Reevaluation of species richness in Winnertzia (Diptera, Cecidomyiidae, Winnertziinae), with descriptions of 37 new species from Sweden, Peru and Australia
Author
Jaschhof, Mathias
0000-0003-3447-1620
Author
Jaschhof, Catrin
0000-0002-1030-0934
mjaschhof@yahoo.de
text
Zootaxa
2020
2020-08-11
4829
1
1
72
journal article
8695
10.11646/zootaxa.4829.1.1
04b19d7f-1d74-41ec-b657-9b57f47826f9
1175-5326
4402757
7B34E058-03B4-44D0-AC4E-065B010172E1
Winnertzia brachytarsus
sp. nov.
Figs 7–9
Diagnosis.
A small, brown
Winnertzia
with short antennae and short palpi. The fore tarsus of
W. brachytarsus
is appreciably shorter than in other species of the
discreta
group, the second tarsomere being only about half as long as the tibia. Male genitalic characters specific to this species are as follows (
Fig. 9
). The elongate, subcylindrical gonostylus is covered with dense, moderately long microtrichia apicomedially (↓
1
); of the gonocoxites, the ventral emargination is perfectly U-shaped, the ventroposterior portions form broadly rounded lobes (↓
2
) that extend beyond the dorsoposterior portions, and the dorsal apodemes are short; the tegmen has large flaps with marginal microtrichia (↓
3
); and the posterior edge of the ninth tergite is indented medially.
Winnertzia brachytarsus
is known from the
holotype
male only; females and preimaginal stages are unknown.
Other male characters.
Body size
1.3 mm
.
Head.
Eye bridge 2–3 ommatidia long dorsally. Antenna shorter than half body. Scape and pedicel same size, both concolorous with flagellum. 10 flagellomeres, apical flagellomere long, translucent sensilla present on all flagellomeres. Fourth flagellomere: neck 0.3 times as long as node; node 1.5 times as long as broad; sensory hairs numerous; both lateral and medial translucent sensilla long, filiform to slightly broadened (
Figs 7–8
). Palpus clearly shorter than head height, 4 setae-bearing segments; second to fourth segment equally long. Labella fully developed, albeit small.
Thorax.
Pronotal setae 2. Anepimeral setae absent. Lateral mediotergal microtrichia conspicuously large. Parascutellar area bright, vaguely contoured.
Wing
shorter than body, 2.3 times as long as broad. Costal cell reinforced. M
4
faint, CuA gently bent, both veins extending to edge of wing.
Legs.
Scales pointed. Basitarsal spines absent. Acropods: claws slightly bent, toothless; empodia vestigial.
Abdomen.
Pleural membrane devoid of setae.
Genitalia
(
Fig. 9
). Ninth tergite shorter than half gonopodal length; setae confined to posterior portion; anterior edge straight, indistinct. Gonocoxal synsclerite slightly broader than long; ventral emargination membranous basally; ventroanterior edge slightly convex; dorsal apodemes shorter than half the distance separating them. Gonostylus 2.5 times as long as broad, nearly parallel-sided, straight; basolateral apophysis small, angulated. Aedeagal apodeme parallel-sided; apex slightly narrowed; solid basal portion short. Aedeagal bulge with closely spaced rows of tiny spikes. Tegmen sharply contoured, markedly tapered towards rounded apex; parameral apodemes small.
Etymology.
The name, a noun in apposition, refers to the unusually short tarsi of this species.
Type material.
Holotype
.
Male
,
Sweden
,
Småland
,
Nybro
,
Bäckebo
,
Grytsjön Nature Reserve
, old-growth forest of conifers mixed with aspen trees,
2–12 July 2005
,
Malaise trap
,
Swedish Malaise Trap
Project
(trap 1000, collection event 1323) (spn
CEC
1882 in
NHRS
).
Distribution and phenology.
The only specimen available of
W. brachytarsus
was collected at the height of summer in a mixed, old-growth hemiboreal forest in Småland, southern
Sweden
. Our studies over the past 15 years have shown the collecting site, Grytsjön Nature Reserve, to be a hotspot of
Winnertzia
diversity, with 30 species found there. In spite of the fact that we continued Malaise trapping in Grytsjön in several of the subsequent years, we failed to capture another specimen of
W. brachytarsus
.