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
Meropsiella
Conci, 1941
Nirmus
Nitzsch, 1818
: 291
(
in partim
).
Degeeriella
Neumann, 1906
: 60
(
in partim
).
Brueelia
Kéler, 1936a
: 257
(
in partim
).
Type host.
Nirmus apiastri
Denny, 1842
: 52
, by original designation.
Diagnosis.
Meropsiella
is not particularly similar to any other genus treated here.
Meropsiella
was placed near
Meropoecus
and
Motmotnirmus
in the phylogeny of Bush
et al
. (2016), but this placement was not strongly supported. Morphologically, there are great differences among these three genera in many character sets; indeed, the male genitalia of
Meropsiella
and
Meropoecus
are so different that they are hard to compare. The marginal carina is interrupted submedianly in all three genera. However, the carina of
Motmotnirmus
is interrupted only submedianly (
Fig. 504
), whereas the carina of
Meropoecus
is reduced to a small remnant near the preantennal nodi (
Figs 494
,
499
) and the marginal carina of
Meropsiella
is interrupted submedianly and laterally, at least on the dorsal side (
Fig. 481
). In
Motmotnirmus
(
Fig. 504
) and
Meropsiella
(
Fig. 481
) the dorsal preantennal suture reaches the
dsms
but not the
ads
, but in
Meropoecus
the suture reaches the
ads
as well (
Figs 494
,
499
). The
mts
2
are macrosetae in
Motmotnirmus
(
Fig. 504
), and
mts
2
is longer than
mts
1
and
mts
4–5
in
Meropoecus
(
Figs 494
,
499
), but in
Meropsiella
all
mts
except
mts
3
are of equal length (
Fig. 481
). Gonopore is terminal in
Motmotnirmus
(
Fig. 506
), but ventral in
Meropsiella
(
Figs 484, 487, 490
), and other characters of the male genitalia are hard to compare between these three genera; the male genitalia of
Meropoecus
(
Figs 495
,
500
) are unique within the
Brueelia
- complex, and most of the terminology introduced here to describe the male genitalia of the
Brueelia
-complex are largely inapplicable to
Meropoecus
. The female subgenital plate and vulval margin of
Meropsiella
(
Fig. 482
) is structurally very similar to that of
Meropoecus
(
Figs 496
,
501
): both genera have broad lateral submarginal extensions of the subgenital plate, and in both genera, there is a distinct median extension of the subgenital plate, that may approach, but not reach, the vulval margin. Additionally, in both
Meropoecus
(
Figs 496
,
500
) and
Meropsiella
(
Fig. 482
), the
vss
and
vms
are largely mixed, and do not form separate sets. All these characters are in stark contrast to
Motmornirmus
(
Fig. 508
), in which the subgenital plate does reach the vulval margin, but does not have lateral submarginal extensions, and in which the
vss
and
vms
are separated into distinct sets.
Description.
Both sexes
. Head trapezoidal (
Fig. 481
). Marginal carina interrupted submedianly, but not completely interrupted laterally. Ventral carina continuous with marginal carina. Frons hyaline and continuous with dorsal preantennal suture that does not reach
ads
. Dorsal anterior plate continuous with main head plate. Ventral anterior plate absent. Head setae as in
Fig. 481
;
ads
very short, and may be absent in some species;
mds
and
pns
absent. Antennae monomorphic. Temporal carinae not visible;
mts
3
only macrosetae. Temporal margin bulges distinctly between
mts
3
and
mts
4
. Gular plate roughly triangular.
Prothorax (
Figs 479–480
) rounded rectangular;
ppss
absent or minute. Proepimera with hammer- or hookshaped median ends. Pterothorax rounded trapezoidal; lateral margins convex; posterior margin more or less flat (
contra
Denny, 1842
: 133
);
mms
moderately separated medianly. Meso- and metasterna not fused, setae only on postero-lateral corners of metasternum. Metepisterna with hammer-shaped median ends. Leg chaetotaxy as in
Fig. 25
, except
fI-v4, fI-p2, fII-v2, fIII-v2
absent;
tII-v1
and
tIII-v1
short.
