Redescription of Leptoconops (Leptoconops) brasiliensis (Lutz) and Leptoconops (Megaconops) floridensis Wirth (Diptera: Ceratopogonidae) with its first Brazilian record
Author
Santarém, Maria Clara Alves
Coleção de Ceratopogonidae, Laboratório de Diptera, Instituto Oswaldo Cruz, Fiocruz, Rio de Janeiro, RJ, Brazil.
Author
Cremer, Marta Jussara
0000-0003-3521-1409
Laboratório de Ecologia e Conservação de Tetrápodes Marinhos e Costeiros (TETRAMAR), Universidade da Região de Joinville (UNIVILLE), São Francisco do Sul, SC, Brazil. & https: // orcid. org / 0000 - 0003 - 3521 - 1409
Author
Vieira, Jenyffer Vierheller
0000-0001-7785-5670
Laboratório de Ecologia e Conservação de Tetrápodes Marinhos e Costeiros (TETRAMAR), Universidade da Região de Joinville (UNIVILLE), São Francisco do Sul, SC, Brazil. & https: // orcid. org / 0000 - 0001 - 7785 - 5670
Author
Lemos, Giulia Gaglianone
0000-0002-9701-8236
Laboratório de Ecologia e Conservação de Tetrápodes Marinhos e Costeiros (TETRAMAR), Universidade da Região de Joinville (UNIVILLE), São Francisco do Sul, SC, Brazil. & https: // orcid. org / 0000 - 0002 - 9701 - 8236
Author
Pecor, David B.
Walter Reed Biosystematics Unit, Museum Support Center MRC- 534, Smithsonian Institution, 4210 Silver Hill Rd., Suitland, MD 20746, SA. & One Health Branch, Walter Reed Army Institute of Research, 503 Robert Grant Ave., Silver Spring, MD 20910, USA.
Author
Felippe-Bauer, Maria Luiza
0000-0002-4209-2826
Coleção de Ceratopogonidae, Laboratório de Diptera, Instituto Oswaldo Cruz, Fiocruz, Rio de Janeiro, RJ, Brazil. & https: // orcid. org / 0000 - 0002 - 4209 - 2826
text
Zootaxa
2023
2023-11-29
5380
2
173
183
https://www.mapress.com/zt/article/download/zootaxa.5380.2.5/52386
journal article
10.11646/zootaxa.5380.2.5
1175-5326
10216597
F30A3477-F101-4C60-87AA-09FEFA5F160F
Leptoconops
(
Leptoconops
)
brasiliensis
(Lutz)
(
Figures 1–2
)
Tersesthes brasiliensis
:
Lutz, 1913: 66
(female;
Brazil
);
Gezuelo and Franca-Rodríguez, 1972
(
Uruguay
record).
Leptoconops brasiliensis
:
Lane, 1945: 358
(new comb.;
type
redescr.)
Leptoconops
(
Leptoconops
)
brasiliensis
Cavalieri & Chiossone, 1966: 56
(in key to American species);
Ronderos & Spinelli, 1992: 43
(in key to Neotropical species);
Borkent & Spinelli, 2000: 9
(in Catalog; distrib.);
Trindade & Gorayeb, 2005: 66
(
Pará State
—
Brazil
);
Spinelli
et al
., 2005: 148
(
Argentina
record);
Borkent & Spinelli, 2007: 44
(in Neotropical catalog);
Pessoa
et al
., 2012: 138
(
Acre State
,
Brazil
);
Farias
et al
., 2015: 3
(Amazonas State,
Brazil
);
Borkent & Dominiak, 2020: 38
(in World Catalog);
Spinelli
et al
, 2022: 489
(in key to Neotropical species);
Santarém & Felippe-Bauer, 2023: 48
(Brazilian biting midges Catalog; distribution);
Spinelli
et al
., 2023: 8
(
Argentina
record removed).
FIGURE 1.
Leptoconops
(
Leptoconops
)
brasiliensis
Lutz
, female.
A
. head, anterior view, asterisks: frons setae;
B
. antenna;
C
. third palpal segments. Figure C from type specimen, other figures from additional material from Goiás (Brazil).
Diagnosis
. The only species of
Leptoconops
(
Leptoconops
)
on Neotropical region with the following combination of characters: frons with a pair of mesal setae; 3
rd
palpal segment slightly longer than 4
th
; costa extending to 0.45–0.52 of total wing length, longitudinal veins reaching wing margin; two ovoid spermathecae. Male unknown.
Redescription
.
Female
.
Head.
Dark brown. Eyes (
Fig. 1A
) bare, separated by a distance equal to 0.33–0.38 (0.35, n=3) of total head width, separation approximately to diameter of ten ommatidial facets; vertex with long setae, frons with a pair of mesal setae (
Fig.1A
), clypeus usually bare or with two setae. Antenna (
Fig. 1B
) with pale scape, pedicel and flagellum dark brown with 12 flagellomeres, lengths of flagellomeres in proportion of 35-20-20- 20-20-20-20-20-20-23-23-75 μm; last flagellomere 2.54–3.77 (3.24, n=4) longer than broad; AR 0.74–0.87 (0.80, n=5). Palpus (
Fig. 1C
) dark brown, lengths of segments in proportion of 40 (I+II)-53-42 μm; 3
rd
segment elongated with broad, shallow, irregular sensory pit extending for most of its length;
PR
2.0–3.43 (2.76, n=4). Mandible with 13 small teeth, P/H ratio 0.58–0.62 (0.60, n=2).
