Dibezzia Kieffer

Borkent, Art, 2014, The Pupae of the Biting Midges of the World (Diptera: Ceratopogonidae), With a Generic Key and Analysis of the Phylogenetic Relationships Between Genera, Zootaxa 3879 (1), pp. 1-327 : 80-81

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.3879.1.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:6423894B-97D9-4286-ABB9-D4AF072B57FD

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5593021

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/027587C9-BD61-3026-FD4E-199F4801E6A4

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Dibezzia Kieffer
status

 

Dibezzia Kieffer View in CoL

( Figs. 12B View FIGURE 12 , 21A View FIGURE 21 , 26E View FIGURE 26 , 30J View FIGURE 30 , 38A View FIGURE 38 , 45G View FIGURE 45 , 51A View FIGURE 51 , 64B View FIGURE 64 , 75I View FIGURE 75 )

DIAGNOSIS: Only pupa of Ceratopogonidae with a well-developed prothoracic extension ( Fig. 26E View FIGURE 26 ) and an elongate seta (D-5-IX) on the base of the terminal process ( Figs. 12B View FIGURE 12 , 75I View FIGURE 75 ).

DESCRIPTION: Habitus as in Fig. 12B View FIGURE 12 . Total length = 4.03 mm (5.5 mm from Mayer 1934c). Without larval exuviae retained on abdomen. Exuviae with flagellum appressed against lateral margin of midleg, wing (as in Figs. 16B View FIGURE 16 , 33B View FIGURE 33 ). Ecdysial tear uncertain anteriorly; present along prothoracic extension. Head: Dorsal apotome ( Fig. 21A View FIGURE 21 ), with partial ventral line of weakness, without dorsomedial tubercle, without central dome; dorsolateral cephalic sclerite (as in Fig. 13H View FIGURE 13 ) fused to scutum, each side separated medially by dorsal apotome in whole pupa; mouthparts ( Fig. 26E View FIGURE 26 ) with mandible well-developed, lacinia absent; palpus extending posterior to posterolateral margin of labium; labium entire (not divided medially); apex of antenna ( Fig. 38A View FIGURE 38 ) posterior to posterior extent of midlength portion of midleg (portion lateral to mesosternum), narrowed posteriorly; sensilla: dorsal apotomals ( Fig. 21A View FIGURE 21 )—1 elongate seta, 1 campaniform sensillum; dorsolateral cephalic sclerite sensilla—1 seta, 1 campaniform sensillum; clypeal-labrals ( Fig. 26E View FIGURE 26 )—2 slender setae; oculars ( Fig. 26E View FIGURE 26 )—2 setae, 1 campaniform sensillum. Thorax: Prothoracic extension ( Fig. 26E View FIGURE 26 ) wide, well-developed, extending from palpus but narrow dorsolaterally, extent to antenna uncertain; mesonotum without tubercles, not extending posteromedially, not dividing metathorax medially ( Fig. 51A View FIGURE 51 ); respiratory organ ( Fig. 45G View FIGURE 45 ) length/width = 3.11–3.61, moderately elongate, with blunt apex, somewhat flattened apically, with pores closely abutting at apex of respiratory organ, arranged in single row, outer surface with plates with very fine spicules, without pedicel, base with elongate posteromedial apodeme, membranous base of respiratory organ short, tracheal tube straight to slightly curved along length, with spirals restricted to base, plates to 3/4 length; wing ( Fig. 38A View FIGURE 38 ) without apical tubercle or angle, separated medially by fore-, midlegs; halter apex and hind leg (as in Fig. 33A View FIGURE 33 ) broadly abutting; halter apex abutting anterolateral knob-like extension of tergite 2; legs ( Fig. 38A View FIGURE 38 ) with lateral margin of foreleg near midlength of wing evenly curved; hind leg visible at lateral margin of wing (as in Fig. 33C View FIGURE 33 ); with apex of foreleg moderately anterior to apex of midleg; apex of hind leg abutting apex of midleg laterally; sensilla: anteromedials—2 elongate setae (as in Figs. 31L–M View FIGURE 31 ); anterolaterals—1 moderately long seta; dorsal setae ( Fig. 30J View FIGURE 30 )—D-1-T, D-2-T, D-4-T setae, D-5-T broken or absent, D-3-T campaniform sensillum, D-3-T lateral to D-4-T; supraalar 2—campaniform sensillum; metathoracics ( Fig. 51A View FIGURE 51 )—1 campaniform sensillum; M-3-T distant from margin of metathorax (at least 1/3 length of metathorax). Abdomen: without pigmentation pattern, segment 2 as wide or slightly wider than segment 3, segments with undivided, thin to thick setae, with rounded to pointed, short to moderately elongate tubercles, tergites or sternites entire, each without membranous disc; segment 9 ( Fig. 75I View FIGURE 75 ) not strongly modified, terminal processes closely approximated basally, each projecting nearly posteriorly, elongate, slender, tapering to pointed apex; sensilla: tergite 1 ( Fig. 51A View FIGURE 51 ) with 6 setae, 2 campaniform sensilla, including 3 lateral sensilla, D-2-I, D-3-I closely approximated, D-7-I situated anteriorly near D-3-I; segment 4 ( Fig. 64B View FIGURE 64 )—D-2-IV, D-3-IV short to moderately elongate setae, D-2-IV on short tubercle; D-8-IV, D-9-IV moderately elongate setae, D-5-IV, D-7-IV absent (or perhaps not visible); D-8-IV, D-9-IV on elongate, single tubercle, posterior dorsal sensilla in transverse row, arranged medially to laterally: D-4-IV, D-8-IV, D-9-IV; L-1-IV short seta without tubercle, just anterior of base of tubercle with L-2-IV; L-2-IV, L-3-IV, L-4-IV moderately elongate setae on elongate tubercles, V-5-IV, V-6- IV, V-7-IV moderately elongate setae, without tubercles, all closely approximated; segment 8 without D-3-VIII, without L-1-VIII; segment 9 ( Fig. 75I View FIGURE 75 )—with D-5-IX elongate seta, D-6-IX campaniform sensillum.

