Zorotypus pecten, a new species of Zoraptera (Insecta) from mid-Cretaceous Burmese amber
Author
Mashimo, Yuta
Author
Müller, Patrick
Author
Beutel, Rolf G.
text
Zootaxa
2019
2019-08-06
4651
3
565
577
journal article
26072
10.11646/zootaxa.4651.3.9
6e841f69-ffc9-4bf1-94e3-a25a115d7180
1175-5326
3363469
057923C4-B4AD-4CA8-8129-DFD1FA58B64C
Zorotypus pecten
Mashimo
,
sp. n.
(
Fig. 1
)
Holotype
.
Alate male
;
MYANMAR
,
Kachin State
,
Hukawng Valley
; Albian-Cenomanian, mid Cretaceous. The holotype is deposited in PM’s private collection (depository number
BUB2809
).
Etymology.
The specific name is taken from the Latin
pecten
, meaning “comb” and refers to the paired ctenidia along the posterior margin of
T
9. It is a noun in apposition.
Diagnosis.
This species resembles
Zorotypus cenomanianus
Yin, Cai & Huang, 2017
with respect to its ctenidium and the group of thick setae of
T
9, but is easily distinguished from it by the presence of a group of thick setae on
T
10. The rugose body surface of
Z. pecten
sp. n.
is conspicuous, but the possibility of artifact cannot be eliminated completely.
Description.
Alate male (
Fig. 1
). Integument brown except antennomeres VII and VIII, slightly lighter on distal parts of legs (
Fig. 1A, B
). Body surface rugose (
Fig. 1A, B
). Antennae 8-segmented; antennomere I distinctly elongate, approximately 4.5 times longer than wide; antennomere II short, about one-third as long as antennomere I; antennomere III subequal to antennomere II; antennomeres IV–VIII elongate, approximately 2.3–2.5 times as long as wide (
Fig. 1A, B
).
Pronotum subrectangular, with vestiture of short setae. Metafemur with six stout spines (sp1–6) placed on tubercles along posterior border of ventral surface, faintly visible (
1–6 in
Fig. 1
C–E); two stiff bristles inserted on anterior border of ventral surface (1’, 2’ in
Fig. 1C, D
); sp5 and sp6 distinctly elongated; sp3 and sp4 slightly longer than remaining ones. Metatibia relatively stout, with two stout spines at apical third and at apex (a, c in
Fig. 1C
), additionally with small spine near stout apical spine (b in
Fig. 1C
). Meta-pretarsus with pair of small pulvilli (arrowheads in
Fig. 1F
); empodium reduced to hair-like structure.
Abdominal terga (
Fig. 1A, G
) sparsely set with short setae, also with longer setae along posterior margin; posterior half of
T
9 with short setae and two pairs of long, erect setae; posterior margin with dense group of short and thick setae at middle region, also with two rows of thick setae arranged as comb (ctenidium) on both sides (
Fig. 1G, H
);
T
10 medially sclerotized, with group of short, thick setae, also with pair of setae of moderate length on both sides of this cluster (
Fig. 1G, H
);
T
11 uniformly sclerotized, with several setae of moderate length and with two or three long setae on both sides of posterior margin, additionally with median up-curved projection (
Fig. 1G, H
). Cercus conical, with four or five long subapical setae subequal to length of cercus (
Fig. 1A, G, H
). Chaetotaxy of abdominal sterna hardly recognizable; posterior margin of S8 medially produced and more sclerotized (arrow in
Fig. 1H
).
Forewing (
Fig. 1A, B
) with brownish pterostigma at anterior margin;
R
obliterating in pterostigma base, not reaching wing margin; Rs separating from radial stem near midpoint of wing, separated from M by short rs-m cross vein; M reaching posterior wing margin near wing apex; CuA
1
extending over 3/5 of wing, terminating on posterior wing margin; CuA
2
short, restricted to basal 1/3 of wing. Posterior margin of forewing lacking stiff, jugate setae. Hindwing without Cu.