Revision of early taxa of Australian gall midges (Diptera: Cecidomyiidae)
Author
Kolesik, Peter
Author
Gagné, Raymond J.
text
Zootaxa
2016
4205
4
301
338
journal article
37404
10.11646/zootaxa.4205.4.1
eb5dfbad-e024-4318-b58e-6d9b9e19eac3
1175-5326
208241
BAC8F107-21D6-49FE-BAC7-BF4EE6C3E6A4
Sphenolasioptera
Kolesik & Gagné
new genus
[Fig. 14]
Type species:
Lasioptera vastatrix
Skuse 1888
: 128
. Monotypic.
Description
.
Adults.
Head. Palpus 3-segmented, palpiger present. Labella acutely tapered in dorsal view. Female antennal flagellomeres 15 (see note in
S. vastatrix
description below), first and second flagellomeres fused, barrel-shaped in both sexes, circumfila consisting of two transverse and two connecting longitudinal bands. Wing: R4+5 2/3 wing length, straight, closely adjacent to R1 and C, C with break at juncture with R4+5, Cu forked, wingfold visible. Tarsal claws toothed, empodia as long as claws. Male terminalia: gonocoxites cylindrical, gonocoxal apodemes merged basally; gonostylus with comb-like tooth apically, microtrichose basally, carinate beyond, cerci triangular; hypoproct bilobed; mediobasal lobes subdivided, dorsal part short, hemispherical, long-microtrichose, ventral part long-tapered, tightly sheathing aedeagus, apically with short setae, elsewhere with long microtrichia. Ovipositor: eversible part with dense group of numerous hooked bristles on each side, protrusible part fairly long, partially obscured; cerci fused, rigid, pigmented, bilaterally flattened, anteriorly with a dorsal and two lateral apodemes (Fig. 14d), dorsally with single row of large, scooped setae along most of length followed near apex with single row of minute, scooped setae, with scattered, simple, short, lateral and ventral setae; hypoproct not evident.
Pupa.
Antennal horns present (“head bifid in front”), dorsal spines absent (
Skuse 1888
).
Larva.
Spatula with 4 lateral papillae on each side, 2 of them with short setae, the ventral papilla closely approximated to lateral papillae, without seta; terminal segment with three setose papillae on each side.
Etymology.
The name combines “sphen”, Greek for wedge, referring to the shape of the fused cerci, and
Lasioptera
, the
type
genus of the tribe
Lasiopterini
. The gender is feminine.
Remarks.
The uniquely derived character of
Sphenolasioptera
within the
Lasiopterini
is the partially rigid ovipositor.
Lasiopterini
contain three other genera in
Australia
:
Lasioptera
Meigen
,
Actilasioptera
Gagné
and
Dactylasioptera
Kolesik & Veenstra-Quah.
Lasioptera
and
Dactylasioptera
have soft ovipositors with cerci bearing scooped setae while
Actilasioptera
has a rigid ovipositor without scooped setae.
Sphenolasioptera
differs from these genera by having a partially rigid ovipositor with cerci that bear scooped setae.
Sphenolasioptera
and
Actilasioptera
further differ from
Lasioptera
and
Dactylasioptera
by the apparent lack of a hypoproct. The ridged fused cerci of
Sphenolasioptera
are possibly used as a wedge between grass leaves during oviposition. To accommodate the new genus in the key to
Cecidomyiinae
genera of
Australia
and
Papua New Guinea
(
Kolesik 2014
) the following addition is made:
35 Ovipositor at least partly rigid, without apparent hypoproct.................................................. 35a – Ovipositor soft, with obvious hypoproct.................................................................. 36 35a Ovipositor with entire protrusible part rigid and glabrous, with only straight setae apically...........
Actilasioptera
Gagné
– Ovipositor with protrusible part mostly flexible, the cerci bilaterally flattened, rigid, microtrichose and bearing scooped setae.
........................................................................
Sphenolasioptera
Kolesik & Gagné
Endemic
to
Australia
,
1 sp.
,
S. vastatrix
(Skuse)
, causing stem swellings on unidentified grass.
FIGFURE 14
.
Sphenolasioptera vastatrix
(Skuse)
. a,c: male; b, d–g: female; h–j: larva.
(a)
terminalia in dorsal view (left lobe of hypoproct missing), (
b
) mouthparts in ventral view, (
c
) part of last tarsomere with claw and empodium, (
d
) postabdomen in lateral view, (
e
) fused cerci in lateral view, (
f
) sixth flagellomere, (
g
) wing, (
h
) spatula with adjacent papillae, (
i
) head (left antenna missing), (
j
) terminal segment in dorsal view.