Neotropical osmylids (Neuroptera, Osmylidae): Three new species of Isostenosmylus Krüger, 1913, new distributional records, redescriptions, checklist and key for the Neotropical species
Author
Martins, Caleb Califre
Author
Ardila-Camacho, Adrian
Author
Aspöck, Ulrike
text
Zootaxa
2016
4149
1
1
66
journal article
10.11646/zootaxa.4149.1.1
a4408b5b-0ea4-4d35-a7de-8f9694fa6e9e
1175-5326
256806
3C009047-18B7-4C79-9C22-6D7659AA533B
Isostenosmylus julianae
U. Aspöck, Martins & Ardila-Camacho
n. sp.
(
Figs. 10–12
)
Holotype
,
♂
,
Peru
:
Pasco
,
Villa Rica, ZA
.
Bosque de Protección
,
San Matías
,
San Carlos
,
10°38’36’’N
−
75°12’55’’W
,
674 m
, 3~
5.v.2012
,
V. Borda
and
L. Figuova
,
Malaise trap
(
MHNL
);
Paratype
,
♀
,
Peru
,
Pasco
,
Villa Rica, ZA
.
Bosque de Protección
,
San Matías
,
San Carlos
,
10°38’36’’N
−75°12’55’’W,
674 m
, 3~
5.v.2012
, V. Borda and L. Figuova,
Malaise trap
(MHNL).
Distribution (
Fig. 43
).
Peru
(
Pasco
).
Diagnosis.
Isostenosmylus julianae
presents a wing pigmentation pattern similar to
I. contrerasi
, with numerous small amber spots at distal half of forewing, but it lacks the distinctive spot located between MP and posterior wing margin of
I. contrerasi
. The pterostigma is well marked, and its color pattern varies from a mixture of light greyish brown and very pale yellow to light brown and pale yellow. This species is distinguished from other species in the genus by the following combination of genital characters: male terminalia has ectoproct with a prominent beak-like process. Anterolateral branches of ninth gonocoxite are prominent and widened in lateral view, while posteromedial lobe is rounded in ventral view. Another distinctive characteristic of this species is the ventral branch of tenth gonocoxite, which is prominent and acuminate. Female genitalia has the ninth gonapophysis short, with basal half widened, medially it is constrained, and distal half is short and bilobate.
Description. Head (
Figs. 10
A, C).
Labrum pale yellow, covered with setae of same color; clypeus pale yellow; frons yellowish brown. Maxillae light brown, maxillary palpi five-segmented, apical one with brown ring; labial palpi yellowish brown. Scape and pedicel light brown. Vertex slightly elevated, with black line laterally, peripheral surface of ocelli light brown. Antennae filiform, with 32 articles left (apex missing), all light brown, and densely covered with setae of the same color as cuticle. Occiput brownish. Genae and postgenae brownish. Eyes damaged.
Thorax (
Figs. 10
A, C).
Prothorax, length
1.8 mm
; pronotum yellowish brown, with a pair of brownish spots distally, entire surface with numerous setae arising from protuberant bases, most of these dark brown pigmented. Pleural region of prothorax dark brown, densely covered with long setae. Pterothorax, length
2.5 mm
. Mesonotum damaged. Metanotum greyish brown, scutum with brown spots. Pteropleura yellowish, with brown spots, entire surface densely covered with yellowish setae.
Legs (
Figs. 10
A, C).
Foreleg with elongated coxa, in mid- and hindlegs short. Femora and tibiae mainly yellowish and covered with setae of the same color as cuticle, first and second femora with brown spot basally, tibiae with several brown spots. Apex of tibiae amber. Tibial spurs short, light amber. Tarsi light brown covered with yellowish brown setae, five-segmented, the first tarsomere as long as the following three together, the fifth as long as the second and third together. Tarsal claws light amber, arolium present.
Wings (
Figs 10
A, C).
Forewing length
26 mm
, maximum width
8.9 mm
; wing veins alternating light brown and pale yellow, and covered with setae of the same color as the cuticle. Wing margin with trichosors. Costal field wide, about 65 costal cross-veins before pterostigma, some of these forked near to Sc. Pterostigma, length
3 mm
, slightly marked with brownish and yellowish parts. Seven crossveins in the costal field beyond the pterostigma. Subcostal field hyaline with single crossvein basally. Radial field with 27 crossveins. Rs with 11 branches. Wing membrane mostly hyaline, with maculae on crossveins of radial field, Rs, MP and between CuA and CuP. Nygmata barely perceptible. CuP abruptly curved posterad. Hindwing, length
23 mm
, maximum width
6.6 mm
; wing membrane hyaline, veins mainly pale yellow. Radial field possessing 21 crossveins. CuP pectinate, with most branches forked, not sinuate. Pterostigma weakly marked with color pattern similar to forewing.
Abdomen (
Figs 10
A, 11A–D).
Tergites mainly brown, sternites yellowish brown, all segments covered with long yellowish setae.
Male genitalia (
Figs. 11
A–D).
