Type locality. Bolivia, Organo, 700 m a.s.l., 18°20′S 59°46′W ( Figs. 79C View Figs , 81–83 View Figs ).
Type material. HOLOTYPE: J, BOLIVIA: ‘ Organo, 700 m a.s.l., 18°20′S, 59°46′W, Eastern Santa Cruz Department, summit of Serrania de Santiago on the road between Santiago de Chiquitos y Tucavaca lowlands, Chiquitos province . iii.-iv. 2008, F. LePont leg.’ ( NMPC: slide Cat. No. 34513, Inv. No. 18877) GoogleMaps . PARATYPES: 1 J, same data as holotype ( MNKM).
Description. Male. Eyes separated ( Fig. 59 View Figs ), frontal sutural plate complicated, three-dimensional ( Fig. 75 View Figs ), frons bare, frontoclypeus with insertions of hairs arranged in two irregularly oval areas, of which stems touched below frons and divergent near tentorial pits. The minimum distance between eyes corresponds hardly to one facet diameter. Index of distance of the apices of eyes to minimum width of frons mostly 10.4, to facet diameter a little lesser (10.1). Eye bridge formed by three rows of facets ( Fig. 75 View Figs ). Vertex hairy, inner structures of vertex in detail as in Fig. 60 View Figs . Number of antennomeres 16. Scape short, somewhat widened distad ( Fig. 61 View Figs ). Pedicel almost globular. Flagellomeres spindle-shaped, the last flagellomere with a long finger-like protuberance in axis ( Fig. 62 View Figs ). Ascoids simple, paired, needle-shaped ( Figs. 67, 68 View Figs ). Length ratio of maxillary palpomeres 1.0: 2.0: 2.0: 2.5, palpomere 4 not annulate ( Fig. 69 View Figs ). Terminal lobes of labium and cibarium as in Fig. 59 View Figs .
Thoracic sclerites as in Fig. 76 View Figs . Wings narrow, wing membrane maculated, spots on veins as a part of dots on wing membrane are very dark and conspicuous ( Fig. 77 View Figs ), 2.9–3.0 mm long (holotype and paratype). Completely strengthened veins: Sc, R 1, R 5, M 4 and Cu. Basal costal nodes well visible, Sc uninterrupted. M 3, M 4 and Cu not touched at basis of wing. R 5 extends in the apex of the wing. Radial and medial forks complete, cross veins missing. The ending of Cu is distad of radial fork and medial fork distad of the wing margin reaching of Cu. Medial wing angle 216° (BCD). Wing indices: AB: AC: AD = 4.7: 4.2: 4.5; BC: CD: BD = 1.0: 1.1: 2.0; maximum wing length equal to 2.6 times its maximum width. Haltere clubbed, with maximum length equal to 3.3 times its maximum width.
Ratios of lengths of femora, tibiae and first tarsomeres: P 1 = 2.3: 2.5: 1.0; P 2 = 2.4: 3.1: 1.3; P 3 = 2.5: 3.6: 1.4; fore claws twice pointed and bent distad (see Fig. 63 View Figs ).
Complicated and bizarre aedeagal complex on Figs. 65 View Figs , 73 and 74 View Figs . Basal apodeme of male genitalia broad and extremely rounded proximally in dorsal view, narrow laterally, phallobasis with three quite different phallomeres in the following shape: Two dorsal narrow phallomeres of the same length, subapically a little bent (one phallomere is rounded at the end and the second one is rather dully pointed). The third phallomere is reduced, very short and irregularly rounded. Aedeagal complex not compact, well-sclerotised, overlaid basally by a large hyaline tunica (hypandrium) with long hairs in two small isolated areas distad. Tunica (as long as gonocoxites), with a pair of outer elongate, pointed and a little divergent arms, supported by sclerotized ribs, articulated proximally with distal protuberances of conspicuous basal apodeme. Gonocoxites rather short ( Figs. 64 View Figs , 70, 71, 73 View Figs ), a little expanded laterally and hairy, gonostyles shorter, bipartite distally, with a small sclerotized tridentate protuberance and with an elongate, pointed and bent arm. Epandrium bare, without operculum ( Figs. 66 View Figs , 72 View Figs ); sclerotized remainders of 10 th tergite and sternite inside of epandrium reduced to only two sclerotized converging ribs jointed with surstyli. Hypandrium hyaline and inconspicuous, hardly visible, very narrow, practically missing, lateral margin of 9 th sternite grows together or connected with proximal border of epandrium (tergite 11) and proximal protuberance of gonocoxite. Epiproct wrinkle-shaped, wide, hardly visible, hypoproct shortly tongue-shaped, both parts hairy. Surstyli ( Figs. 66 View Figs , 72 View Figs ) almost ovoid, pointed caudally, with numerous tenacula ( Fig. 78 View Figs ) and hairs, subapically with one retinaculum.
Female. Unknown.
Differential diagnosis. Alepia santacruz sp. nov. has infuscation in central area of wing conspicuously disjunctive, arranged in many small patches ( Fig. 77 View Figs ); length ratio of maxillary palpomeres 1.0: 2.0: 2.0: 2.5 ( Fig. 69 View Figs ); long tapered process of bifurcated gonostyle angled at approximately one-fourth distance from base to pointed tip, short blunt process conspicuously expanded distally, with short three-toothed cut end ( Figs. 64 View Figs , 70, 71, 73 View Figs ); tunica of aedeagal complex truncated by slightly concave horizontal cut, almost bare, covered with hairs only in two small isolated areas distad ( Figs. 73, 74 View Figs ); ending of aedeagal complex narrow, tapering in dorsal view to two tips ( Fig. 73 View Figs ).
Alepia tricolor ( Knab, 1914) differs from the new species by not interrupted infuscation in central area of wing; indices of length of maxillary palpomeres 1.0: 1.8: 1.6: 2.1; long tapered process of bifurcated gonostyle angled at one-third distance from base to pointed tip, short blunt process narrow with two rounded digital protuberances on the opposite side of the obliquely cut top; tunica of aedeagal complex truncated by an almost straight horizontal cut, covered distally with one large area of hairs; ending of aedeagal complex compact, almost rectangular (dorsal view).
Biology and collecting circumstances. The type locality is situated in a pass, crossing the top of the Serrania de Santiago, on the road Santiago – Santo Corazon ( Fig. 83 View Figs ). The landscape at the type locality is characterized by a mosaic of cliffs and big rocks in a typical Chiquitano dry forest. Burning occurs there annually ( Fig. 82 View Figs ). Phlebotomine sandflies could abound, but leishmaniasis is not known.
Etymology. The new species name, a noun in apposition, is related to Santa Cruz de la Sierra, capital of the Santa Cruz department.
Distribution. Bolivia: Serrania de Santiago.
NMPC |
National Museum Prague |
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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