Luciola Laporte

Ballantyne, Lesley A. & Lambkin, Christine L., 2013, Systematics and Phylogenetics of Indo-Pacific Luciolinae Fireflies (Coleoptera: Lampyridae) and the Description of new Genera, Zootaxa 3653 (1), pp. 1-162 : 64-70

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.3653.1.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:72A07BC6-AEB0-4EBC-AFA8-F5871065680F

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/E46FF216-5E3D-C508-FF6F-B986FC13ECA1

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Luciola Laporte
status

s. str.

Luciola Laporte View in CoL s. str.

[ Figs 109–138 View FIGURES 109–119 View FIGURES 120–127 View FIGURES 128–138 ]

Luciola Laporte. Laporte 1833:146 View in CoL . Lacordaire 1857:335. Motschulsky, 1853:52. Gorham 1880:99. Olivier 1902:69; 1907:50. Lea 1909:106.

Type species: Luciola pedemontana Motschulsky designated by Motschulsky 1853.

Luciola (Luciola) Laporte. McDermott, 1966:103 (Partim) . Nec Calder, 1998: 178.

Lampyroidea View in CoL Costa. Costa 1875:clxix. Olivier 1902:69; 1907:49; 1911:102. McDermott 1966:115. Type species: Lampyroidea syriaca Costa monobasic.

Bourgeoisia Olivier. Olivier 1908:17 View in CoL ; 1911b:102. McDermott, 1966:117. Deheyn & Ballantyne 2009:47. Type species: Luciola antipodum Bourgeois View in CoL designated by McDermott 1966.

Diagnosis. Luciola s. str. belongs in a group of genera with aedeagal LL visible beside the ML; distinguished by the separation of the LL dorsally, the often strongly curved/arched ML terminating in a preapical ventral point, and the presence in some species (including italica ) of elongate slender apically pointed lobes arising from the inner ventral margins of the LL. Dorsal colour pattern of orange pronotum and dark brown elytra occurs in several species including the type (which may have a median dark pronotal marking); Pacific Island species have deep grayish brown to black dorsal colour (see Table 9) and several have eye emarginations of varying depth. Females macropterous in L. kagiana , or with varying degrees of fore and hind wing loss in other species. Larvae reliably associated only for kagiana and parvula where they are probably terrestrial and have laterally explanate tergal margins (e.g. Chen 2003:168).

Male. Pronotum: dorsal surface without irregularities in posterolateral areas and longitudinal groove in lateral areas; punctation dense; anterior margin not explanate; lateral margins either diverging posteriorly along their length (C>A, B), or converging in posterior 1/3; width <or subequal to humeral width; anterolateral corners rounded obtuse; lateral margins without indentation at mid-point, or sinuousity in either horizontal or vertical plane; without indentation in lateral margin near posterolateral corner, and irregularities at corner; posterolateral corners usually rounded obtuse, angulate in Pacific Island species where they are 90° approximately and incline obliquely to the median line; posterolateral corners either not projecting, or extending as far as median posterior margin and separated from it by scarce emarginations except in kagiana where the emarginations are well developed.

Hypomera: closed; median area not elevated in vertical direction; posterior area not flat in italica , syriaca and hypocrita , narrowly flat in remainder, where dorsal and ventral surfaces are strongly adpressed; pronotal width/ GHW 1.2–1.6.

Elytron: punctation dense, not linear, not as large as that of pronotum, nor widely and evenly spaced; apices not deflexed; epipleuron and sutural ridge extending beyond mid-point, almost to apex but not extending as a ridge around apex, neither thickened in apical half; no interstitial lines; elytral carina absent; in horizontal specimen viewed from below epipleuron at elytral base wide, covering humerus; viewed from above the anterior margin of the epipleuron arises level with or anterior to posterior margin of MS; epipleuron developed as a lateral ridge along most of length; sutural margins approximate along most of length in closed elytra; lateral margins parallel-sided except for hypocrita where they are slightly convex-sided.

Head: minimally to moderately depressed between eyes; well exposed in front of pronotum, not capable of complete retraction within prothoracic cavity; eyes moderately separated beneath at level of posterior margin of mouthpart complex in L. italica , contiguous ventrally in Pacific Island species ( Fig. 111 View FIGURES 109–119 ); eyes above labrum close, sometimes contiguous; frons-vertex junction rounded, without median elevation; posterolateral eye excavation strongly developed, visible in resting head position in some Pacific Island species only (Figs 110,120,121,122); antennal sockets on head between eyes, contiguous, or separated by <ASW or = ASW; clypeolabral suture present, flexible, not in front of anterior eye margin when head viewed with labrum horizontal; outer edges of labrum reach inner edges of closed mandibles. Mouthparts: probably functional; apical labial palpomere either strongly flattened, shaped like broad triangle (widest at base), with inner edge dentate in L. italica , or ovoid, longer than wide with margins entire; at least half as long as apical maxillary palpomere in the remaining species described below. Antennae 11 segmented; length>GHW up to twice GHW except in Pacific Island species where antennal length is subequal to GHW; no segments flattened, shortened, or expanded; pedicel not produced; FS1 not shorter than pedicel.

