Systematics of Amphineurus (Rhamphoneurus Alexander) (Diptera: Tipuloidea: Limoniidae)
Author
Santos, Daubian
https://orcid.org/0000-0003-1220-1267
Universidade Federal do ABC, Centro de Ciencias Naturais e Humanas, Santo Andre, Sao Paulo, Brazil
daubians@gmail.com
Author
Santos, Rodrigo dos Reis
Pos-Graduacao em Entomologia, Departamento de Zoologia, Universidade Federal do Parana, Curitiba, Parana, Brazil
Author
Ribeiro, Guilherme Cunha
Universidade Federal do ABC, Centro de Ciencias Naturais e Humanas, Santo Andre, Sao Paulo, Brazil
text
Arthropod Systematics & amp; Phylogeny
2022
2022-09-12
80
439
494
http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/asp.80.e83035
journal article
http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/asp.80.e83035
1864-8312-80-439
62FFB94CEBF441639F22881435EFC37C
3F4E21B524465471831D09738C2304A6
3.1. Genus
Amphineurus Skuse, 1890
Amphineurus
Skuse, 1890: 800 (as a subgenus of
Rhypholophus
). Type-species:
Amphineurus (A.) umbraticus
Skuse, 1890 (as
Rhypholophus
).
Diagnosis.
Amphineurus
can be diagnosed by the following combination of characters: gonocoxite bifid; wing with R2+3+4 aligned with R2+3. When there is an element R4+5 (and therefore, no R2+3), members of the genus are distinguished from other
Chioneinae
by the closed discal cell.
Remarks.
There is great diversity in the male terminalia of
Amphineurus
(Figs
1
,
2
). There are many variations from the simplified pattern of
A. (A.) patya
Theischinger (Fig.
1A
) to the asymmetric disposition of
A. (Nesormosia)
(Fig.
2D
). Therefore, defining a broad diagnosis for
Amphineurus
is not so easy.
Skuse (1890)
defined
Amphineurus
as a subgenus of
Rhypholophus
.
Skuse's
definition fits better to the current subgenus
A. (Amphineurus)
but does not portray the reality of other species of
Amphineurus
. His diagnosis included the absence of the discal cell, the radial sector with four branches, "second longitudinal vein angulated", and hind femora one third longer than the intermediate pair. These features are non-exclusive or variable in the genus.
Figure 1.
Schematic illustration of the male terminalia of representatives of
Amphineurus
(dorsal view).
A
A.
(
A.
)
Amphineurus patya
;
B
A. (A.) superbus
;
C
A. (A.) pita
;
D
A. (A.) umbraticus
. - Abbreviations:
ad spur
, anterodorsal spur;
aed
, aedeagus;
aed sh
, sheath of aedeagus;
b spur
, basal spur;
cgonst
, clasper of gonostylus;
db clasper
, dorsal branch of clasper of gonostylus;
db lobe
, dorsal branch of lobe of gonostylus;
f
, foramen of male tergite X;
goncx
, gonocoxite;
la spur
, latero-apical spur;
lb sh
, lateral branch of sheath of aedeagus;
lgonst
, lobe of gonostylus;
lh
, lateral humps;
mh
, medial humps;
pb sh
, posterior branches of sheath of aedeagus;
t9
, male tergite IX;
t10
, male tergite X;
vb clasper
, ventral branch of clasper of gonostylus;
vb lobe
, ventral branch of lobe of gonostylus.
Figure 2.
Schematic illustration of the male terminalia of representatives of
Amphineurus
(dorsal view).
A
A. (A.) maculosus
;
B
A. (Nothormosia) edentulus
;
C
A. (A.) perdecorus
;
D
A. (Nesormosia) fatuus
. - Abbreviations:
aed
, aedeagus;
aed sh
, sheath of aedeagus;
cgonst
, clasper of gonostylus;
db clasper
, dorsal branch of clasper of gonostylus;
goncx
, gonocoxite;
gonst
, gonostylus;
lb sh
, lateral branch of sheath of aedeagus;
lgonst
, lobe of gonostylus;
ms lobe
, mesal lobe of gonocoxite;
t9
, male tergite IX;
vb clasper
, ventral branch of clasper of gonostylus.
Alexander (1920)
allocated
Amphineurus
as a subgenus of
Ormosia
after highlighting the abundant and conspicuous wing macrotrichia (Fig.
5B
).
Edwards (1923)
redefined the genus to support two New Zealand species.
Edwards'
diagnosis includes the short mid-leg, short and hairy wing, and radius four-branched. Nevertheless, these features occur in other
Chioneinae
.
Edwards (1923)
also referred to the fact that the medial vein forks in M3+4 and M1+2 and that the anal vein is sinuous. These features are plastic in the genus.
Alexander (1929a)
used the definition of
Edwards (1923)
and emphasized the characteristic "abundant trichiation" of the genus. However, in the same article,
Alexander (1929a)
described the genus
Maietta
, which has more wing vestiture than
Amphineurus
. Some species of the Neotropical subgenus
A. (Rhamphoneurus)
have less macrotrichia than other subgenera. No more inclusive diagnosis was proposed and recent revisions (e.g.,
Theischinger 1994
,
1996
) redefined only the diagnosis of the subgenus
A. (Amphineurus)
.
Amphineurus
has an 180
°
rotation of male terminalia (in the words of Edwards: "undergone permanent torsion").
Edwards (1923)
also shows that
Amphineurus
has a long, finger-like gonocoxite process (Fig.
1A
). This is evidence of the bifid gonocoxite, a condition present (Fig.
29G
) in some
Chioneinae
with inverted male terminalia. This gonocoxal process forms a protective hood (
Kramer 2020
) for the appendices of the inverted terminalia.
The
Chioneinae
genera with inverted terminalia bear great diversity and frequently they have hairy wings similar to
Amphineurus
. The great amount of wing vestiture resembles
Maietta
Alexander. The wings of some
A. (Amphineurus)
(Fig.
32
: Node 18) have a distinctive radial sector such as seen in
Molophilus
Curtis. Some
A. (Amphineurus)
(Fig.
32
: Node 23) resembles
Hoplolabis
(
Parilisia
Savchenko). The trifid claspers of
A. (Rhamphoneurus)
are observed in genera such as
Hoplolabis
Osten Sacken and
Cheilotrichia
Rossi. Despite that, in the group of genera with a bifid gonocoxite and inverted terminalia, vein R2+3 is normally aligned with R2+3+4. The exception is a clade of
A. (Amphineurus)
(Fig.
32
: Node 18) that shows resemblances in the radial sector with
Molophilus
(where R2+3+4 is lacking), but the former has a closed discal cell among other wing features which places it within
Amphineurus
.