One new genus and three new species of the Penenirmus-complex (Phthiraptera Ischnocera) from China, with resurrection of Picophilopterus Ansari, 1947
Author
Gustafsson, Daniel R.
Guangdong Key Laboratory of Animal Conservation and Resource Utilization, Guangdong Public Laboratory of Wild Animal Conservation and Utilization, Institute of Zoology, Guangdong Academy of Sciences, 105 Xingang West Road, Haizhu District, Guangzhou, 510260, Guangdong, China.
Author
Adam, Costică
“ Grigore Antipa ” National Museum of Natural History, Sos. Kiseleff no. 1, 011341 Bucharest, Romania.
Author
Zou, Fasheng
0000-0002-8913-5651
Guangdong Key Laboratory of Animal Conservation and Resource Utilization, Guangdong Public Laboratory of Wild Animal Conservation and Utilization, Institute of Zoology, Guangdong Academy of Sciences, 105 Xingang West Road, Haizhu District, Guangzhou, 510260, Guangdong, China. & https: // orcid. org / 0000 - 0002 - 8913 - 5651
text
Zootaxa
2022
2022-01-07
5087
3
401
426
journal article
2768
10.11646/zootaxa.5087.3.1
71bd0140-d33c-4d83-a7b3-65b7d0b50b2e
1175-5326
5826892
0CE51AC4-E75F-43DE-B9F5-56247B75F394
Picophilopterus pici
(
Fabricius, 1798
)
sensu lato
(
Figs 4
,
8–9
)
Pediculus pici
Fabricius, 1798: 571
.
Docophorus scalaris
Burmeister, 1838: 427
.
Picophilopterus tuktola
Ansari, 1947: 265
.
Picophilopterus sitzendorfensis
Mey
[in Złotorzycka], 1980: 129.
Penenirmus pici
(
Fabricius, 1798
)
;
Price
et al.
2003: 210
.
Type
host:
Picus viridis
Linnaeus, 1758
—green woodpecker (
Picidae
).
Type locality.
Estonia
—following
Clay & Hopkins (1960)
designation of a
neotype
.
Other hosts:
25 species and subspecies of woodpeckers (
Picidae
); see Appendix 1.
Host in
China
:
Picus canus sordidior
(Rippon, 1906)
—gray-headed woodpecker:
new host record
.
Material examined:
1♂
,
1♀
, 2 nymphs,
Wudiancun
, elev.
903–1080 m
,
Ruili County
,
Yunnan Province
,
China
,
8 Jan. 2013
,
Y. Wu
&
Y. Zhang
, bird J-0681, GD-PHTH-00119–00122 (
IZGAS
)
.
Remarks.
This species was previously recorded from
China
by
Chu
et al.
(2019)
, and this report is based on the same specimens.
Picophilopterus pici
has been recorded from at least 16 host species (
Price
et al
. 2003
), but it is unclear whether all louse populations are conspecific. As we show above, at least the population from
Blythipicus pyrrhotis sinensis
is not conspecific with
P. pici
. Considering that
Dalgleish (1971)
named as
Brueelia straminea
(
Denny, 1842
)
a large number of dissimilar species, many of which are not closely related to each other (Gustafsson & Bush,
in prep.
), we suspect that
Dalgleish (1972)
overestimated the similarities among populations of
P. pici
from different hosts, and that some of these populations may prove to be different species.
The phylogeny of
Johnson
et al
. (2021
: fig 1) includes only
one specimen
of
P. pici
from
Picus canus
, nested within a large clade of species mostly named as
P. auritus
; hence, genetic variation within
P. pici
from different hosts is unknown. However, several specimens of
P. auritus
included in the same phylogeny indicate that this nominal species may represent a number of different taxa. A thorough morphological revision of
Picophilopterus
from all woodpeckers is needed to ascertain the true number of different species currently included under these two species names. As an example, here we provide illustrations of the head and male genitalia of lice from
Picus canus sordidior
, which may prove to be a different species from
P. pici
sensu stricto
. Note that
pst1–2
are not visible in examined specimens, and are not illustrated; the absence of these setae would need to be confirmed in other specimens.