Reevaluation of species richness in Winnertzia (Diptera, Cecidomyiidae, Winnertziinae), with descriptions of 37 new species from Sweden, Peru and Australia
Author
Jaschhof, Mathias
0000-0003-3447-1620
Author
Jaschhof, Catrin
0000-0002-1030-0934
mjaschhof@yahoo.de
text
Zootaxa
2020
2020-08-11
4829
1
1
72
journal article
8695
10.11646/zootaxa.4829.1.1
04b19d7f-1d74-41ec-b657-9b57f47826f9
1175-5326
4402757
7B34E058-03B4-44D0-AC4E-065B010172E1
Winnertzia setosa
group
Diagnosis.
This group is introduced here for species sharing three or more of the following similarities: the gonostylar claw is long, mostly narrow and, as a rule, exposed at or near the gonostylar apex; of the gonocoxites, the U-shaped emargination is surrounded by conspicuously large setae, the dorsal apodemes are short, and the dorso-posterior portions are not extended; the tegminal flaps are mostly distinct and occasionally microtrichose; and the spikes on the aedeagal bulge are unusually small. Several of the species classified in this group have broad, roundish wings and / or lack vein M
4
. The tarsal claws have almost always a single, large tooth basally.
Phylogeny.
Although the included species resemble each other closely, we are not entirely convinced that the
setosa
group is monophyletic Our suspicion comes from the fact that none of the derived character states found in this group is shared by all its members. A good example here is the absence of vein M
4
, a condition unknown to occur in
Winnertzia
outside the
setosa
group. The four species in
Sweden
lacking M
4
(
W. ekdalensis
,
W. grytsjoenensis
, two unnamed species) are not homogenous in other morphological features but blend in well with those species in which M
4
is present. This observation is important insofar as
Felt (1920)
had introduced a discrete genus,
Parwinnertzia
, for a
Winnertzia
-like female from North America whose only distinction is the lack of M
4
. As is now obvious, this condition should not be used as a generic character.
Parwinnertzia
is thus synonymized here with
Winnertzia
, and the two species previously classified in that genus,
P. notmani
Felt
and
P. italiana
Mamaev & Zaitzev
, are recombined accordingly. Another reason to be uncertain about the monophyly of the
setosa
group is that some of the included species show characters whose principal occurrence is in the
globifera
group. For example, the aedeagal apodeme of
W. grytsjoenensis
is markedly swollen above the solid basal portion (
Fig. 50
), and the gonostylar claw of
W. setosa
is in a subapical rather than apical position (
Fig. 59
).
Species included.
The
setosa
group is established for six species newly described here, including the eponymous
W. setosa
, and for the two species previously classified in
Parwinnertzia
, the Nearctic
W. notmani
comb. nov.
and the Palearctic
W. italiana
comb. nov.
Our material from
Sweden
contains another seven species belonging to this group, which we do not treat in detail here because the specimens at our disposal, in each case singletons, are not in a proper condition.
Remarks.
A likely explanation why the
setosa
group has not been detected earlier (in spite of its many members) is the fact that specimens of the included species are rarely found. Of the 13 species known to occur in
Sweden
we have seen only
24 specimens
in total, all but two specimens found in Malaise trap samples. This shows to what extent survey work on
Winnertzia
depends on Malaise trap material.