A review of Boreoheptagyia Brundin, 1966 (Chironomidae: Diamesinae) from East Asia and bordering territories, with the description of five new species
Author
Makarchenko, Eugenyi A.
Institute of Biology and Soil Sciences, Russian Academy of Sciences, Far East Branch, 100 let Vladivostoku Avenue, Vladivostok 690022 Russia. E-mail: makarchenko @ biosoil. ru Koporasu-Tamura-C, Minami-machi Higashi- 5 - 1 - 14, Obihiro, Hokkaido 080 - 0855, Japan. E-mail: endito @ snow. plala. or. jp Life Science College of Nankai University, Tianjin, 300071 China. E-mail: xhwang @ nankai. edu. cn Corresponding author
Author
Endo, Kazuo
Author
Wu, Jingyang
Author
Wang, Xinhua
text
Zootaxa
2008
2008-07-07
1817
1
1
17
https://biotaxa.org/Zootaxa/article/view/zootaxa.1817.1.1
journal article
10.11646/zootaxa.1817.1.1
11755334
5125134
Boreoheptagyia brevitarsis
(Tokunaga)
(
Figs 14–20
)
Prodiamesa
(
Monodiamesa
)
brevitarsis
Tokunaga, 1936: 528
.
Heptagyia brevitarsis
(Tokunaga)
;
Tokunaga (1939: 302)
;
Sasa and Kikuchi (1995: 207)
.
Boreoheptagyia brevitarsis
(Tokunaga)
;
Serra-Tosio (1989: 140)
;
Makarchenko (1981: 89
,
1985: 38
,
2006: 259
) misidentifications;
Endo (2002: 12)
.
Boreoheptagyia kurobeia
Sasa
et
Okazawa, 1992
;
Endo (2002: 12)
.
Material examined
.
JAPAN
:
Honshu
,
Kyoto Prefecture
,
Kibune
,
2 males
,
16.x.1934
,
M. Tokunaga
(
KPU
)
;
Gifu Prefecture
,
Kamioka
,
Futatsuya
,
Takahara River
,
1 male
,
28.v.2001
,
K. Endo
;
Niigata Prefecture
,
Yuzawa
,
Tsuchitaru
,
Kedo-sawa
,
1 male
,
26.vi. 2001
,
K. Endo
;
Hokkaido
,
Shintoku
,
Yutomuraushi River
,
700 m
a.s.l.
,
Malaise trap
,
2 males
,
11–21.vi. 1999
,
K. Endo
;
Kiushu
,
Fukuoka Prefecture
,
Hoshino
,
Kumado River
,
1 male
,
26.iii.2002
,
K. Endo
.
Male
(n = 3)
Total length
2.27–2.50 mm
. Wing length
1.7–2.16 mm
. Total length / wing length 1.16–1.27.
Coloration.
Body dark brown. Legs brown, tibiae of all legs white medially.
Head.
Frontal tubercles
24–28 µm
long, with 2–3 setae basally. Temporal setae includes 7–10 frontals, 7– 9 inner verticals, 8–18 outer verticals, and 4–7 postorbitals. Clypeus with 10–14 setae. Antenna with 13 flagellomeres. AR 0.11–0.16. Lengths (in µm) of palpomeres 1–5: 28–32, 36–46, 72–86, 96–100,148–160. Head width / palp length 1.16–1.20.
Thorax.
Antepronotum with 7 lateral setae. Acrostichals 30–37, dorsocentrals
17–23 in
anterior and posterior groups, prealars 17–28, supraalars 1–2. Scutellum with 61–70 setae.
Wing.
Costal extension
65–73.8 µm
long. Anal lobe well developed, fully fringed. Alula without setae. Squama with 27–48 setae. R and R
1
with 8–11 setae, R
4+5
with 2–4 setae, R
2+3
reduced and visible only in basal part. RM/MCu 2.5–2.6.
Legs.
Spur of foretibia
32–36 µm
long, spurs of midtibia
28–36 µm
and
32–36 µm
long, of hind tibia
32– 38 µm
and
48–56 µm
long. Hind tibial comb with 11–12 setae. Lengths and proportions of legs as in
Table 3
.
FIGURES 14–20.
Boreoheptagyia brevitarsis
(
Tokunaga, 1936
)
males from Hokkaido (14, 16, 19), Honshu (15, 20) and Kyushu (17, 18).
14.
Scutum, dorsal view.
15–17.
Tergite IX.
18.
Transverse sternapodeme.
19–20.
Hypopygium with tergite IX removed, dorsal view. Scale bars: Fig. 14 = 200 µm, Figs 15–20 = 50 µm.
Hypopygium
(
Figs 15–20
). Tergite IX with concave posterior margin and 29–36 setae. Laterosternite IX with 3–4 setae. Transverse sternapodeme
60–64 µm
wide. Aedeagal lobe sharply triangular, phallapodeme not clearly discernable, sometimes visible as narrow appendage (
Figs 19–20
). Gonocoxite
180 µm
long; basal lobe widely triangular with rounded apex and 1–2 setae. Gonostylus
88 µm
long, wrinkled, slightly curved, ending in short megaseta.
Remarks
. We redescribe the male of
B. brevitarsis
as K. Endo compared specimens from the Kolyma River Basin of the
Magadan Region
in
Russia
and from
Hokkaido
of
Japan
with the
type
material of
B. brevitarsis
deposited in Kyushu University,
Japan
and concluded that all males from Kolyma River and some males from
Hokkaido
clearly differs from the
type
material in several features of the thorax and hypopygium. We therefore describe these specimens as a separate species,
B. sasai
sp. n.
, below.
Distribution.
The species is now for certain only known from
Japan
. All other records based on larvae from
China
and the Russian Far East should be revised.