Heteromeringia CZERNY, 1903
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.21248/contrib.entomol.57.1.37-80 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4793466 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/763A87EE-FFCA-FF95-FEBD-FD04FBD179DD |
treatment provided by |
Carolina |
scientific name |
Heteromeringia CZERNY |
status |
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Heteromeringia CZERNY View in CoL View at ENA ,, 1903
HeteromeringiaHeteromeringia CZERNY, 1903: 72. KERTESZ, 1903: 567. JOHNSON, 1913: 98. MALLOCH, 1918: 7. MELANDER & ARGO, 1924: 28. MCAC LPINE 1960, 83-85. SASAKAWA, 1966: 61-100. Type species: Heteromeringia nigrimana (LOEW, 1864) View in CoL (by monotypy).
Diagnosis
Outer angular extension on pedicel blunt and obtuse. Scutellum flattened and wrinkled dorsally. Subcostal break indistinct. Three or four fronto-orbital bristles, reclinate except for inclinate anterior bristle. Interfrontal bristle absent. One small lateral scutellar bristle ( Fig. 8 View Fig ). Acrostichal bristle absent. Tibiae without dorsal preapical bristles. Distiphallus elongate, thin, with one pair of heavily-sclerotized lateral “ribs” and usually with accessory distal sclerites ( Fig. 12 View Figs 10-12 ). Ejaculatory apodeme elongate with apex fan-shaped (shown from different angles in Figs 24, 36 and 53).
Generic description
General. Body length 2.4-5.0 mm. Colour predominantly brown to black, sometimes yellow with variable dark pattern. Face flat and microsetulose. Arista sparsely plumose to pubescent. Outer angular extension on pedicel blunt and obtuse; inner extension absent. Antenna arising at midpoint of head. Frons almost always with medial pilose patch on anterior half or more (often reduced in females). Postcranium concave. Scutellum flattened dorsally and longitudinally wrinkled. Subcostal break indistinct. Wing clear to variably patterned. M 1+2 ratio (length of the ultimate section of vein M 1 divided by length of penultimate section) 4.0-12.0 (usually 4.5-8.0). Fore tarsi usually with slight lateral compression (pronounced in some Old World species).
Chaetotaxy
Bristles black to brown. Three or four fronto-orbital bristles, reclinate except for inclinate anterior pair; anterior two bristles closely spaced near anterior margin of frons and hind pair positioned near posterior margin; fourth bristle sometimes present between anterior two pairs but less than 2/3 length of other bristles. Postvertical and ocellar bristles divergent, minute to large. Interfrontal bristle absent. Vibrissa well-developed. Usually five to seven short genal bristles (anterior bristle sometimes vibrissa-like). Two subgenal bristles. Pedicel with one outstanding dorsal bristle. Occiput with row of short bristles behind eye margin. Two postsutural dorsocentral bristles, with anterior bristle usually 3/5-4/5 times length of posterior bristle; sometimes small additional bristle directly in front of anterior dorsocentral. Scutellum with one small lateral bristle and one long incurved apical bristle ( Fig. 8 View Fig ). Acrostichal bristle absent. One postpronotal, two notopleural, two postsutural intra-alar and sometimes one small to minute intra post-alar bristle. 1-2 ( Fig. 8 View Fig ) strong anepisternal and 1 katepisternal bristle. Tibiae without dorsal preapical bristles. Male fore and mid femora with ventral row of ctenidial bristles.
Male abdomen and terminalia
Tergite 1 narrow and fused to tergite 2; tergites 3-6 and sternites 2-5 well-developed, separate; sternite 1 reduced to thin strip; sternites 2-5 well-developed. Sternites 6- 8 forming complete asymmetrical ring (= “annulus”); sternite 8 setose and dorsal with right lateral extension; sternite 7 on left side between sternites 6 and 8, heavily sclerotized anteriorly; sternite 6 fused to sternite 7 laterally, heavily sclerotized anteriorly, and weakly attached to sternite 8 ventrally; sternites 6 and 7 variably differentiated ventrally into weakly sclerotized, folded and/or widened regions, forming enlarged membranous “pocket” to enclose distiphallus when it is at rest. Spiracles in membrane ventral to tergites 1-5, (often) dorsolaterally between sternites 6 and 7, and ventrally between sternites 6 and 8. Epandrium dome-shaped, evenly bristled ( Figs 10 and 11 View Figs 10-12 ), and usually much narrower than abdomen. Surstylus variable in shape ( Figs 10 View Figs 10-12 , 17 View Figs 16-18 , 33 View Figs 31-33 and 51 View Figs 51-53 ), but often less than 2/3 length of epandrium and rounded (very thin if longer); small rounded bristles apical on inner face. Cerci variable ( Figs 11 View Figs 10-12 , 14 View Figs 13-15 , 18 View Figs 16-18 , 32 View Figs 31-33 and 47 View Figs 45-47 ), but usually less than half length of epandrium and often united. Hypandrium fused to pregonite (shape globose to triangular in profile) ( Fig. 12 View Figs 10-12 ), sparsely setose (bristles usually short and stout) and sometimes with distal setulae; hypandrial arm short and stout. Postgonite, epiphallus and lateral lobe of distiphallus absent. Phallapodeme 0.5-1.0 times length of hypandrium + pregonite. Basiphallus fused to distiphallus anteriorly. Distiphallus very elongate, dark, thin, with one pair of heavily-sclerotized lateral “ribs”, and often with distal accessory sclerites. Ejaculatory apodeme elongate with apex fan-shaped.
Female abdomen and terminalia
Tergites 1 and 2 fused; tergites 3-6 and sternites 2-6 complete; sternite 1 reduced to thin anterior strip. Segments 7 and 8 narrowed into long, thin tube; terminal segments separated by long membranous area. Spiracles in membrane below tergites on segments 1 to 7. Cerci as long as sternite 10, length four times width. Spermatheca (one pair) pigmented ( Figs 28-30 View Figs 28-30 and 48-50 View Figs 48-50 ); shape variable, but usually small, transversely wrinkled, cylindrical and telescoped. Genital chamber membranous and elongate. Spermathecal duct weakly sclerotized. Ventral receptacle sac-like (widest subapically), recurved, and with long, sometimes loosely coiled, subterminal flagellum ( Fig. 29 View Figs 28-30 ).
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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Clusiodinae |