A taxonomic revision of the Eucelatoria ferox species group (Diptera: Tachinidae)
Author
Burington, Zelia L.
text
Zootaxa
2022
2022-06-01
5143
1
1
104
http://zoobank.org/f71553b2-7d58-4e61-a883-546b2a0124d5
journal article
112021
10.11646/zootaxa.5143.1.1
9d7cad94-f472-47eb-a988-5569e479204e
1175-5326
6601404
F71553B2-7D58-4E61-A883-546B2A0124D5
Eucelatoria crambivora
sp. nov.
(
Figs 32
,
77
,
179
)
Type material.
Holotype
♂
, labeled “LEGS AWAY/ FOR DNA”, “DHJPAR0044950”, “Voucher:
D.H. Janzen
&
W. Hallwachs
/ DB: http://janzen.sas.upen.edu/
Area de Conservacion
Guanacaste
,/
COSTA RICA
./ 11 -SRNP-55780”, “
HOLOTYPE
/
Eucelatoria
/ crambivora/ ZL Burington [red label]”, “
Eucelatoria
/ Janzen10.2/ ZL Burington 20”, “ZLB_E.Ferox 00404” (
CNC
).
Recognition.
The male of
E. crambivora
sp. nov.
is most similar to
E. jorgecortesi
sp. nov.
and
E. woodorum
sp. nov.
in sharing four thin thoracic vittae, broad and even abdominal tomentum bands, and yellow palpi. It differs from both species in that the parafacial tomentum is gray.
Etymology.
From the Latin suffix -
vora
(“eater”) and the host family of moths,
Crambidae
.
Description.
Male
[described from
1 specimen
]. Length
8.5 mm
.
Head. Fronto-orbital plate, vertex, and upper half of post-ocular plate tomentum dense yellow. Parafacial, vibrissal angle, genal dilation, lower half of post-ocular plate, postgena, and occiput tomentum ash-gray to gray. Pale occipital setae yellow-gray. Ocellar setae more than three-fourths length of posterior reclinate orbital seta. Gena with 3–4 setae, subvibrissal ridge with 1 strong seta, a second thinner seta present. Facial ridge with setulae on less than lower one-third. Postocellar setae two-thirds length of ocellar setae. Paravertical seta two-thirds length of postocellar setae. Outer vertical seta slightly differentiated from post-orbital row, no more than one-fourth length of inner vertical seta. Reclinate orbital setae 3. Frontal setae 8, last frontal seta level with base of arista. Eye apparently bare. Eye height to head height ratio 0.85. Postpedicel length 0.51 height of head. Facial ridge length 0.28 height of head. Parafacial width 0.12 lateral length of head. Pedicel 0.36 length of postpedicel. Postpedicel 1.7 times width of parafacial in lateral view. Vertex 0.22 width of head in dorsal view. Palpus yellow, slightly dilated and flattened at apex; with dense short, stout setulae dorsoapically, and longer, thinner setulae mediolaterally.
Thorax. Dorsomedial length 1.3 times width of thorax. Lateral tomentum gray. Dorsal tomentum yellow. Presutural outer vitta subtriangular, pointed anteriorly. disconnected from anterior margin Postsutural outer vitta subfusiform, disconnected from presutural outer vitta and inner vitta. Inner thoracic vittae slightly divergent, bar-shaped; extending to second postsutural dorsocentral seta. Scutellar dorsal tomentum dirty gray, covering one-half area. Postpronotum with 3 setae. Presutural area with 2 supra-alar setae. Postsutural area with 3 dorsocentral setae. Scutellum with 1 pair discal setae. Fore tibia with 2 posterodorsal setae. Wing hyaline. Calypters tan to cream colored.
Abdomen. Cuticle and setulae entirely black. Dorsal tomentum bands gray, even, covering one-half to threefourths T3–5, with at most a thin, indistinct median vitta. Ventral tomentum bands ash-gray, covering one-half to two thirds T3–5, with diffuse tomentum near margin of T1+2. T4 marginal setae forming continuous row, such that there appear to be 2 pairs of medial marginal setae and more than 4 pairs of lateral marginal setae extending to ventral margin of T4.
Terminalia. Unknown [
holotype
was not dissected as it is the only known individual].
Female
. Unknown.
Host(s).
One individual was reared from an undescribed species of
Crambidae
feeding on
Iresina diffusa
Humb. & Bonpl. (Amaranthaceae)
(
Janzen & Hallwachs 2008
).
Geographic extent and seasonal occurrence.
This species is known only from the
type
locality, where it was collected in seasonal moist forest at
733 m
elevation (
Fig. 179
).
Discussion.
Eucelatoria crambivora
sp. nov.
,
E. jorgecortesi
sp. nov.
, and
E. woodorum
sp. nov.
appear to form a species complex of Crambidae-parasitizing individuals with yellow palpi and broad abdominal bands. This would suggest that the female of
E. crambivora
sp. nov.
would also have a short piercer, as do females of the other two species. The parafacial color should reliably separate
E. jorgecortesi
sp. nov.
from the other two. Genetic data strongly support
E. crambivora
sp. nov.
and
E. jorgecortesi
sp. nov.
as sister species (
Fig. 1
).