Culicoides Latreille and Leptoconops Skuse biting midges of the southwestern United States with emphasis on the Canyonlands of southeastern Utah (Diptera: Ceratopogonidae)
Author
Phillips, Robert A.
2962 Desert Road Moab, UT 84532 USA
text
Insecta Mundi
2022
2022-01-28
2022
907
1
214
journal article
10.5281/zenodo.6391684
1942-1354
6391684
CBD29188-143B-44DF-BE21-1654D50D8621
Culicoides
(
Haematomyidium
)
kettlei
Breidenbaugh and Mullens
(
Fig. 80
, 133, 187, 188)
Culicoides
(
Haematomyidium
)
kettlei
Breidenbaugh and Mullens, 1999b: 150
(egg, larva, pupa, adult female; male genitalia; fig. egg, larval head, caudal segment, mouthparts, pupal respiratory trumpet, operculum, caudal segment, chaetotaxy, female eyes, antenna, palpus, legs, wing, spermathecae, male genitalia;
California
).
Diagnosis.
(
Tables 14
,
15
) Brown; r
2
dark; distal pale spot in r
3
irregular, crude C- or mushroom-shaped, sometimes extending faintly along anterior wing margin into apex of cell to form an arch; two irregular pale spots in m
1
; distal pale spots in m
2
, cua
1
, anal cell; M
1
and M
2
without pale spots; one pale spot in distal half of anal cell, not reaching wing margin; male tergite 9 apicolateral processes as long as ~0.4 the distance between them; ventral apodeme of gonocoxite with two well-developed widely divergent processes, footlike; aedeagus simple, median process tapering to blunt minutely serrate tip, aedeagal ratio ~0.6; parameres separate, with distinct bulbous submedian lobe smaller than width of paramere, and with subapical fringe of spines. (Male genitalia indistinguishable from that of
C
.
stellifer
.)
Distribution.
California
,
Baja California
.
Larval ecology and adult behavior.
Breidenbaugh and Mullens (1999a)
collected adults with emergence traps from soil margins of an ephemeral creek at
300–350 m
elevation in San Bernardino County,
California
. They (1999b) also report collections of
C
.
kettlei
females with CO
2
-baited traps, and
Mullens and Dada (1992a
, as “
Culicoides
n. sp.
near
lahillei
”) collected an unfed female from a bighorn sheep, which, along with its SCo pattern reduced to only the proximal flagellomeres, strongly suggests it is mammalophilic.
Life cycle.
Laboratory studies by
Breidenbaugh and Mullens (1999b)
found that wild-caught
C
.
kettlei
laid an average of
74 eggs
and the larvae fed on bacterial-feeding
Pelodera
nematodes and started pupating 26 d after egg hatch at 21 °C.
Symbionts.
Mullens et al. (1997b)
experimented with the potential biocontrol parasitic nematode,
Heleidomermis magnapapula
in the laboratory and found it readily penetrated but did not develop or emerge from
C
.
kettlei
(as “
C
. n. sp. near
lahillei
[Iches]”) larvae, which continued to develop to adults with no sign of the nematode.
Remarks.
Willis Wirth referred to this species as new species number 120 (
Breidenbaugh and Mullens 1999b
).
Culicoides kettlei
has considerable wing pattern variation (Fig. 133, 187, 188) and is often similar to
C
.
stellifer
(Fig. 134, 135, 189); and their quantitative characters (
Table 14
), leg-banding (
Table 15
), and genitalia are nearly identical. Other than for the number of distal pale spots in m
1
and the anal cell, I could find no consistent ways to distinguish adult
C
.
kettlei
from
C
.
stellifer
. In addition, other than the lack of hypostomal teeth on
C
.
kettlei
, I could find no distinct differences between the larval and pupal descriptions of
C
.
kettlei
in
Breidenbaugh and Mullens (1999b)
and those of
C
.
stellifer
in
Blanton and Wirth (1979)
and
Murphree and Mullen (1991)
. See
C
.
stellifer
remarks.