Legs: with inner tarsal claw not split; without MFC; no femora or tibiae swollen or curved; no basitarsi expanded or excavated.

Abdomen (Figs114,119,124,125): without cuticular remnants in association with aedeagal sheath; no ventrites with curved posterior margins nor extending anteriorly into emarginated posterior margin of anterior segment; LO absent in L. oculofissa sp. nov. (Figs 124,125); LO absent in V7 and restricted to anterolateral plaques in V 6 in L. hypocrita ( Deheyn & Ballantyne 2009 Fig. 5 a,b View FIGURES 3–5 ); LO in V 7 in remaining species entire, either occupying most of V7, and reaching to sides and almost to posterior margin ( Fig. 119 View FIGURES 109–119 ), or not reaching sides or posterior margin and occupying about half or less of V7 ( Fig. 114 View FIGURES 109–119 ); posterior half of V7 not arched or swollen, muscle impressions not visible in this area; neither anterior nor posterior margin of LO emarginate; if LO present in V6, occupying almost all V6 except in hypocrita . MPP present, symmetrical, apex rounded or truncate, not laterally compressed, short, not inclined dorsally nor engulfed by T8 apex, without dorsal ridge, median longitudinal trough. V7 without median carina, median longitudinal trough, anteromedian depression on face of LO, incurving lobes or pointed projections, median ‘dimple’, or reflexed lobes. T7 without prolonged anterolateral corners. T8 symmetrical, W=L, visible posterior area not narrowing abruptly, median posterior margin shallowly and narrowly emarginate; widest across middle with lateral margins tapering evenly in both an anterior and posterior direction; without prolonged posterolateral corners, median posterior projections, not inclined ventrally nor engulfing posterior margin of V7 nor MPP, not extending conspicuously beyond posterior margin of V7; T8 ventral surface without well developed median longitudinal trough, lateral depressed troughs, asymmetrical projections, median posterior ridge; concealed anterolateral arms of T8 either not as long as visible posterior portion of T8, or shorter, not laterally emarginated before their origins, not expanded dorsoventrally, expanded only in horizontal plane; without bifurcation of inner margin and ventrally directed pieces; lateral margins of T8 not enfolding sides of V7.

Aedeagal sheath: approx. 3 times as long as wide; without bulbous paraprocts; either symmetrical in posterior area where sheath sternite tapers evenly to a narrow rounded apex or slightly emarginated on right side; tergite without lateral arms extending anteriorly at sides of sheath sternite; tergite without projecting pieces along posterior margin of T9, anterior margin without transverse band.

Aedeagus ( Figs 111–113 View FIGURES 109–119 , 122,126) (e.g. Ballantyne 1968 Figs 162–169 View FIGURES 160–167 View FIGURES 168–176 ; Jeng et al. 2003 Figs 21A–C View FIGURES 18–25 ): LL lack lateral appendages; LL visible from beneath beside ML, LL/ML moderate to wide; LL of equal length, slightly longer than ML, either diverging along their length or not diverging basally; separated longitudinally by most of their length; LL base width often narrower than LL apex width which may be wider than that of ML; LL apices often more widely expanded than elsewhere and enfolding the ML at the sides; dorsal base of LL symmetrical, not excavated; LL without lateral hairy appendages along their outer ventral margins; narrowed apices of LL sometimes inturned; without projection on left LL; inner margins often with slender leaf-like projection; ML symmetrical, without paired lateral teeth and tooth to left side, usually strongly arched, preapical ventral area produced and pointed; BP not strongly sclerotised, not hooded, not strongly emarginated along anterior margin, often very narrow.

Female. Macropterous in kagiana ( Chen 2003:168) , or with varying degrees of fore and hind wing loss. Pronotum without irregularities in posterolateral areas; punctation moderate to dense; pronotal width less than, subequal to or greater than humeral width; without indentation of lateral margin, irregularities at posterolateral corner; outline similar to that of male. Elytral punctation not as large as that of pronotum, nor evenly spaced; no interstitial lines; elytral carina absent. No legs or parts thereof swollen and /or curved. LO in V6 only, without any elevations or depressions or ridges on V7; median posterior margin of V7 widely emarginate, median area not broadly rounded; median posterior margin of V8 entire. Bursa plates not observed in dissections of ethanol preserved specimens of italica .