Thorax
. Dark brown; scutellum not visible in slide mounted specimens. Legs (
Fig. 2C
) uniformly dark brown; basitarsi and tarsomeres 2 paler (
Fig. 2D
); hind tibial comb (
Fig. 2E
) with 4 spines (n=4), the first near the spur smaller, delicate and hyaline; first to fourth from the spur measuring 22.5–27.5 (25, n=2), 30–47.5 (40.5, n=5), 37.5–45 (39.5, n=5), 27.5–37.5 (32, n=5) μm. Tarsi (
Fig. 2D
) with strong ventral spines; a pair of apical spines on tarsomeres 1–3; tarsomeres 4 can present one apical spine; tarsal claws (
Fig. 2F
) short, slightly curved, 0.40 (n=3) as long as 5
th
tarsomeres, with basal bristly hairs (
Fig. 2F
). Wing (
Figs. 2A–B
) membrane infuscated, microtrichia abundant, stigma pale brown; longitudinal veins reaching wing margin; wing length 0.69–0.83 (0.77, n=5) mm, width 0.33–0.40 (0.37, n=5) mm; costa extending to 0.45–0.52 (0.48, n=5) of total wing length. Halter pale.
Abdomen. Brown. Genital lamellae (
Fig. 2G
) brown, long, narrow, about 5x longer than broad, 3x longer than sternite 9. Sternite 8 (
Fig. 2I
) with two-three pair of long hairs. Spermathecae (
Fig. 2H
) two, ovoid, subequal, measuring 30.0–42.5 (36.2, n=4) by 25.0–32.5 (28.7, n=4) μm and 32.5–45 (36.2, n=4) μm by 27.5–30.0 (28.7, n=2) μm; sclerotized necks short with 5 (n=3) μm.
FIGURE 2.
Leptoconops
(
Leptoconops
)
brasiliensis
Lutz
, female.
A
. wing;
B
. wing in phase contrast microscopy;
C
. fore-, mid-, hind legs (right to left), lateral view;
D
. fore-, mid-, hind tarsomeres (bottom to top);
E.
hind tibial comb, lateral view;
F.
tarsomere 5 with claw, arrowhead: basal bristle;
G.
abdomen, lateral view, arrowhead: genital lamellae;
H.
Spermathecae;
I.
Sternite 8. Figures from additional material from Goiás (Brazil).
Male
. Unknown.
Material examined
. Type series,
3 females
, slide mounted, labeled “
Tersethes brasiliensis
Lutz (1913)
,
Rio Tocantins
,
Pará
,
BRASIL
, 1912 [
Astrogildo Machado
col.].” (
CCER
#
T335
/1.3 -
T335
/3.3)
;
1 female
, slide mounted, labeled “
Uruaçú
,
Goiás
,
BRASIL
,
13.III.2000
” (
CCER#3833
)
;
1 female
same data except
14.III.2000
(
CCER#3834
)
;
1 female
same data except
17.IV.2000
(
CCER#3835
) (
NEW
RECORD
)
.
Distribution
.
Brazil
(
Acre
, Amazonas,
Pará
,
Goiás
) and
Uruguay
.
Taxonomic discussion
.
Leptoconops
(
L.
)
brasiliensis
is a typical member of the
Leptoconops
subgenus by the frons with a pair of setae, claws with a basal bristle, tarsi with strong ventral spines and female genital lamellae long. From the seven Neotropical species, it is similar to
L.
(
L.
)
casali
Cavalieri & Chiossone
by the antennal flagellomeres shape, the aspect of the palpal sensory pit, the costa reaching 0.40–0.50 from total wing length and the ovoid spermathecae. These species can be easily distinguished from each other by the smaller wing length (
1.24 in
L.
(
L.
)
casali
), the palpus with segment 3 only slightly longer than 4 (1.5x longer in
L.
(
L.
)
casali
) and longitudinal veins extending to the wing margin (obsolete in
L.
(
L.
)
casali
).
Ronderos & Spinelli (1992)
and
Spinelli
et al
. (2022)
consider in their key that
L.
(
L.
)
brasiliensis
has bare frons; however, we observe that the specimens present a pair of medial setae in the frons (
Fig. 1A
). In addition, these authors cited the flagellomere 12 of female antenna 4–5 times longer than broad, but herein we observe this relation much smaller. In this case, we have seen that the antenna position after slide montage and the conservation state of the material is very important and can influence this relation. Considering this, we suggest not using this measurement to separate and define species from this subgenus.
In 2005, Trindade & Gorayeb corrected the record of the
type
locality for the state of Pará and collected this species in the estuarine coastal zone and on the coast of this same state.
Pessoa
et al
. (2012)
found it on the river margin in the state of Acre.
Farias
et al
. (2015)
collected in the Amazonas State, near small farms, but there is no data describing if it was collected in upland or lowland environments.
Spinelli
et al
. (2005)
have reported
L.
(
L.
)
brasiliensis
from
Argentina
, but recently
Spinelli
et al
. (2023)
recognized the specimen is
L.
(
L.
)
casali
and removed the record. We report this species for the first time in the Brazilian State of
Goiás
, in Uruaçú municipality, which is in the Cerrado biome.This region includes one of the largest artificial lakes associated with a hydroelectric plant in
Brazil
. Thus, we can observe that
L.
(
L.
)
brasiliensis
occurs in areas with high humidity, even if they are not coastal areas, as it was previously reported. It is the only species from this subgenus found in
Brazil
.