Abdomen (
Figs 479–480
) elongated oval in both sexes, longer in female. Tergopleurites rectangular; tergopleurites II–IX+X in male and tergopleurites II–VIII in female moderately divided medianly. Sternal plates rectangular, medianly continuous, do not approach pleurites. Pleural incrassations moderate. Ventral section of tergopleurites moderate to wide. Re-entrant heads prominent. Anterior end of pleurite II with rectangular extensions medianly.
Male
subgenital plate rounded triangular, reaching posterior margin of abdomen. Female subgenital plate roughly triangular, approaching but not reaching vulval margin (
Fig. 482
). Lateral submarginal extensions present. Abdominal chaetotaxy as in
Table 2
. Vulval margin with median bulge (
Fig. 482
),
vss
and
vms
not forming separate rows;
vos
follow lateral margins of subgenital plate, not approaching vulval margin.
Male
genitalia (
Fig. 483–491
) variable. Basal apodeme trapezoidal (
Fig. 483
), rounded rectangular (
Fig. 486
), or pentagonal (
Fig. 489
). Proximal mesosome blunt, either broad (e.g.
Meropsiella apiastri
,
Fig. 484
) or narrow (e.g.
Ms
.
bullockoda
,
Fig. 487
). Proximal mesosome overlapping basal apodeme. Gonopore with broad marginal thickening that vary in shape (
Figs 484, 487, 490
); open only distally. Mesosomal lobes fused distally, often square-shaped, but variable between species; 2
ames
sensilla on each side lateral to gonopore; absent or not visible
in
Ms
.
apiastri
(
Fig. 484
); 2
pmes
sensilla on each side lateral or sublateral. Rugose nodi may be present as fringed or papillate sections of distal margins of mesosome (
Figs 487, 490
). Parameral heads bifid, but variable (
Figs 485, 488, 491
). Parameral blades generally broad, somewhat elongated, but those of
Ms
.
bullockoda
(
Fig. 488
) broad with irregular margins;
pst1–2
both sensilla, central, not near distal end of parameres.
Host distribution.
Species of this genus are only known from the genus
Merops
Linnaeus, 1758
, family
Meropidae
.
Geographic range.
Occurs throughout Africa and Europe to
South-East
Asia and
Australia
.
Remarks.
Meropsiella
was erected by
Conci (1941b: 104)
for the slender lice parasitising
Meropidae
.
Conci (1941b)
stated that
Meropsiella
is similar to
Brueelia
, but distinguished by the almost perfectly triangular head shape, the distinct clypeal suture located at about 4/5ths of the length of the head, the presence of a long and a short seta on the frons, and the lack of setae on the posterior dorsal corners of the prothorax. He included only one species in the genus
,
Ms
.
apiastri
, but suspected that
Ms
.
erythropteri
, which he was unable to examine, would be included as well.
Hopkins & Clay (1952: 225)
considered
Meropsiella
inseparable from
Brueelia
, a view followed also by
Price
et al
. (2003
: 198). In the phylogeny of Bush
et al
. (2016),
Meropsiella
was placed with strong support as a lineage sister to the main
Brueelia
-complex, together with several other genera (
Buerelius, Couala
,
Meropoecus
,
and
Motmotnirmus
) that parasitise non-passerines.
Mey & Barker (2014)
suggested that
Meropsiella
should be resurrected, but offered no reasons for their opinion.
To date, the only revision of the
Brueelia
-complex species on the bee-eaters is by
Williams (1981)
, who treated five species, three of which were newly described in that paper. However, we recognise
Brueelia bullockoda
Williams, 1981
as the only species belonging to
Meropsiella
, because we place
Br
. athertona
Williams,
1981
in
Aporisticeras
n. gen.
,
and
Brueelia superciliosa
Williams, 1981
is
a
junior synonym of
Alcedoffula alcedinis
(
Denny, 1842: 48
)
(see
Williams 1982b
). We have examined a large amount of lice from several species of beeeaters and found small but consistent differences between material we list as
Ms. erythropteri
in Appendix III; populations of
Ms. erythropteri
on different host species may be separate species.
Included species
*
Meropsiella apiastri
(
Denny, 1842: 52
)
[in
Nirmus
]
*
Meropsiella bullockoda
(
Williams, 1981: 516
)
[in
Brueelia
]
new combination
*
Meropsiella erythropteri
(
Piaget, 1885: 28
)
[in
Nirmus
]