A revision of the genus Mesoconius Enderlein (Diptera, Micropezidae, Taeniapterinae)
Author
Marshall, Stephen A.
text
European Journal of Taxonomy
2019
2019-09-05
548
1
126
journal article
25589
10.5852/ejt.2019.548
bdc12bce-f24c-4713-8026-a1aee4193ef5
3401901
7BA0D937-437E-4252-8EF4-4F35E6B59445
Mesoconius eques
group
Diagnosis
The
Mesoconius eques
group is recognizable by the absence of postocellar and outer vertical bristles (thus with only inner vertical bristles on the upper back of the head) and, with a few exceptions (
M. obtusiconus
,
M. albiseta
sp. nov.
,
M. suzukii
sp. nov.
), the presence of a greatly enlarged, pointed katatergite.
Description
Upper fronto-orbital bristle usually absent (minute in
M. suzukii
sp. nov.
, well developed only in
M. obtusiconus
); lower fronto-orbital strong or weak, usually inserted in a patch of microtrichia near lower point of epicephalon. Prosternum usually microtrichose and with at least a few fine setulae anteriorly, bare in
M. suzukii
sp. nov.
Wing usually evenly infuscated but sometimes with clear or dark areas; one species (
M. rufithorax
) has dark wings with clear discal spots similar to those in species of the
M. infestus
group.
FEMALE ABDOMEN.
Stems of paired spermathecae usually characteristically folded with multiple processes (except
M. suzukii
sp. nov.
and
M. rufithorax
); paired spermathecal duct divided into basal and distal sections (except
M. rufithorax
) and arising from apex of narrowed distal part (common duct) of bursa; in almost all species the single spermathecal duct arises from side of the common duct, widely separated from the paired duct.
MALE ABDOMEN.
Tergite and sternite 6 well developed, S6 very large (except in
M. suzukii
sp. nov.
). Anterior hypandrial loop narrow and ribbon-like, in contrast to broad scoop-like anterior hypandrium of other species groups. Distal distiphallus usually very long and slender, much longer than basal distiphallus (shorter in
M. suzukii
sp. nov.
).
Distribution
Other than the Central American species
M. tigrinus
Marshall, 2015
, members of this species group occur only in Andean South America.
Remarks
Mesoconius suzukii
sp. nov.
is included in the
M. eques
group because of its head chaetotaxy, even though it lacks the many other putative synapomorphies found in the remainder of the species group. Sequence data (
Fig. 50
) suggest that
M. suzukii
sp. nov.
does not belong with the rest of the group. The placement of
M. rufithorax
also needs re-assessment on the basis of more and better specimens. With the exception of these two problematic species, the
M. eques
group is strongly supported as monophyletic on the basis of the elaborate spermathecal stems, the large and elongate male S6 and the elongate distal distiphallus.