Oxysarcodexia Townsend, 1917 (Diptera: Sarcophagidae) - a centennial conspectus
Author
Souza, Carina Mara De
carina_mara@yahoo.com.br
Author
Pape, Thomas
tpape@snm.ku.dk
Author
Thyssen, Patricia Jacqueline
carina_mara@yahoo.com.br
text
Zootaxa
2020
2020-08-31
4841
1
1
126
journal article
8542
10.11646/zootaxa.4841.1.1
18306272-d3ad-494e-a630-cf9f40132d2f
1175-5326
4405603
F55A3BE7-673C-4D46-9FC4-D5B5C7041DC0
Oxysarcodexia trivialis
(
Wulp, 1895
)
(
Figs 264–266
)
Sarcophaga trivialis
Wulp, 1895: 268
; 277;
Mexico
,
Guerrero
, Tierra Colorada;
Mexico
,
Guerrero
, Xucumanatlan;
Mexico
, Amula;
Mexico
,
Morelos
, Cuernavaca;
Mexico
,
Veracruz
, Atoyac;
Mexico
,
Tabasco
, Teapa. Seventeen male and nine female
syntypes
in NHMUK (not examined). [Described from “several specimens of both sexes” (
Wulp 1895: 277
), and with six different localities mentioned;
Aldrich (1930: 32)
examined “seventeen males, nine females” that he separated “into
ten species
” (his emphasis); Aldrich further stated: “I restrict the species to three males of the last-named group from Amula and one from Atoyac” (p. 33); this restriction, however, is not regulated by the
Code
.]
Diagnosis.
Male. Length 9.0 mm. Postocular plate with golden pollinosity. Ocellar bristles weakly developed. Thorax and abdomen with golden pollinosity, more evident laterally, T5 partly with golden pollinosity. Two welldifferentiated posterior and 1–3 smaller anterior post-sutural dorsocentrals. Apical scutellar bristles present. Legs blackish. T3 with 3 pairs of lateral marginal bristles, T4 with 1 pair of median marginal and 3 pairs of lateral marginal bristles. ST5 with deep median cleft with margins almost parallel and with pilosity and bristles at apex of arms. Cercus sinuous in lateral view, with expanded obliquely cut apex. Cercus with bristles ventrally present at distal third. Cerci with distal third as broad as middle part in posterior view; parallel. Pregonite with expanded base and sudden narrowing at apex, which is darker than base. Postgonite with expanded base, gradually narrowing to apex; unicolorous. Distiphallus with smooth ventroapical margin, rounded apex and straight dorsal outline. Vesica symmetrical, with rounded median projection of main branch; distal lobes well developed, with filaments, tapering, partially membranous, with microscopic spines only on ventral surface.
Remarks.
The main characteristic enabling a reliable identification of
O. trivialis
is the slender vesica, which is partially membranous and with microscopic spines (
Fig. 265
). See also remarks under
O. edwardsi
. The female of
O. trivialis
has an undivided T7 (
Tibana & Mello 1985
).
Distribution.
NEARCTIC.
Mexico
(
Distrito Federal
,
Michoacán
,
Morelos
,
Puebla
),
USA
(
Arizona
,
New Mexico
). NEOTROPICAL.
Costa Rica
,
El Salvador
,
Guatemala
,
Mexico
(
Chiapas
,
Guerrero
,
Michoacán
,
Nuevo León
,
Sinaloa
,
Tabasco
,
Veracruz
),
Panama
.
Biology.
Oxysarcodexia trivialis
has been bred from human feces (
Howard 1900
). It can also be an occasional flower visitor on avocado (
Persea americana
Mill.
,
Lauraceae
) (
Castañeda-Vildózola
et al.
1999
).
Material examined.
[
♂
]
COSTA RICA
:
Puntarenas
,
Las Alturas
,
Cerro Chai
,
2100m
,
14.viii.1995
,
Th. Pape
leg. [
NHMD
] // [
♂
]
COSTA RICA
:
San José
,
Rio Savegre
,
9km
SW route 2,
San Gerardo de Dota
2200–2500m
,
7–11.viii.1995
,
Th. Pape
leg. [
NHMD
] // [
♂
] TIRIBL—5.1.abril-56
Zel.
col. /
Oxysarcodexia trivialis
(Wulp) Det. H. S. Lopes
♂
[
MNRJ
].