Revision of the northern South American species of Mortoniella Ulmer 1906 (Trichoptera: Glossosomatidae: Protoptilinae) *
Author
Blahnik, Roger J.
Author
Holzenthal, Ralph W.
text
Insecta Mundi
2017
2017-12-29
2017
602
1
251
journal article
10.5281/zenodo.5170203
1942-1354
5170203
AB1A57F0-7CB4-4830-920B-DF219740A596
Mortoniella
(
Mortoniella
)
flexuosa
,
new species
Fig. 33
,
111
This species is very similar to
M. bolivic
a (Flint), as discussed in the diagnosis for that species, and the two form a closely related species pair. The species are unusual for members of the
M leroda
species group in having an elongate, reflexed, dorsolateral lobe on each of the inferior appendages. That of
M. flexuosa
is diagnostic in being more elongate and sinuously bent, and the apicoventral projection of the inferior appendage is also much more acute.
Mortoniella flexuosa
also has a small, sclerotized projection or tubercle on the phallicata that is apparently absent in
M. bolivica
. There is some size variation in the material examined. The
holotype
appears as in the illustration; the
paratypes
, which include the female specimens, are smaller in size and have the ventral projection of the inferior appendages slightly shorter. There are no other significant structural differences and we infer the differences to be populational variation.
Adult
—Length of forewing: male
3.8-4.8 mm
; female
4.1-4.6 mm
. Forewing with forks I, II, and III present, hind wing with forks II and III. Spur formula 0:4:4. Overall color light brown. Tibial spurs slightly darker in color, contrasting with legs. Wing bar at anastamosis relatively indistinct, interrupted, marked with whitish setae.
Male genitalia
—Ventral process of segment VI laterally compressed, very large, subtriangular, posteroventrally projecting, width at base nearly as long as segment, subequal to length. Segment IX nearly evenly rounded anterolaterally, length greatest midlaterally, posterolateral margin weakly convexly rounded dorsally, narrowing ventrally; segment deeply mesally excised dorsally and ventrally, forming lateral lobes, separated dorsomesally by much less than ½ width of segment. Tergum X with excision between lateral lobes nearly linear; apicolateral lobes distinctly sclerotized, acute, curved inward from lateral margins, mesal margins subparallel. Inferior appendages relatively large and prominent, setose, nearly completely divided ventromesally, apicolateral angles projecting and very acutely narrowed, dorsolateral lobes elongate, narrow, sinuous, posteriorly recurved, apices acute. Mesal pockets of inferior appendage with apical processes relatively short, dorsally curved. Paramere appendages moderately elongate, narrow, extending about as far as apical inflection of dorsal phallic spine. Dorsal phallic spine, as viewed laterally, only slightly widened in basal ½, narrowing apically, base distinctly curved, apex weakly and obtusely upturned in about apical 1/3 or 1/4; in dorsal view, with apical inflection distinctly widened (dorsoventrally flattened), apex asymmetrical and irregularly serrate. Phallicata with dorsal margin weakly sclerotized, apparently to accommodate dorsal phallic spine, laterally with rounded protrusion, apparently to accommodate flexed dorsal lobe of inferior appendages. Endophallic membrane moderately elongate and relatively simple, with small membranous apical and preapical lobes, ventrally with pair of distinctly sclerotized, curved spines; phallotremal spines absent.
Holotype
male
(pinned)—
COLOMBIA
:
Quindió
:
Río Quindió
,
Retén
“La Playa”, ca.
2 km
NE
Salento
,
4.64028° N
,
75.55667° W
,
1890 m
,
2.i.1998
,
F
Muñoz-Q et al. (
UMSP000209628
) (
UMSP
).
Paratypes
—
COLOMBIA
:
Cauca
:
Municipio de Belalcazar, Quebrada Tálaga, ca.
14 km
N
Páez (Belalcazar),
2.70667° N
,
76.01806° W
,
1680 m
,
22.xii.1997
,
F
Muñoz-Q et al.–
2 males
,
2 females
(pinned) (
UMSP
),
1 male
,
1 female
(pinned) (
NMNH
).
Etymology
—This species is named
M. flexuosa
from the Latin
flexuosus
, meaning winding or with many bends, and referring to the sinuously bent dorsolateral process of the inferior appendage in this species.