Morphological revision of the hyperdiverse Brueelia - complex (Insecta: Phthiraptera: Ischnocera: Philopteridae) with new taxa, checklists and generic key
Author
Bush, Sarah E.
text
Zootaxa
2017
2017-08-31
4313
1
1
443
journal article
32249
10.11646/zootaxa.4313.1.1
d8cc2cd8-8410-49aa-a75d-7a41d9f52b26
1175-5326
883161
A5Fdfba5-F992-44A8-84C2-1756C943C19B
Anarchonirmus
Gustafsson & Bush
,
new genus
Type species.
Anarchonirmus albovittatus
new species
Diagnosis
.
Anarchonirmus
n. gen.
does not appear to be very close to any of the previously treated genera. The male genitalia are most similar to those of
Brueelia
s. str.
(
Figs 45–47
). Like in
Brueelia
s. str.
(
Fig. 48
), the female subgenital plate of
Anarchonirmus
(
Fig. 121
) flares into a cross-piece; however in
Anarchonirmus
the cross-piece is medianly displaced.
as3
and
pns
are absent in both
Brueelia
s. str.
(
Fig. 44
) and
Anarchonirmus
(
Fig. 116
). However, unlike in
Brueelia
s. str.
(
Fig. 44
), the antennae are sexually dimorphic in
Anarchonirmus
(
Figs 116– 117
), and whereas in
Brueelia
s. str.
(
Figs 42–43
) the tergopleurites in are rectangular and reach the lateral margins of the abdomen, the tergopleurites of
Anarchonirmus
(
Figs 114–115
) are much reduced and no not reach the lateral margins of the abdomen.
Brueelia
s. str.
lacks
aps
and
psps
on more anterior segments (
Figs 42–43
), but these are present in
Anarchonirmus
(
Figs 114–115
; see also
Tables 2–3
).
The structure and chaetotaxy of the head of
Anarchonirmus
(
Fig. 116
) is similar to that of
Sychraella
n. gen.
(
Fig. 108
) and
Teinomordeus
n. gen.
(
Fig. 77
). In all three genera the antennae are sexually dimorphic; however, the dimorphism is more extreme in
Anarchonirmus
(
Figs 116–117
) than in either of the other two genera (
Figs 77– 78
,
108–109
). In
Sychraella
(
Figs 106–107
) and in
Anarchonirmus
(
Figs 114–115
) the
ads
is sexually dimorphic, and in both these genera the sternal plates and subgenital plates of both sexes have deeply concave lateral margins (
Figs 106–107
,
114–115
). However, while male
Sychraella
(
Fig. 106
) have no setae on tergopleurites II–III, male
Anarchonirmus
(
Fig. 114
) have both
aps
, psps,
tps
, and
ss
on these segments. Female
Sychraella
have no setae apart from
ps
on tergopleurites II–VII (
Fig. 107
), yet both
psps
and
ss
are present on these segments in
Anarchonirmus
(
Fig. 115
).
Description.
Both sexes
. Head indented-dome shaped (
Fig. 116
). Marginal carina uninterrupted; displaced dorsally and posteriorly at osculum. Clypeo-labral suture does not reach the anterior margin of the head. Ventral carinae fused to short but broad ventral anterior plate continuous with marginal carina. Broad median fingers of ventral carinae protrude into clypeo-labral suture. Dorsal preantennal suture absent. Head setae as in
Fig. 116
;
ads
sexually dimorphic;
as3
and
pns
absent;
vsms2
on lateral margins of ventral anterior plate;
s1–2
and
pts
not visible in the material examined;
s3–4
mesosetae. Coni short and broad, obscured almost entirely by lateral protrusions of the head in male. Antennae sexually dimorphic; male scapes (
Fig. 116
) swollen, longer than female scapes (
Fig. 117
). Temporal carinae not visible;
mts
3
only temporal macrosetae. Gular plate slender, pentagonal.
Prothorax (
Figs 114–115
) rectangular;
ppss
on postero-lateral corner. Proepimera slender; median ends blunt. Pterothorax pentagonal; lateral margins divergent; posterior margin convergent to median point;
mms
moderately separated medianly. Meso- and metasterna not fused; 1 seta on postero-lateral corner of each side of each plate. Metepisterna moderate; median ends blunt. Leg chaetotaxy as in
Fig. 25
, except
fI-v4, fI-p2–4, fII-v2, fIII-v2
absent;
cI-d1, cI-v3, tII-d1
not visible in the material examined;
cIII-v2–3
of about equal length.
Abdomen (
Figs 114–115
) oval. Abdominal chaetotaxy as in
Table 2
. Tergopleurites hook-shaped, encircling spiracle openings; tergopleurites II–IX+X in male and tergopleurites II–VIII in female widely separated medianly; tergopleurite IX+X in female continuous with lateral section of tergopleurite XI. Sternal plates with concave lateral margins; only anterior and posterior margin pigmented in female. Antero-lateral corners of tergopleurites thickened, but plates do not reach lateral margins of abdomen. Abdominal setae generally thick.
Male
subgenital plate of irregular shape, reaching posterior margin of abdomen. Female subgenital plate roughly triangular; anterior margin pigmented; distally reaches vulval margin where it flares; postero-lateral margins thickened. Vulval margin (
Fig. 121
) with slender
vms
, thorn-like
vss
;
vos
follow lateral margins of subgenital plate.
Basal apodeme (
Fig. 118
) constricted at mid-length, anterior end pointed. Proximal mesosome trapezoidal. Gonopore (
Fig. 119
) slight, open distally, associated anteriorly with lateral extensions. Mesosomal lobes elongated, rugose; lateral and distal margins serrated;
ames
and
pmes
not visible. Parameral heads (
Fig. 120
) blunt. Parameral blades elongated, slender; distinct heel at about half length (
Fig. 82
);
pst1
not visible;
pst2
microseta, lateral near distal tip of paramere.
Host distribution.
Presently known only from the host genus
Pomatostomus
. We have seen some specimens from
P
.
superciliosus ashbyi
Mathews, 1911
, but these are too poorly preserved to compare with the material from
P
.
temporalis strepitans
.
Geographical range.
New Guinea.
Etymology.
The name
Anarchonirmus
is ultimately derived from Greek “
an-
” for “without” and
“archos
” for “leader”. “Anarchy” usually denotes a form of socialist society in which there are no hierarchies or leaders. However “
anarchos
” is here used in the derived meaning of “chaotic, unruly”, referring to the wild mixture of morphological characters that defies close association with any of the other genera in the
Brueelia
-complex. “
Nirmus
” is a common generic suffix in louse taxonomy, referring to Nitzsch’s (1818) genus of the same name. Gender: masculine.
Remarks.
Anarchonirmus
was not included in the phylogeny of Bush
et al
. (2016), and its position within the
Brueelia
-complex is uncertain.
Included species
*
Anarchonirmus albovittatus
new species