Taxonomic revision of the Neotropical genus Arthropeina Lindner, 1949 (Diptera: Xylomyidae)
Author
Fachin, Diego Aguilar
Author
Amorim, Dalton De Souza
text
Zootaxa
2014
3827
2
231
257
journal article
45290
10.11646/zootaxa.3827.2.6
1e3c00bb-f125-4105-89e5-6c0a532973cc
1175-5326
226503
D6C800AA-8127-41D1-ACEA-52254F7CE89D
The genus
Arthropeina
The genus
Arthropeina
is endemic to the Neotropical Region and before now included a single described species,
Arthropeina fulva
Lindner, 1949
. The real diversity of the genus, however, is pretty large, as predicted by Woodley (2009, 2011).
Besides the original description of
A. fulva
by
Lindner (1949)
, subsequent papers have addressed the genus.
Papavero & Artigas (1991)
illustrated the female genitalia, including the spermatheca morphology.
Woodley (1999)
made
lectotype
and
paralectotype
designations for the
type
material, while Woodley (2009, 2011) commented on the diagnosis of the genus within a phylogenetic discussion of the family (
Woodley, 2011
).
The recognition of the genus was largely based on body color—primarily yellow, sometimes with shining black maculae—and the shape of the two apical flagellomeres, which form a stylus. The shape of the stylus was considered autapomorphic for the genus (
Papavero & Artigas, 1991
;
Woodley, 2011
). Furthermore,
Papavero & Artigas (1991)
proposed that a helicoid spermathecae with three “layers” or coils was autapomorphic for
Arthropeina
. This, however, was criticized by
Woodley (2011)
, who commented that the blind duct illustrated by the former authors could be a sac ruptured during the preparation, not a derived condition, as proposed. A possible additional apomorphy mentioned by
Woodley (2011)
are the valves of the spermathecal ducts, illustrated by
Papavero & Artigas (1991)
.
This paper reviews the genus
Arthropeina
, describing five new Neotropical species and redescribing
A. fulva
, including illustrations of the antenna, palpus, thorax, spermatheca, genital fork, and male genitalia. The paper also adds some comments on the issue of the relationships within the genus and provides an identification key for the known species of
Arthropeina
.