Larva ( Figs 128–138 View FIGURES 128–138 ). Here only L. hypocrita , and New Caledonian larvae associated by label data are described ( Tables 10, 11 indicate rationale for association). Elongate, slender, tapering somewhat in front and behind; with 3 thoracic and 9 abdominal segments; external plates of the dorsal surface very well sclerotised with no obvious dorsal areas of exposed membrane except between segments; all body segments except the last with a median dorsal longitudinal line; lateral margins of tergal plates explanate thickened (except for terminal segment which is parallel-sided), and projecting beyond sides of body and usually covering laterotergites in the abdomen, visible only if they are laterally prolonged. Head: antennal segment 3 surmounted by a ring of hairs and subequal in length to the elongate sense cone. Mouthparts: mandibles without inner teeth; apical palpomeres of maxilla and labium with terminal sense organs. Thorax ( Figs 128, 131, 132, 135, 137, 138 View FIGURES 128–138 ): prothorax longer than wide, always with lateral projections especially at posterolateral corners; meso and metathoracic segments shorter than prothorax and with 2 or 3 lateral projections. Legs: tibiae with an apical brush of fine white hairs reaching over the apical claw (tarsungulus) ( Fu et al. 2012b Fig. 55 View FIGURES 45–55 ). Abdomen ( Figs 129, 130, 133, 134 View FIGURES 128–138 ): median sternal plates of segments 1–6 and laterotergites of segments 1–6 with short posterior projections in Pacific Island species; posterolateral corners of laterotergites angulate, often narrowly prolonged and may be visible at sides of body from above when lateral margins of terga are narrowed and prolonged ( Fig. 134 View FIGURES 128–138 ) ( Fu et al. 2012b Fig. 54 View FIGURES 45–55 ).

Remarks. Luciola s. str. is addressed from scoring a population from Pisa of Luciola italica , the type species ( Ballantyne and Lambkin 2000, 2001, 2006, 2009). Bourgeoisia and Lampyroidea (based only on its type species syriaca ) are submerged under Luciola . Luciola italica exists in a variety of morphological forms across Europe, and such an investigation while necessary is currently beyond our capacity. Suggestions for possible subdivisions below relate to Figs 3, 4 View FIGURES 3–5 and the key to genera and species groups incorporates all these possible subdivisions of Luciola .

1. Fig. 3 View FIGURES 3–5 Node 1 two aquatic Japanese species Luciola cruciata , L. owadai .

2. Fig. 3 View FIGURES 3–5 Node 8 blue number 2 ( Luciola trilucida ).

3. Fig. 3 View FIGURES 3–5 Node 11 blue number 3 ( Luciola indica ).

4. Fig. 4 View FIGURES 3–5 Node 44 blue number 20 Species 8.

5. Fig. 4 View FIGURES 3–5 Node 45 includes species with elytral punctures in lines, an emarginated LO in V7 and sclerites surrounding the aedeagal sheath ( L. carinata L. aquatilis ).

6. Fig. 4 View FIGURES 3–5 Node 46 ( Luciola dejeani L. aegrota ).

Footnote: *1 hand collected at night; 2 yellow pan in day

* single larva from Foret du Nord lacks the anterolateral projection; #curved towards rear in 1 larva from Col d’Amieu, 3

Aoupinnie larvae from top camp and sawmill, and in one of two larvae taken on 23.xi.2001; + outer posterior margin of lateral tergal projections with small tooth in Mt Taom, Mt Mou base, one Dzumac Road larva and Foret du Nord larva.

List of species of Luciola s. str.

- antipodum (Bourgeois) *

- aquilaclara sp. nov. *

- italica L.

- hypocrita Olivier *

- oculofissa sp. nov. *

- syriaca (Costa)

Here we address specifically only the fauna of New Caledonia and Fiji *.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Coleoptera

Family

Lampyridae

Loc

Luciola Laporte

Ballantyne, Lesley A. & Lambkin, Christine L. 2013
2013
Loc

Luciola (Luciola) Laporte. McDermott, 1966:103 (Partim)

Calder, A. A. 1998: 178
McDermott, F. A. 1966: 103
1966
Loc

Bourgeoisia Olivier. Olivier 1908:17

Deheyn & Dimitri D. & Lesley A. & Ballantyne 2009: 47
McDermott, F. A. 1966: 117
Olivier, E. 1911: 102
Olivier, E. 1908: 17
1908
Loc

Lampyroidea

McDermott, F. A. 1966: 115
Olivier, E. 1907: 49
Olivier, E. 1902: 69
1902
Loc

Luciola Laporte. Laporte 1833:146

Lea, A. M. 1909: 106
Olivier, E. 1907: 50
Olivier, E. 1902: 69
Gorham, H. S. 1880: 99
Lacordaire, T. 1857: 335
Motschulsky, V. de 1853: 52
Laporte, F. L. de 1833: 146
1833
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