Basal Cyclorrhapha In Amber From The Cretaceous And Tertiary (Insecta: Diptera), And Their Relationships: Brachycera In Cretaceous Amber Part Ix David A. Grimaldi
Author
Grimaldi, David A.
Division of Invertebrate Zoology American Museum of Natural History, New York
text
Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History
2018
2018-10-24
2018
423
1
97
http://www.bioone.org/doi/10.1206/0003-0090-423.1.1
journal article
7631
10.1206/0003-0090-423.1.1
2e886aea-b59a-45a6-aeaa-2427d584a894
0003-0090
4613008
Hennigophora pria
(Grimaldi and Cumming)
,
new combination
Figures 18
,
46C
,
47A
Archiphora pria
Grimaldi and Cumming, 1999: 97
.
SUMMARY: The original (
holotype
) specimen of
H. pria
is covered with a milky coating that obscures many surface details, critically the acrostichals, as well as the presence/absence of a median furrow on the frons, and terminalia, though portions of larger macrosetae protrude through the coating. A new specimen in
New Jersey
amber, AMNH NJ-Ch1, has some critical features that are better preserved, but this specimen lost the left side of the head and thorax before or during fossilization, and the abdomen has a thin milky coating. A few acrostichals can be seen in left profile, which appear to be in one (or possibly several) rows and are significantly smaller than those in
H. robusta
(whose acrostichals are about as large as the flanking dorsocentrals; fig. 19). Male genitalic structure cannot be compared to
H. robusta
since this specimen is female. Most importantly, the stridulatum is present in AMNH NJ-Ch1, with a scraper very visible on the mesal surface of the right profemur, and a file on the lateral surface of the left procoxa. The location, arc, and length of the stridulatum are just as in living sciadocerines, but the number and structure of ridges and teeth are not visible. A stridulatum was also observed in
H. robusta
based on a file on the right procoxa of a male specimen, AMNH Ba-JH58 (fig. 19) (this specimen also lacks a median furrow on the frons).
Hennigophora pria
is similar to
H. robusta
in venation (proportions and lengths of main veins, a tubular stem of M; fig. 47A, B), setation of legs; and a broad frons (judging from the preserved right half in AMNH NJ-Ch1). It differs from
H. robutsa
by having a pair of reclinate interfrontals, near the frontal margin of the frons (vs. absent); also, setae are shorter, especially the acrostichals, supraalars, postalars, and scutellars. In agreement with
Brown (2007a)
,
Archiphora
should be restricted to the sole living species.