Elaphropeza furcatella, Grootaert, 2019
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.5852/ejt.2019.554 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:369BE0D6-70EC-4653-93A2-194246F8915E |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3477495 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/8DC272D2-7B30-4371-A22F-C437B77BBAA9 |
taxon LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:act:8DC272D2-7B30-4371-A22F-C437B77BBAA9 |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Elaphropeza furcatella |
status |
sp. nov. |
Elaphropeza furcatella View in CoL sp. nov.
urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act:8DC272D2-7B30-4371-A22F-C437B77BBAA9
Etymology
The specific name is from the Latin ‘ furca , furcatella ’, meaning ‘fork, small fork’, and alludes to the fork-shaped tip of the right epandrial lamella.
Material examined
Holotype
HONG KONG • ♂; Tai Tan (28M1); 22.43857° N, 114.33327° E; C. Taylor and U. Chang leg.; 5–19 Dec. 2017; barcode reference JP1 F (not dissected); RBINS. GoogleMaps
Paratypes
HONG KONG • 1 ♀; same collection data as for holotype; barcode reference HKC_0000505; RBINS GoogleMaps • 1 ♂; Tai Tam (22M2); 22.24614° N, 114.22334° E; C. Taylor and U. Chang leg.; 9–23 Oct. 2017; barcode reference HKC_0000801; RBINS GoogleMaps .
Description
Male ( Fig. 4 View Fig )
BODY. 1.4 mm long; wing 1.5 mm long.
HEAD. Occiput black, scape and pedicel yellow, postpedicel brown, but paler on basal half. Postpedicel nearly 4× as long as wide. Stylus a little longer than postpedicel. Palpus yellow, with white basal and pale brown subapical bristle. Proboscis pale yellowish.
THORAX. Yellow, including scutellum, metanotum dusky yellow (not brown). Acrostichals quadri-serial, not reaching scutellum.
WING ( Fig. 4 View Fig ). Clear. Haltere white.
LEGS. Yellow, including all tarsomeres. Fore femur with a single row of short white ventral bristles, nearly half as long as femur is wide. Mid femur with a row of ventral bristles that are longest in basal half, brownish and becoming shorter towards tip. Bristles are pale brownish in basal half. Mid tibia with a row of tiny dark spine-like ventral bristles in apical half only, row ending in a tiny black apical spine. Hind tibia with a pale anterodorsal bristle near middle.
ABDOMEN. Tergites 2–3 and 6–7 yellowish (not brown). Tergite 4 long, black and covered with long pale bristles that are not squamiform. Tergite 5 very narrow, with a row of indistinct pale squamiform bristles. Terminalia ( Fig. 5 View Fig ) brown, but hypandrium yellowish at base.
TERMINALIA. Right epandrial lamella with a forked apex, right margin with four strong bristles, left fork with short bristles, right fork almost bare ( Fig. 5A View Fig ). Cerci apically fused, with a few strong bristles on right side ( Fig. 5B View Fig ). Tip of the cercus blunt ( Fig.4D View Fig ). Left surstylus with a wide truncate tip ( Fig. 5C View Fig ) with a small notch near apex ( Fig. 5B View Fig , not visible on Fig. 5C View Fig ). The apical border before the notch with pronounced papillae (not visible on Fig. 5 C View Fig due to bend of the surstylus).
Female
BODY. 1.7 mm long; wing 1.6 mm long.
Resembling male in most aspects except the mid femur with only white ventral bristles and the mid tibia without ventral spinules and lacking the tiny apical spine. Tergites 4–5 and 8 black. Cerci short, brown. Sternite 10 not pronounced.
Remarks
The most striking character in this species is the forked right epandrial lamella, which is quite unique in Elaphropeza . The acrostichal bristles do not reach the anterior border of the scutellum, but the presence of a small hair beside the most apical dorsocentrals might be confusing. The fore and mid tibiae and tarsi are pale yellowish, but sometimes in the female they are dusky yellow, which can lead to its being confused with E. riatanae .
RBINS |
Royal Belgian Institute of Natural Sciences |
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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SuperFamily |
Empidoidea |
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SubFamily |
Tachydromiinae |
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