Fossil Sciaroidea (Diptera) in Cretaceous Ambers, Exclusive of Cecidomyiidae, Sciaridae, and Keroplatidae
Author
BLAGODEROV, VLADIMIR
Author
GRIMALDI, DAVID
text
American Museum Novitates
2004
2004-02-27
3433
1
1
76
http://www.bioone.org/perlserv/?request=get-abstract&doi=10.1206%2F0003-0082(2004)433%3C0001%3AFSDICA%3E2.0.CO%3B2
journal article
5822
10.1206/0003-0082(2004)433<0001:FSDICA>2.0.CO;2
51eea930-5f0d-43f6-8e03-3093edf36cd7
0003-0082
4712338
Thereotricha
,
new genus
DIAGNOSIS: Eyes forming incomplete eye bridge, facets large, round. Ocelli three. Flagellomeres barrelshaped, length no more than 1.5Χ the width. Antepronotum and proepisternum subequal, setose. Proepimeron touches episternum at the episternal suture. Anepisternum smaller than katepisternum. Anepisternal cleft distinct, narrow. Midpleural pit present. Metepisternum setose. Anterior parapsidal suture distinct. Insertion of abdomen wide. Wing membrane with or without macrotrichia. Sc short, ends free. Rs base,
rm,
base of M
3+4
, and CuA fork very basal. Section M2 connects
rm
and base of M
3+4
and CuA fork. M
3+4
reduced.
TYPE
SPECIES:
Thereotricha sibirica
,
n.sp.
ETYMOLOGY: The genus name is a feminine anagram of
Heterotricha
. The name is feminine.
COMMENTS: The new genus is close to the
Heterotricha
group of genera, which have been included in the
Sciaridae
or
Diadocidiidae
. Recently,
Chandler (2002)
reviewed known taxa of the group and described seven more genera from all zoogeographic regions except Nearctic. These taxa seem to represent a stem group of Recent families of
Sciaroidea
, but monophyly of the group is not apparent. The new genus differs from all taxa of the
Heterotricha
group in having eyes with large facets, that form an eye bridge, short antennae, the scape and pedicel not differing from flagellomeres in length, palpi very short, anepisternite and katepisternite subequal, the base of RS in basal position, and
rm
and the section of M2 subequal, where eyes and palpi demonstrate an apomorphic condition. The new genus resembles
Sciaropota
Chandler
in the porrect antenna with short flagellomeres, an absence of a clearly differentiated series of scutellar bristles, large katepisternum, mesepimepon broader below, but it differs by the short Sc, long stem of M
1+2
, and reduced M
3+4
.
Distinct synapomorphies separate the group from other Mesozoic
Sciaroidea
: M1 section completely reduced; M2 section fused with
tb
in one vein meeting the base of M
3+4
, and that oblique vein is shifted distad. The same structure of the basal veins is observed in advanced representatives of the Mesozoic family
Mesosciophilidae
, which are thought to represent a sister group to
Mycetophilidae
(
Kalugina and Kovalev, 1985
;
Blagoderov, 1993
). Similar conditions occur in the peculiar Mesozoic family
Archizelmiridae (
Grimaldi et al., 2003
)
, but
Archizelmiridae
have crossvein
rm
aligned with M2 +
tb
and the basal portion of M
3+4
, forming one horizontal vein and the base of RS is shifted distad.
Diadocidiidae
s.str. (
Diadocidia
and
Docidiadia
n.gen.
) also have these veins aligned (
rm
through the base of M
3+4
), but they form a vertical vein. In
Mycetophilidae
the combined vein M2 +
tb
lost contact with the base of M
3+4
and meets the base of CuA or MA (arculus) (see
Shcherbakov et al., 1995
). Some
Mycetophilidae
(
Drepanocercus
,
Ectrepesthoneura
, Cretaceous
Paradzickia
,
Drepanorzeckia
,
Ekhiritus
,
Zazicia
) have the fork of M
3+4
and CuA sessile or shortstalked, but the base of the fork is situated more basally that in Mesozoic
Sciaroidea
and the
Heterotricha
group. Moreover, at least in
Ectrepesthoneura
the sessile fork of M
3+4
and CuA is secondary (see Analyses below and fig. 78). Obviously, reduction of M1 and fusion of M2 with
tb
might have originated several times in the history of
Sciaroidea
. Although monophyly of the group combining Recent
Heterotricha
like taxa and Cretaceous
Thereotricha
is not proven, position of these taxa in sciaroid phylogeny should be at the base of lineages leading to Mesosoic
Mesosciophilidae
and
Archizelmiridae
and Recent
Sciaridae
on the one hand and higher sciaroids such as
Mycetophilidae
and
Lygistorrhinidae
on the oth er.