Systematics and Phylogenetics of Indo-Pacific Luciolinae Fireflies (Coleoptera: Lampyridae) and the Description of new Genera
Author
Ballantyne, Lesley A.
lballantyne@csu.edu.au
Author
Lambkin, Christine L.
lballantyne@csu.edu.au
text
Zootaxa
2013
2013-05-22
3653
1
1
162
http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.3653.1.1
journal article
10.11646/zootaxa.3653.1.1
1175-5326
5265340
72A07BC6-AEB0-4EBC-AFA8-F5871065680F
Medeopteryx pupilla
(Olivier)
[
Figs 168–176
]
Luciola pupilla
Olivier, 1892:1011
;
1902:72
.
Pteroptyx pupilla
(Olivier)
.
McDermott, 1966:117
.
Luciola (Luciola) pupilla
Olivier.
Ballantyne & McLean, 1970:237
, 268. Nec
Ballantyne, 1987a:164
, 165, 167;
Ballantyne, 1987b:177
, 178, 185.
Lectotype
.
Male
designated here.
NEW
GUINEA
:
9.43S
147.45E
Central Pr.
,
Ighibirei
(
MCSN
).
Other Specimens examined. NEW
GUINEA
:
5.14S
,
145.45E
,
Madang Dist.
,
Sek Harbor
,
10 mi
n
Madang
,
Oct. 5, 1969
,
J.E. Lloyd
,
2 males
(G148, 141). (
JELC
).
Mt Lamington District Northern Division
, C
. McNamara
6 males
(
1 male
v.1927
) (
AMSA
)
.
Diagnosis.
One of two
Medeopteryx
with trisinuate V7 but without deflexed elytral apices; distinguished most from
M. similispupillae
by the pale terminal abdominal tergites (
Fig. 170
) and the broader ML (that of
similispupillae
is very narrow;
Fig. 182
).
Male.
5.3 (
lectotype
)–
7.7 mm
long. Colour (
Fig. 168
): pronotum dingy orange (finely dark margined in G141); MS dingy orange, marked in brown in anterior half; MN cream; elytra uniformly very dark brown, reddish brown with narrowly pale margins in one Mt Lamington male; head between eyes, antennae and palpi almost black (head of G148 appearing paler brown as semitransparent cuticle reveals underlying fat body); entire ventral surface of thorax, all of legs 1–3 dark brown (coxae and base of femora of legs 1, 2 orange in one Mt Lamington male); basal abdominal ventrites dark brown; V5–7 dirty white (1/4 to ½ of posterior area of V5 pale in Mt Lamington males; T2–6 yellow (
lectotype
), brownish in Mt Lamington males, semitransparent, T7–8 white, semitransparent. Pronotum: 1.3 (
lectotype
)–
2.2 mm
wide, 1.0 (
lectotype
)–
1.4 mm
long, W/L = 1.4–1.7; punctures shallow, contiguous across anterior and lateral margins, separated by up to their width over central area of disc; midanterior margin broadly rounded, moderately projecting beyond rounded anterolateral corners, with lateral margins subparallel, converging slightly in anterior and posterior third in
lectotype
; lateral margins divergent slightly posteriorly, with anterolateral and posterolateral corners angulate in Mt Lamington males. Head: GHW 1.1(
lectotype
)–
1.8 mm
, SIW
0.2 mm
; ASD slightly <ASW. FS elongate, slender, subequal. Abdomen (
Figs 169, 170, 175, 176
): LOs occupying all of V6 and 7 except for narrow posterior margin of 7; MPP moderately broad, longer than wide, apically truncate (
lectotype
) or slightly emarginated, longer and wider than PLP, T8 with broad short rounded flanges in
lectotype
; flanges about as long as wide and apically truncate in Mt Lamington males (
Fig. 175
). Aedeagus: (
Figs 171–173
) ML expanded, and may appear concave in posterior half, 0.7 as wide as LL across narrowest portion of ML; LL inturned at inner apex.
Remarks.
Confusion in the literature over the identity of
Luciola pupilla
is resolved by designation of a
lectotype
(first in a
syntype
series).
McDermott (1966)
incorrectly assigned
pupilla
to
Pteroptyx
.
LB tentatively identified
Lloyd's (1973a)
Luciola
species
11 as
Luciola pupilla
and abdominal modifications were described (
Ballantyne, 1987a
, b). This study has revealed two species with similar V7, viz.
M. pupilla
and
M. similispupillae
sp. nov.
It is now possible to determine an approximate location for "Ighibirei" which is also the
type
locality of
Medeopteryx cribellata
(Olivier)
.
Helgen
et al.
(2008)
referred to Loria’s collecting locality as either “on the Kemp Welch river some little way inland “or “ just inland from the mouth of the Wanigela River”. The elevation is unknown.
Lloyd's field records for specimen G148 read "slow double pulse signal, one second interval".