DISTRIBUTION AND HABITAT: The genus Dibezzia is known from five species in the Oriental and Afrotropical Regions ( Borkent 2014 , additional species below). The two species were reared from either "bamboo peat" ( Johannsen 1932) in Indonesia or a tree hole in Singapore ( Wirth & Ratanaworabhan 1981a).

TAXONOMIC DISCUSSION: The pupae of this genus are known from two species ( Tables 2–3 View TABLE 2 View TABLE 3 ). Originally described as Johannsenomyia prominens by Johannsen (1932), Mayer (1934a:244, 1934c) described the pupa of this Indonesian species as (?) Homohelea prominens , based on the pupal exuviae from which the male holotype of this species was reared. Wirth (1973) placed the species in Mallochohelea as a new combination but did not identify it as such or give any justification for doing so and this is where it has remained since. The descriptions by Mayer (1934a, 1934c), however, clearly indicate the presence of the elongate seta at the base of the terminal process, a feature of Dibezzia and unique within the Ceratopogoninae . In addition, Mayer (1934c) noted the presence of "breiten Schuppen" (broad scales) on the surface of the respiratory organ, which is what the fine scales appear as in D. debenhamae . This feature is unique within the Heteromyiini + Sphaeromiini s. lat. + Palpomyiini + Stenoxenini . I therefore remove the name from Mallochohelea and consider it a member of Dibezzia as follows: Dibezzia prominens (Johannsen) 1932: 435 ( Johannsenomyia ). new combination.

Dibezzia prominens , as illustrated by Mayer (1934c), has D-5-IV represented as a small campaniform sensillum or perhaps a very small seta and D-7-IV located posterolateral to D-3-IV (like other members of Heteromyiini + Sphaeromiini s. lat. + Palpomyiini + Stenoxenini ; see character 64). I could not find either on the single, dirty, and distorted specimen of D. debenhamae I examined.

MATERIAL EXAMINED: D. debenhamae : 1 pupal exuviae (of allotype), Singapore, VI-1959 (USNM).

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Diptera

Family

Ceratopogonidae

SubFamily

Ceratopogoninae

Tribe

Johannsenomyiini

GBIF Dataset (for parent article) Darwin Core Archive (for parent article) View in SIBiLS Plain XML RDF