Haloscatella Mathis, 1979

Costa, Daniel N. R., Mathis, Wayne N., Marinoni, Luciane & Sepúlveda, Tatiana A., 2024, Phylogeny and taxonomy of the shore-fly tribe Scatellini (Diptera: Ephydridae: Ephydrinae), Zoologia (e 23100) 41, pp. 1-35 : 13-14

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.1590/S1984-4689.v41.e23100

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:17D6AEAA-7851-4B4D-9FDB-19E7AB689

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.13177052

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/E557206E-B21D-FFBB-FC55-FF23FD4CFB3F

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Haloscatella Mathis, 1979
status

 

Haloscatella Mathis, 1979 View in CoL

Figs 9 View Figures 3–9 , 32, 33, 40–43 View Figures 24–47

Haloscatella Mathis 1979b: 6 View in CoL (as a subgenus of Lamproscatella View in CoL ; feminine). Type species: Lamproscatella arichaeta Mathis 1979a View in CoL , original designation. – Olafsson 1991: 42 [revised status]. – Mathis and Zatwarnicki 1995: 255–256 [world catalog]. – Mathis et al. 2004: 4–18 [ New Zealand fauna].

Diagnosis. Haloscatella is distinguished from other genera of Scatellini by the following combination of characters: anterodorsal corner of anepisternum with one strong seta curved; parafacial margin lacking row of setulae near parafacial; eye conspicuously wider than high, usually obliquely oriented; insertion of posterior notopleural setae distinctly elevated above level of anterior seta; prescutellar acrostichal seta longer than other acrostichal setae; and female ventral receptacle lacking operculum.

Some Haloscatella similar to Lamproscatella , can be differentiated by the following combination of characters: cinereous, densely microtomentose species; frontal vitta with small setulae towards anterior margin; vestiture of frontal vitta usually microtomentose; posterior notopleural seta inserted at distinctly higher level than anterior seta; medial scutellar seta half the length of apical seta.

Description. Small to moderately small shore flies, body length 1.30–2.90 mm; generally cinereous species.

Head: Frontal vitta generally dull, usually densely microtomentose; small setulae towards anterior margin of frontal vitta; long lateroclinate fronto-orbital setae 2. Antenna short; pedicel with strong seta ventrally and dorsally; basal flagellomere brown; arista macropubescent. Face conspicuously protruding, with an interfoveal, dorsal hump; facial setae conspicuous, 1–3 lateral facial setae curved laterodorsally. Eye usually wider than high, ob1iquely oriented to general plane of head; gena usually medium to high; a row of setulae at the ventral margin of gena, without a distinct genal seta.

Thorax ( Fig. 9 View Figures 3–9 ): Mesonotum cinereous to brown, microtomentose; dorsocentral setae 3 (1+2); a row of small acrostichal setae extending to scutellum, with a longer prescutellar acrostichal setae; basal scutellar setae conspicuously smaller than apical setae; posterior notopleural seta distinctly elevated above level of anterior seta; a distinct dorsoclinate seta toward anterodorsal corner of anepisternum; legs typical, usually without distinct setae, color of tarsi brown; stem of halter short, head oval, white; wing mostly hyaline, some species infuscate around crossveins and veins; costa relatively long, extended to vein M 1; costal vein sometimes bearing spines.

Abdomen: Tergites gray to brown, microtomentose; sternite 1 absent or membranous. Male Terminalia ( Figs 32, 33, 40–43 View Figures 24–47 ): epandrium a closed plate around cercal cavity, sometimes with processes laterally; surstyli united but distinguishable of epandrium, or absent; gonites roughly to distinctly Y-shaped, dorsal arms flattened or sharply terminated, generally without setae; phallapodeme laterally flattened, in lateral view curved or dorsoventrally flattened, usually with 2 lateral projections, rod-like, lacking a keel; ejaculatory apodeme lacking. Aedeagus shoe-shaped in lateral view short or elongate; some species with distiphallus; distiphallus, if present, with membranous ventral elongate process that originates from distal aedeagal margin, covered by short, sharp scales or scale-like thorns. Female Terminalia: sternite 8 divided, as 2 lateral, subquadrate sclerites; female cerci without prominent setae. Female ventral receptacle without operculum only extended process present.

Distribution. Afrotropical (Cape), Australasian, Nearctic (including northern Mexico), Palearctic Regions.

Remarks. Species of this genus often proliferate best where saline or alkaline conditions are near saturation ( Mathis 1979b, Mathis et al. 2004). Immature stages are unknown. The nine species of Haloscatella are quite homogeneous in overall appearance, but structures of the male terminalia are also similar to males of other tribes of Ephydrinae , especially Ephydrini , as well as to the genera Philotelma and Scatophila within Scatellini . The species of Haloscatella that share the same states of characters with Philotelma and Scatophila are all from New Zealand. This peculiarity makes Haloscatella an important and pivotal genus in our understanding of the evolution of Scatellini .

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Diptera

Family

Ephydridae

Loc

Haloscatella Mathis, 1979

Costa, Daniel N. R., Mathis, Wayne N., Marinoni, Luciane & Sepúlveda, Tatiana A. 2024
2024
Loc

Haloscatella

Mathis WN & Zatwarnicki T & Marris JWM 2004: 4
Mathis WN & Zatwarnicki T 1995: 255
Olafsson E 1991: 42
Mathis WN 1979: 6
1979
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