Picicola Clay and Meinertzhagen (Phthiraptera: Philopteridae) from jacamars and puffbirds (Piciformes: Galbulidae, Bucconidae), with descriptions of five new species
Author
Price, Roger D.
Author
Weckstein, Jason D.
text
Zootaxa
2006
1367
37
50
journal article
10.5281/zenodo.174824
094fd388-43dc-452b-b2a4-a922f344bcb9
1175-5326
174824
Genus
Picicola
Clay and Meinertzhagen
Picicola
Clay and Meinertzhagen 1938
:74
.
Type
species:
Picicola praeposterus
Clay and Meinertzhagen
by original designation. Now recognized as
P. snodgrassi
(Kellogg)
.
A thorough characterization of this genus may be found in the works cited by
Valim and Linardi (2006)
. We provide here only the diagnostic characters that are pertinent to define the genus as it pertains to the jacamar and puffbird lice and serve to distinguish them as a unit from
Picicola
species found on various families of the suboscine Passeriformes and on the woodpeckers (
Piciformes
:
Picidae
).
General morphology as in
Figs. 1 and 2
. Head evenly rounded anteriorly, longer than wide, with temple slightly wider than preantennal portion; with conspicuous transverse dorsal preantennal suture; with well-developed complete marginal carina; each side of temple with two long marginal setae. Thorax with small quadrangular pronotum bearing single seta at each posterior corner; metanotum with four very long setae on each side; thoracic sternal plate large, with setae as shown. Abdomen slender, much longer than wide; tergites II–IX undivided medially; postspiracular setae very long on III–VII, shorter on VIII. Tergite II with medioanterior pair of setae in addition to medioposterior tergocentral setae. Female and male subgenital plates of fused sternites VII–IX. Male genitalia with prominent inwardly-curved parameres, a median slender penis, and complex of endomeral structures.
There is only slight sexual dimorphism, which is limited to males having somewhat smaller dimensions and differences associated with the posterior abdomen. Characters cited above for the genus will not be repeated in the species descriptions.