A new genus, Protaustrosimulium, for four species of Australian black flies (Diptera: Simuliidae)
Author
Currie, Douglas C.
Author
Craig, Douglas A.
Author
Moulton, John K.
text
Zootaxa
2018
2018-11-15
4521
3
301
334
journal article
27956
10.11646/zootaxa.4521.3.1
a3a0ed95-6968-4792-b451-81d8acba882e
1175-5326
2609903
F5736D61-B519-4F13-93FC-FCCAEC9505B4
Protaustrosimulium terebrans
(Tonnoir)
. New combination
(
Figs. 67–83
)
Simulium terebrans
Tonnoir 1925
: 238
. Original description, female only.
Simulium
(
Cnephia
)
terebrans
.
Edwards, 1931
: 131
.
Cnephia terebrans
.
Smart, 1945
:499
.
(
Cnephia
of authors)
terebrans
.
Crosskey, 1987
: 443. Unplaced species of
Prosimuliini
.
Paracnephia terebrans
.
Crosskey & Howard, 1997
: 18
.
Bugledich 1999
: 329
.
Paracnephia terebrans
.
Adler & Crosskey, 2008
: 26
. Transferred to
Simuliini
.
Redescription
.
Adult female
(based on five pinned specimens from ANIC and one from McKenzie Falls).
Body
(
Fig. 67
): markedly evenly blackish brown with dark brown abdomen; total length
ca
.
3.5 mm
.
Head
(
Figs. 68, 69
): frons moderately narrowed, tapered only slightly towards antennae; width
ca
.
0.13 mm
; depth
ca
.
0.56 mm
; postocciput black, vestiture of markedly sparse, long black hairs; frons, dark brown-black, vestiture of markedly sparse hairs; frons:head ratio 1.0:6.5.
Eyes
: interocular distance
ca
.
0.13 mm
; ommatidia diameter
0.014–0.016 mm
;
ca.
33 rows across and down at mid-eye.
Clypeus
: width
0.23–0.25 mm
; moderate vestiture of fine silvery hairs.
Antenna
(
Fig. 70
): dark brown; total length
0.70–0.72 mm
; scape small, pedicel and flagellomere I similar in size, rectangular, next five flagellomeres broader than long, apical flagellomere cone-shaped; antenna overall not tapered.
Mouthparts
: substantive, 0.5–0.7× length of head depth (longest in McKenzie Falls specimen); cibarium (
Fig. 73
) median depression flat, cornuae short, broadly flared and substantially sclerotized; mandible (
Fig. 71, 72
) with
ca.
18 outer and 57 inner teeth, many finely expressed; lacinia with
ca.
19 and 26 teeth; maxillary palp (
Fig. 71
), dark brown, total length
ca.
0.70 mm
, basal two palpomeres small, palpomere III darker brown than remainder, only slightly extended beyond articulation; palpomere IV markedly extended apicolaterally beyond articulation with palpomere V; proportional lengths of palpomeres III–V 1.0:0.7:1.0; sensory organ spherical, 0.3× length of palpomere III, opening 0.5× vesicle width.
Thorax
: length
1.6 mm
; width
0.95–1.20 mm
; evenly black; pronotal lobe slightly lighter in colour with fine hair longer than on scutum, scutum black with overall even sparse fine small golden hairs; scutellar depression similar; scutellum concolourous with scutum, vestiture of long hairs, black laterally, pale medially; postnotum concolourous with scutellum, pollinose in some lighting; antepronotal lobe (propleuron), proepisternum and forecoxa with long fine hairs; pleuron and anepisternal membrane dark brown, without hairs, pollinose in some lighting; katepisternal sulcus shallow.
Wing
(
Figs. 74
,
75
): length
2.3–3.5 mm
; a:b ratio 1.0:2.7, width
1.5–1.7 mm
; anterior veins dark brown, small basal cell present; costa with spines, R
s
not branched, M
2
markedly double, CuA sinuous, but not markedly so.
Haltere
: knob dark brown, stem testaceous.
