Rudimentary halteres of some flightless female Phoridae (Diptera) reassessed, and some taxonomic implications
Author
Disney, R. Henry L.
text
Zootaxa
2005
1042
39
54
journal article
50961
10.5281/zenodo.169846
30242e99-0242-4a2f-986b-93106edf4251
11755326
169846
Puliciphora triangularis
(Borgmeier)
,
comb. nov.
(
Figs 22–24
)
Pulicimyia triangularis
Borgmeier, 1960
: 338
Among the material sent by Dr Carl Rettenmeyer was a series of somewhat teneral female specimens that had been misidentified by Borgmeier, in 1967, as
Ecituncula halterata
Borgmeier. He
failed to realise they were the same as
paratypes
of
Pulicimyia triangularis
that he had designated in 1959. He also, in 1967, misidentified associated males as?
Ecituncula
. His misidentification of the females was evidently based on the resemblance of the halterelike wing rudiments to those of
E. halterata
. However, in
P. triangularis
the wing rudiments bear a subterminal bristle (
Fig. 23
), unlike in
E. halterata
(
Figs 3–7
). The species not only has wing rudiments but also a distinctive triangular anterior flap of abdominal tergite 5 (
Fig. 22
). The specific epithet refers to the latter feature. The hitherto unknown male is described below.
Male
The specimens are somewhat faded after half a century in alcohol. Frons with four supraantennal bristles, 244 bristles and a pair of ocellars. The preocellars are level with the anteroir ocellus and directly in front of the posterior pair. Postpedicels with numerous SPS vesicles whose diameters are subequal to sockets of SAs. Palps with 14–16 hairs of which the 5–6 most distal are progressively longer and more bristle like. Proboscis smaller than that of female and with a much smaller labrum. Eyes with lowest ommatidia larger than uppermost ones. Thorax with bare mesopleuron and three bristles on notopleuron. Scutellum with an anterior pair of hairs (subequal to those at rear of scutum) and a posterior pair of bristles. Abdominal tergites with hairs mainly in the rear third of each, and with T2 and T6 longer than the rest. Hypopygium as
Fig. 24
. Legs typical for genus, except the transverse combs of the hind basitarsus lack any bifid spinules. Wing 0.8–0.9 mm long. Costal index 0.52. Costal ratios 0.6–0.7: 1. Costal cilia 0.02–0.03 mm long.
Material
Material examined: Female
paratype
,
Panama
, Barro Colorado Island, ex refuse deposit of
Eciton burchellii
,
1 March 1955
, C. W. and M. E, Rettenmeyer (930, ex colony’ 55Biv) (Department of Ecology & Evolutionary Biology, University of Connecticut); female
paratype
, same data except
26 March 1956
(1568, ex colony E132) (Cambridge University Muzeum of Zoology);
5 females
,
4 males
, same data except
8 March 1963
, (2699, ex colony E313) (
DEEBUC
,
CUMZ
).
Affinities
A few Afrotropical species, a single Nearctic species,
P. nuttingi
Disney (1998)
, and a single Neotropical species,
P. hancocki
Disney (2005)
, retain small wing rudiments. This species differs from
P. nuttingi
by its distinctive, subtriangular, tapered anterior flap of abdominal tergite 5 and by the longer hairs on the abdomen. In the key to the Neotropical females (
Disney, 2003a
) it runs to couplet 27, but the equally distinctive
P. hancocki
runs to couplet 7.