Periscelis stuckenbergi sp. n., the first record of the genus from the Afrotropical Region (Diptera: Periscelididae: Periscelidinae)
Author
Mathis, Wayne N.
Author
Freidberg, Amnon
text
African Invertebrates
2012
2012-06-30
53
1
231
231
http://www.bioone.org/doi/abs/10.5733/afin.053.0115
journal article
10.5733/afin.053.0115
2305-2562
Subfamily
Periscelidinae
Oldenberg, 1914
Periscelidinae:
Oldenberg 1914: 41
.
Diagnosis: Adult.
Head
: Eye microsetulose (sometimes sparsely so); occiput with a silverywhite, microtomentose area immediately adjacent to posterior margin of compound eye; frons with 1 frontoorbital seta, reclinate; postvertical setae present, divergent; ocellar setae present, well developed; face uniformly sclerotized and transversely arched (shieldlike in
Scutops
Coquilett, 1904
); face setose laterally, strongly receded ventrally, extended laterally below gena; gena extended anterodorsally, bearing a row of setae, with anterior one inserted well above oral margin; mouth opening large.
Thorax
: Postpronotal seta well developed. Wing with costa extended to vein
R
4+5
; cell
cup
present, although vein
CuA
2
extremely reduced.
Abdomen
: 7
th
spiracle in sclerite, not free in membrane of female postabdomen. See
Griffiths (1972)
for discussion of male terminalia.
Biology and behaviour: The immature stages, and to an extent the adults, are associated with sap from bleeding deciduous trees (oak, elm, cottonwood,
etc
.).
Classification: The genera comprising
Periscelidinae
are those that
Hennig (1969)
included in his more restricted concept of the family,
viz.
Periscelis
Loew
,
Marbenia
Malloch, 1931
,
Neoscutops
Malloch, 1926
,
Scutops
Coquillett
and
Diopsosoma
Malloch, 1932
. These five genera comprise a wellestablished, monophyletic assemblage, with corroborative synapomorphies as follows: (1) mouth opening large; (2) occiput with a silverywhite, microtomentose area immediately adjacent to the posterior margin of the compound eye; (3) only one frontoorbital seta, reclinate; (4) costal vein short, extended only to vein
R
4+5
; (5) vein
CuA
2
reduced or absent; (6) several characters of the male terminalia (see
Griffiths 1972
).