Legs
: (
Fig. 76
): evenly dark brown; hind basitarsus lacking ventral row of stout spines; calcipala
ca
. half width of basitarsus, as long as wide; intersegmental plate ventrally between basitarsus and basal tarsomere distinct; pedisulcus deeply incised near base, area lacking pigmentation; tarsomere II not markedly elongated, 2.3× longer than apical width; claws small (
Fig. 77
), serrated, basal tooth small and distinctly lateral to broad heel, (as illustrated by
Tonnoir, 1925
: his
Fig. 3H
. In
Mackerras & Mackerras, 1949
: their
Fig. 10
, the tooth is shown as double).
Abdomen
(
Fig. 78
): basal scale dark brown, vestiture of long yellow hairs; remaining segments dark brown, tergites dark orange brown; tergite II markedly broadly bowl-shaped, tergites III–VI rectangular, wider than long and similar sized; vestiture of markedly sparse small hairs increased in length and density posteriorly; remainder of tergites enlarged laterally and rounded; pleurites poorly developed, cuticle markedly pleated; sternites apparently absent; tergites broader in McKenzie Falls specimen.
Genitalia
: sternite VIII evenly pigmented across full width, vestiture of rows of microtrichia, large strong hairs posterolaterally; hypogynial valves (
Figs. 79, 80
), lightly pigmented, vestiture of triads of microtrichia, median edges of valves variable, either slightly concave or convex, but markedly strengthened, moderately rounded apicolaterally; genital fork (
Fig. 81
) anterior arm flattened laterally as a bar (distorted in Figure), two rounded lobes at junction with remainder, lateral arms broad, apodeme small and close to posterolateral expansions, rounded laterally, rectangular medially; spermatheca spherical, dark brown, externally smooth, sparse acanthae, clear area at junction with duct absent, pigment extended for short distance along spermathecal duct (
Fig. 82
); cerci in lateral view slightly extended, rounded apically, anal lobe not markedly expressed (
Fig. 83
).
Male
: unknown.
Pupa
: unknown.
Larva
: unknown.
Types
.
Holotype
.
Pinned
female.
Label
data: [
Victoria
, Sassafras/
22-x-1922
.
Coll. Tonnoir
/
Caught
while biting]. (
ca
.
S37.8600°
E145.3500°
).
ANIC
.
Additional material
.
Tonnoir (1925: 238)
mentioned four females of this species from Canoblas, NSW,
11-x- 1916
, at the time deposited in the collection of the Board of Health, Sydney; however, he did not refer to them as
paratypes
. Although
Bugledich (1999: 329)
refers to them as such, she neither examined these specimens nor explained why she deemed them
paratypes
. Because
Tonnoir (1925)
did not explicitly designate these four females as
paratypes
, and given that they are not from the type locality, and of different date from the type, we consider them merely as ‘additional material'. One of these specimens was examined by us and is now mounted on a slide. We also examined three adult females from Middle Creek, one of which is also now slide mounted. One other specimen—from McKenzie Falls, Grampians—is slide mounted. All of this material is deposited in ANIC.
Etymology
. Not given by
Tonnoir (1925)
, but probably from Latin “
tenebris
” [= dark], in reference to the dark colour of the
holotype
female.
Distribution
(
Fig. 99
).
New South Wales
: Mt. Canoblas,
11-x-1916
, Coll. Tonnoir; Molong Creek, Mt. Canoblas, nr. Orange,
8-x-1950
. det. Mackerras (
S33.3192°
E149.0239°
, elev.
914m
.
). Colo Vale,
28-ii-1956
, Coll. A.K. Grower (
S34.3667°
E150.4352°
, elev.
690m
.
). Way Way,
3-x-1925
, Coll. Mackerras (
S30.7600°
E152.9700°
, elev.
26m
.
).
Australian Capital Territory
: Black Mountain,
8-ix-1953
. Coll. A. Dyce (
S35.2738°
E149.1135°
, elev.
580m
.
).
Victoria
: Sassafras,
22-x-1922
. Coll. Tonnoir (
S37.8628°
E145.3536°
, elev.
