Scatophila bolwigi, Zatwarnicki & Mathis USNM, 2024
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.5487.1.1 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:50AC1672-FC20-4502-8D8A-4BCAE95F719B |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.13210825 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03D187B7-3A63-7B61-FF4E-FC1254FEF842 |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Scatophila bolwigi |
status |
sp. nov. |
11. Scatophila bolwigi sp. nov.
Figs. 90 View FIGURES 89–91 , 93–99 View FIGURES 93–96 View FIGURES 97–99 , 107 View FIGURES 107–109 , 110 View FIGURE 110
Diagnosis.—This species is distinguished from congeners by the following combination of characters: Small shore flies, body length 1.55–1.70 mm.
Head ( Figs. 93–96 View FIGURES 93–96 ): Mesofrons and fronto-orbits tan to brown. Face of ♂ brown, ventral portion protuberant with an elongate, medial depression bordered by dense curly setulae, especially laterally; face of ♀ with some subshiny luster. Gena moderately short, slightly more than half height of basal flagellomere; gena-to-eye ratio 0.25–0.27.
Thorax ( Figs.90 View FIGURES 89–91 , 107 View FIGURES 107–109 ): Mesonotum ( Fig.107 View FIGURES 107–109 ) mostly brown with grayish stripes; scutum mostly microtomentose, dull to subshiny brown with pattern of linear gray stripes anterior, between acrostichal tracks and laterad of acrostichal tracks, fainter linear spots laterad of dorsocentral tracks; presutural dorsocentral setae lacking. Wing ( Fig. 90 View FIGURES 89–91 ) generally faint with moderate pattern of white spots; veins R 2+3 and R 4+5 shallowly undulate near white spots; costal vein ratio 0.29–0.30; M 1 vein ratio 0.56–0.66. Legs dark; male midfemur lacking row of spine-like setulae along posteroventral margin Tarsi often yellowish to brownish red basally.
Abdomen ( Figs. 97–99 View FIGURES 97–99 ): Mostly blackish brown to black, subshiny to shiny, with some blackish gray areas basally on tergites 2–4; subshiny, male tergite 5 truncate posteriorly. Male terminalia ( Figs. 97–99 View FIGURES 97–99 ): Epandrium in posterior view ( Fig. 97 View FIGURES 97–99 ) generally squatly oval except for broadly stepped emargination at ventral margin, width almost equal to height, lateral margins shallowly curved with short, papilla-like projection at ventrolateral corner; dorsal margin of epandrium in posterior view ( Fig. 97 View FIGURES 97–99 ) evenly rounded; length of epandrial setulae variable, those along ventral margin shorter, sparse along lateral margins; cercal cavity nearly round, only slightly higher than wide; cerci in posterior view ( Fig. 97 View FIGURES 97–99 ) hemispherical, medial margin nearly straight; aedeagus in lateral view ( Fig. 99 View FIGURES 97–99 ) broadly rounded basally, irregularly rectangular, dorsal margin deeply excavated, excavation V-shaped, depth of cavity longer than width of opening, posterior margin broadly truncate, in ventral view ( Fig. 98 View FIGURES 97–99 ) more or less pentagonal, widest sub-basally, posterior margin tapered toward apical margin, apical margin truncate, basal margin concave; ventral aedeagal process in lateral view ( Fig. 99 View FIGURES 97–99 ) C-shaped; phallapodeme in lateral view ( Fig. 99 View FIGURES 97–99 ) very elongate, narrow, curved, keel evident as a medial thumb-like protuberance, dorsal length about equal to ventral length, in ventral view ( Fig. 98 View FIGURES 97–99 ) T-shaped, basal crossbar slightly less than half length of medial process, crossbar extensions slightly tapered, especially apically, curved posteriorly; postgonite in lateral view ( Fig. 99 View FIGURES 97–99 ) irregularly and widely V-shaped, dorsal arm subrectangular, wider basally and anterior margin emarginate, ventral extension an elongate, rod-like, parallel-sided projection, posterior apex a tapered, thumb-like projection, narrow apex shallowly bifurcate, posterodorsal corner distinctly produced, apex shallowly and narrowly bifurcate, bearing setulae on dorsal surface, in ventral view ( Fig. 98 View FIGURES 97–99 ) with posterior extensions oriented medially, narrow, thumb-like; neohypandrium in lateral view ( Fig. 99 View FIGURES 97–99 ) narrow, parallel-sided, irregularly and deeply C-shaped.
