Amenia dubitalis Malloch, 1927
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.3853/j.0067-1975.50.1998.1275 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4657297 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/9A5987F8-1624-FFE9-FE72-FD3FFC74F66B |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Amenia dubitalis Malloch |
status |
stat. nov. |
Amenia dubitalis Malloch View in CoL rev.stat.
Amenia dubitalis Malloch, 1927: 343 View in CoL .
Amenia imperialis dubitalis Crosskey, 1965: 111 View in CoL .
Differs from A. imperialis View in CoL in the attributes given in the key. The narrow frons of the male is particularly striking and in both sexes the difference in facial pollinosity, while seemingly rather trivial, is conspicuous under the stated conditions of lighting. For both sexes the M-bend index is 0.7-1.2; the antennal segment ratio is 2.2-3.1 for males and 2.4-2.6 for females.
In the one male dissected the surstylus had a subbasal group of 3-4 bristles on the anterior surface, as opposed to a single bristle for other members of the group.
I have one new rearing record: a male (24 km SE of Bonshaw, NSW, 31 March 1990, PH. Colman; AM) from Strangesta sp. ( Rhytididae ).
Distribution. Eastern Australia, from about Ingham in the north to southeastern Victoria; restricted almost entirely to the coast and adjacent ranges ( Fig. 3 View Figure 3 ) A close examination of records shows a marked deficiency from the more inland localities of southeastern Queensland (Fig. 4), as compared with A. imperialis ( Fig. 6 View Figure 6 ). The area is well-collected and the difference is clearly significant, presumably reflecting some difference in host snails.
Notes. The difference between females from the border area between Queensland and New South Wales and further south, which almost invariably have submedian marginal bristles on abdominal T3 , and those from further north, which almost invariably lack them, could well be used to establish two separate subspecies. However, I see no point in taking this step. The change is quite abrupt, at about the latitude of Brisbane: between there and the 25th. parallel, six out of 13 specimens had such bristles, and furthernorth, only one out of 21 (and that very small). Per contra, only two out of 47 specimens from more southern localities (Sydney and Narrabri) lacked such bristles, two had only a single bristle, and two had three bristles .
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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Order |
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SubFamily |
Ameniinae |
Tribe |
Ameniini |
Genus |
Amenia dubitalis Malloch
Colless, D. H. 1998 |
Amenia imperialis dubitalis
Crosskey, R. W. 1965: 111 |
Amenia dubitalis
Malloch, I. R. 1927: 343 |