Medeopteryx antennata (Olivier) Ballantyne & Lambkin, 2013
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/E46FF216-5E51-C519-FF6F-BB5FFA40EF84 |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Medeopteryx antennata (Olivier) |
status |
comb. nov. |
Medeopteryx antennata (Olivier) View in CoL comb. nov.
[ Figs 154 View FIGURES 154–159 , 160 View FIGURES 160–167 ]
Luciola antennata Olivier, 1885: 365 . Pteroptyx antennata (Olivier) View in CoL . Olivier, 1909a: 319. McDermott, 1966: 117. Ballantyne and McLean, 1970: 240. Ballantyne,
1987a: 127. Lloyd, 1973a: 994, 996, 998, 1001, 1003, 1005 (light production); 1973b: 268; 1978: 265 (light production);
1979, Fig. 7 View FIGURE 7 . Pteroptyx antennatum Olivier, 1910b: 47 ; 1913b: 417. Ballantyne, 1987a: 127 (synonymy).
Lectotype. Male. NEW GUINEA: Fly River , designated by Ballantyne (1987a: 127) ( MCSN).
Other specimens examined. NEW GUINEA: 143.00E, 9.00S, Western Pr. , Ellangowan Island , Fly River, 11.xi.1922, A. McCulloch, male, 2 females ( AMSA). Madang District, Alexishafen, Sek Bridge, xi.4.1969, J. Buck (SEK 23), mating pair GoogleMaps *.
Diagnosis. 7–9mm long; orange pronotum, dark brown MS and elytra; FS orange or dark brown; FS 7–9 shorter than other FS; elytral apex broadly rounded; LO entire in V7; MPP of V7 short, broad, apically truncate and projecting moderately beyond the posterolateral corners. Distinguished from M. similisantennata by the antennal colour, shape of the MPP and outline of the deflexed elytral apices ( Ballantyne 1987a Figs 3, 4 View FIGURES 3–5 ).
Female (of mating pair) ( Figs 154 View FIGURES 154–159 , 160 View FIGURES 160–167 ). 8.0 mm long. Colour: as for male except for brown flagellar segments, abdominal ventrites pale brown, V5 paler across posterior margin, V6 entirely pale except for brown laterally reflexed margins and very narrowly brown posterior margin; V7 pale in anteromedian portion; abdominal tergites light brown except for tT7, 8 which are darker than rest. Abdomen ( Fig. 154 View FIGURES 154–159 ): V6 posterior margin with posterolateral corners acute, broadly excavated across posterior margin with small pointed projection in median line; V8 not indented in median line. Bursa ( Fig. 160 View FIGURES 160–167 ): two sets of separate plates with very small median oviduct sclerite.
Remarks. Olivier named this species for the distinctive orange FS, and brown scape and pedicel. A lectotype male and a female ( Ballantyne & McLean, 1970; Ballantyne, 1987a), and a further male and two females listed above, are the only specimens LB has seen with the pale coloured FS, consistent with the original description. All are from the type locality of the Fly River. All other specimens assigned have brown FS. Ballantyne and McLean (1970:240, Fig. 5 View FIGURES 3–5 ) described 2 males with brownish orange FS (from Milne Bay area in Eastern Papua, and River Tor in Indonesia Papua), as Pteroptyx antennata , and another 4 males (as "Species A", page 266) which conformed to P. antennata except for the uniformly dark FS. Ballantyne (1987a) designated a lectotype male from a syntype series from the type locality and assigned a further 23 males to the species and included Ballantyne and McLean's Species A; all conformed to the description of antennata in Ballantyne and McLean (1970) (i.e. all lacked paler coloured FS), and many had flashing data associated ( Lloyd 1973a). When observed with the unaided eye the dark and shiny brown scape and pedicel, and dull lighter brown FS approach Olivier's original description.
Lloyd (1973a) described the two major flash patterns of the males and the ability of small groups of flying males to flash in "apparent synchrony." Lloyd (1973b) described and figured the "four modulation flicker"; Lloyd (1978) figured "one of two flicker patterns” and (1979) the flash pattern of Species F (assigned to antennata by Ballantyne (1987a).
Guérin-Méneville (1838) described Luciola ruficollis with black antennae, abdomen entirely yellow beneath and abdominal apex "trilobo''. Ballantyne (1987a) considered ruficollis may have been based on antennata like specimens. Luciola ruficollis is not presently identified in collections of New Guinean Luciola .
At Alexishafen Medeopteryx antennata is sympatric with, and similar to M. similisantennata , with which it apparently shares the same pattern of light production. The similarities in light patterns suggest a form of mimicry.
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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Medeopteryx antennata (Olivier)
Ballantyne, Lesley A. & Lambkin, Christine L. 2013 |
Luciola antennata
Ballantyne, L. A. & McLean, M. R. 1970: 240 |
McDermott, F. A. 1966: 117 |
Olivier, E. 1909: 319 |
Olivier, E. 1885: 365 |