Type Material.— The holotype male of Scatophila bolwigi new species is labeled “ USA. A[LAS]K[A]. Gulkana River (19.3 km N Glenallen [should be Glennallen]; 62°16.1'N, 145°23.1'W)[,] 7 Aug 2011, D. & W. N. Mathis/ Sp. photographed T. Zatwarnicki, M. Cielniak, 2018/ USNM ENT 00250327 About USNM [plastic bar code label]/ HOLOTYPE ♂ Scatophila bolwigi Zatwarnicki & Mathis USNM [red].” The holotype is double mounted (minute nadel in block of plastic elastomere), is in excellent condition, and is deposited in the USNM. Four paratypes (3♂, 1♀) bear the same label data as the holotype and five other paratypes (5♂) bear the same locality label, but the date of collection is 9 Jul 2006 and 7 Aug 2012. Other paratypes are as follows: ALASKA. Bethel (Census Area): Bethel (60°47.5'N, 161°45.3'W), 25 Sep 1917, A. H. Twitchell GoogleMaps (1♂ paratype of S. variofacialis ; USNM). Fairbanks North Star: Chena Lake Recreation Area (64°47.6'N, 147°11.4'W), 10 Aug 2003, D. and W. N. Mathis (4♂, 2♀; USNM) GoogleMaps . Kenai Peninsula: Homer (59°38.8'N, 151°31.5'W), 2 Aug 2002, D. and W. N. Mathis (1♂; USNM) GoogleMaps . Matanuska-Susitna: Eklutna (Knik Arm; 61°28.2'N, 149°21.4'W), 7 Aug 2002, D. and W. N. Mathis (1♂; USNM) GoogleMaps ; Sheep Creek (61°58.3'N, 150°05'W; 55 m), 10 Aug 2011, D. and W. N. Mathis (1♀; USNM) GoogleMaps ; Willow Creek (61°46.1'N, 150°04.2'W; 50 m), 26 Jul 2011, D. and W. N. Mathis (5♂, 4♀; USNM) GoogleMaps . Nome (Census Area): Snake River (11 km NW Nome; 64°33.9'N, 165°30.6'W), 2 Aug 2012, D. and W. N. Mathis (1♂; USNM) GoogleMaps .
Other Specimens Examined.— UNITED STATES. ALASKA. Fairbanks North Star: Fairbanks (64°50.3'N, 147°43'W), 29 Jun–4 Jul 1921 GoogleMaps , J. M. Aldrich (2♀ paratypes of S. variofacialis ; USNM). Matanuska-Susitna: Matanuska (61°32.5'N, 149°13.8'W; rotary trap), 19 May–20 Jun 1944 GoogleMaps , J. C. Chamberlin (3♂, 4♀ paratypes of S. variofacialis ; USNM) .
Type Locality.— United States. Alaska. Valdez-Cordova (Census Area): Gulkana River (19.3 km N Glennallen; 62°16.1'N, 145°23.1'W) GoogleMaps .
Distribution ( Fig. 110 View FIGURE 110 ).— Nearctic : United States (Alaska).
Etymology.—The species epithet, bolwigi , is genitive patronym to honor Dr. Niels Bolwig (26 Sep 1911 – 10 Sep 2004), who was a Danish zoologist, behavioral biologist, entomologist, lecturer, and professor Dr. N. Bolwig published three papers on the biology and natural history of Scatophila unicornis ( Bolwig 1940a, 1940b, 1941).
Remarks.— Sturtevant and Wheeler (1954: 200) noted that “the mesonotal glossiness is scarcely evident” in specimens from Alaska that they had identified as S. variofacialis , a new species they were then describing. We concur with their observation and have also discovered that structures of the male terminalia of the Alaskan populations are consistently quite different. These differences include much smaller ventrolateral projections of the epandrium ( Fig. 97 View FIGURES 97–99 ), the pentagonal shape of the aedeagus in ventral view ( Fig. 98 View FIGURES 97–99 ), the smaller keel of the phallapodeme in lateral view ( Fig. 99 View FIGURES 97–99 ), and the shape and orientation of the paired postgonites in ventral and lateral views ( Figs. 98–99 View FIGURES 97–99 ). Thus, we are recognizing the populations from Alaska as a separate and undescribed species.
Like S. variofacialis , this species is placed in the noctula group.
USNM |
Smithsonian Institution, National 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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