Eighth and ninth tergites fused. Ectoproct (partly destroyed) posterodorsally with a beak-like acute prominent process; ectoproct caudally with an unpaired bar. Ninth sternite densely setose; in ventral view posteromedially slightly concave. Ninth gonocoxites paired rod-like sclerites, broadened cephally, caudally fused. Ninth gonapophysis U-shaped in lateral view. Complex of tenth gonocoxites strongly curved in lateral view, posteriorly widened and with two subapical processes. Hypandrium internum triangular in ventral view, weakly tender.
Female genitalia (
Figs. 12
A–D).
Seventh sternite, in lateral view, posteroventrally produced, posteriorly connected with the fused eighth gonocoxites + gonapophyses. This sclerite is plate shaped, elongated posterodorsally with a lobe moderately developed, covered with long setae. Fused ninth gonapophyses elongated, in lateral view medially slightly curved dorsad, apex with two lobes slightly developed, the dorsal one anteriorly projected, the ventral one anteroventrally projected; in ventral view medially constrained, cephal half heart-shaped. Eighth tergite laterally enclosing spiracle of eighth abdominal segment, anteroventral corner slightly ventrally projected. Ninth tergite laterally elongate, ventrally projected. Ectoproct in lateral view semicircular, posterior margin with numerous long setae, callus cerci with trichobothria arranged in a rosette. Ninth gonocoxites acuminate, with ventral margin straight, densely covered with numerous setae; ninth gonostylus ovoid, equipped with small setae. Spermathecae ellipsoid in lateral view.
FIGURE 10.
Isostenosmylus julianae
n. sp.
A)
Holotype male, habitus lateral;
B)
Holotype male, labels;
C)
Habitus lateral of female;
D)
Labels of female. Photos provided by Harald Bruckner (Naturhistorisches Museum (NHNM), Wien [= Vienna], Austria).
FIGURE 11.
Holotype of
Isostenosmylus julianae
n. sp.
, male.
A–B)
Terminalia, lateral view;
C–D)
Terminalia, ventral view.
ect
(ectoproct),
gcx IX
(ninth gonocoxite),
gcx X
(tenth gonocoxite),
gph IX
(ninth gonapophysis),
S VII
(seventh sternite),
S VIII
(eighth sternite),
S IX
(ninth sternite),
T VII
(seventh tergite),
T VIII
(eighth tergite). Photos provided by Harald Bruckner (Naturhistorisches Museum (NHNM), Wien [= Vienna], Austria).
FIGURE 12.
Isostenosmylus julianae
n. sp.
, female.
A–B)
Terminalia, lateral view;
C–D)
Terminalia, ventral view.
ect
(ectoproct),
gcx VIII
(eighth gonocoxite),
gcx IX
(ninth gonocoxite),
gph VIII
(eighth gonapophysis),
gph IX
(ninth gonapophysis),
S VII
(seventh sternite),
spm
(spermatheca),
T VII
(seventh tergite),
T VIII
(eighth tergite),
T IX
(ninth tergite). Photos provided by Harald Bruckner (Naturhistorisches Museum (NHNM), Wien [= Vienna], Austria).
Etymology.
The specific name is a noun in the genitive singular, feminine, derived from the latinized form of Juliane.
The species is named in honour of Dr. Juliane Diller. On Christmas Eve 1971, when she was a girl of 17, at that time named Juliane Koepcke, daughter of the famous German biologists Hans-Wilhelm and Maria Koepcke, founders of the research station in Panguana in the
Amazonas
basin in
Peru
, she flew together with her mother from
Lima
to Pucallpa. When the airplane crossed the
Andes
it was hit by a lightning and crashed from an altitude of
3000 m
. Juliane was the only survivor of this accident. After fighting her way through the tropical forest she was finally rescued after ten days. Later she studied Zoology and devoted her life to the protection of the tropical forest around the research station of Panguana. She is highly respected in
Peru
as an authority in strategies for environmental protection. In
April and May 2015
, we had the opportunity to accompany her to Panguana and to visit the Natural History Museum of
Lima
where we (Horst and
Ulrike Aspöck
) received the two osmylid specimens from Juan Grados, M. Sc., biologist and from Professor Dr. Gerardo Lamas Müller. The two specimens turned out to be the species described here.
Remarks.
Isostenosmylus julianae
seems to belong to a species group together with
I. contrerasi
and
I. fusciceps
. This species group is distinguished by the presence of an elongate and prominent process of ectoproct, pointed or spatulate at the apex. In
I. julianae
, this process is elongated, ventromedially curved, beak shaped in lateral view. In comparison it is sharply pointed and straigth in
I. fusciceps
. Moreover,
I. contrerasi
presents this structure spatulate, straight, slightly pointed in lateral view, and somewhat shorter than in the other two species. Among female genitalia, the ninth gonapophyses of
I. julianae
are similar to that of
I. contrerasi
where this structure is short and widened in the basal half. On the basis of the morphology of the genital structures and the distribution of these species,
I. julianae
may be the sister species of
I. fusciceps
, and
I. contrerasi
could be the sister taxon of both species.