470m
.
). Middle Creek, Beaufort,
29-x-1952
, Coll. Neboiss (
S37.4032°
E143.2415°
, elev.
350m
.
). McKenzie Falls, Grampians,
26-ix-1953
. Coll. Neboiss;
12-ix-2014
, Coll. J.K. Moulton (
S37.1109°
E142.4088°
, elev.
368m
.
).
FIGURES 56–60.
Protaustrosimulium amphorum
. Last instar larva. (56) Habitus, dorsal view. Scale bar = 1.0 mm. (57) Dorsal view of head. Scale bar = 0.2 mm. (58) Antenna. Scale bar = 0.1 mm. (59) Mandible. Scale bar = 0.1 mm. (60) Mandible apex. Scale bar = 0.02 mm.
FIGURES 61–66
.
Protaustrosimulium amphorum
. Last instar larva. (61) Maxilla. Scale bar = 0.1 mm. (62) Postgenal cleft. Scale bar = 0.2 mm. (63) Hypostoma. Scale bar = 0.05 mm. (64) Thorax showing pupal gill histoblast. Scale bar = 0.5 mm. (65) Pharate pupal gill. Scale bar = 0.2 mm. (66) Anal sclerite, accessory sclerites (a s), semicircular sclerite (s s) & circlet of hooks. Scale bar = 0.2 mm.
FIGURES 67–72
.
Protaustrosimulium terebrans
. Female adult. (67) Habitus. (Canobolas, 1916). Scale bar = 1.0 mm. (68) Frontal view of head (cleared). (Middle Creek). Scale bar = 0.2 mm. (69) Frontal view of head (cleared). (McKenzie Falls). Scale bar = 0.2 mm. (70) Antenna. (Middle Creek). Scale bar = 0.1 mm. (71) Maxillary palp, mandible (mnd) & lacinia (lc) (Canobolas, 1916). Scale bar = 0.2 mm. (72) Mandible apex (Canobolas, 1916). Scale bar = 0.05 mm.
FIGURES 73, 74
.
Protaustrosimulium terebrans
. Female adult. (73) Cibarium (Canobolas, 1916). Scale bar = 0.1 mm. (74) Wing veins (Middle Creek). Scale bar = 0.1 mm.
FIGURES 75
.
Protaustrosimulium terebrans
. Female wing (Middle Creek). Scale bar = 0.5 mm.
Bionomics.
Little is known about the biology of this species, although Tonnoir’s label data indicate that females bite. Males, pupae or larvae are unknown, despite extensive searching by
Mackerras & Mackerras (1952: 105)
and our own collecting efforts. With the exception of the Colo Vale locality, dates of collection indicate an Austral spring species. Colo Vale is at a higher elevation than other sites, so perhaps later emergence at that site is related to cooler temperatures.
Remarks.
An attempt by DAC in 2014 to collect new material from Middle Creek,
Victoria
, was unsuccessful. As with many collection sites referred to in the early literature, human activities have rendered such streams unsuitable for simuliids (
e.g
.,
Moulton
et al
., 2018
: 10).
FIGURES 76–77
.
Protaustrosimulium terebrans
. Female. (76) Calcipala & tarsomere II (Middle Creek). Scale bar = 0.05 mm. (77) Claw showing basal tooth (Canobolas, 1916). Scale bar = 0.02 mm.
The mouthparts of known females are substantial, in particular the single specimen from McKenzie Falls (
Fig. 69
). Such mouthparts suggest that females are blood-feeders, although the large size of their abdominal tergites is more typical of non-bloodsucking species.
The genital fork of
Protaustrosimulium terebrans
is unique among Australian simuliids and differs in a number of respects from those of
Prot. pilfreyi
and
Prot. amphorum
. The stem is strongly curved ventrally and laterally flattened—thence contorted when slide mounted (
e.g.,
Fig. 81
). There are unusual lobes at the junction of the anterior and lateral arms, and no evidence of membranous areas lateral to the anterior arm.