Neotropical Agromyzidae (Diptera) of the Mission Géodésique de l’Équateur: Becker (1920) revisited
Author
Boucher, Stéphanie
Author
Wheeler, Terry A.
text
Zootaxa
2014
3779
2
157
176
journal article
46226
10.11646/zootaxa.3779.2.3
41b9d971-197b-41b4-89df-5160e209981f
1175-5326
252252
17D92CCD-AEC6-47A4-9D47-09756607048E
Cerodontha
(
Cerodontha
)
nigricornis
Becker
(
Figs. 25–27
)
Cerodonta nigricornis
Becker 1920
: 212
.
Cerodontha nigricornis
,
Spencer 1963
: 332
;
Sasakawa 1992b
: 815
.
MNHN specimen
.
Holotype
♀:
Ecuador
: Casitagua, alt.
3500 m
, P. Rivet, 1903.
Additional material examined
.
Argentina
: Jujuy, La Quiaca,
23.x.68
,
3500 m
, L.E. Pena (
1 ♂
:
CNC
).
Diagnosis.
This species can be distinguished from other Neotropical species of
Cerodontha (Cerodontha)
by the following combination of characters: the presence of acrostichals; femora yellow only at knees; first flagellomere strongly angulate but without spine; presence of only 1 ors and sometimes 1 weaker ori; orbit with dense patch of white pubescence anteriorly; large size (wing length over 3.0 mm); and the shape of the male genitalia.
Description
. Frons width
0.30 mm
; ratio of frons width to eye width 1.4–1.5 (measured in dorsal view); orbit 0.22–0.27 times width of frons (including orbits) at midpoint; parafacial well developed, forming large ring (cheek) below eye; 1 reclinate ors; and 1 fine, pale (almost invisible in male specimen), proclinate and slightly inclinate ori; orbital setulae forming dense white patch of hairs anteriorly (overlooked in original description); first flagellomere elongated, projecting dorsoapically (but without spine), with short pubescence apically; arista slightly shorter than maximum eye height and with short pubescence; gena deep, extended at rear; gena height at midpoint: 0.38 times maximum eye height; upper margin of clypeus narrow, rounded; eye bare or at most with short scattered pubescence. One presutural and three postsutural dorsocentrals; acrostichals few, in 2 rows; prescutellar acrostichal seta absent; scutellum with only one pair of apical setae; notopleuron with 2 setae; postpronotum with 1 strong seta and 1 (in
holotype
) to 4 setulae; anepisternum with 1 strong seta on posterior margin a little above midpoint, and no additional seta (
holotype
) or 1 small seta (male) underneath; fore femur with 2 strong lateroventral setae near apex, 1 strong lateral seta basally and 1 or 2 strong dorsal setae near apex; fore and mid tibiae without lateral seta; wing length 3.0 mm in male and
3.8 mm
in female; M1+2 ending at wing tip; costa extending to M1+2; last section of CuA1 0.70–0.77 times length of penultimate.
Colour
. Frons completely yellow including most of orbits, except brownish under ors; both vt on brown, but vti at limit of yellow ground; hind margin of eye brown for a short distance beyond vte; face yellow; all antennal segments brown; palpus brown; margin of clypeus brown. Mesonotum and scutellum mat greyish or greyishbrown; postpronotum yellow with central brown patch; postpronotal seta on yellow ground; notopleuron yellow with very small brown marking at anteroventral corner; anepisternum mostly brown excluding yellow posterodorsal corner; katepisternum completely brown; katatergite prominent and yellow; calypter white with margin and fringe pale brown; halter white; legs, including coxae, brown, with knees yellow for about 1/5 of femur length (measurements taken on fore femur).
Male genitalia
. Phallus weakly sclerotized, long and straight for most of its length but curving ventrally near apex; distiphallus fused for entire length except narrowly divided behind apex (
Fig. 27
); surstylus elongated, projecting ventrally, bearing multiple spines on ventral surface; ejaculatory apodeme small with fan-shaped blade.
Comments
. This species was previously known from a single Ecuadorian female specimen (
Becker 1920
;
Spencer 1963
;
Sasakawa 1992b
;
Martinez & Etienne 2002
).
Becker (1920)
did not explicitly designate a
holotype
in the original publication and the specimen does not bear a
type
label, but because no other
type
specimens are known to exist, we consider this specimen to be the
holotype
, fixed by monotypy. We have added a label to that effect.
One additional specimen was examined from
Argentina
and represents the first documented male. This species is most similar to
Cerodontha
(
C.
)
chilensis
Spencer
and
Cerodontha
(
C.
)
magellani
Spencer
, both described from
Chile
(
Spencer 1982
), but differs in having a characteristic white patch of proclinate orbital setulae, larger size, and a slightly different curvature of the phallus. Additional material agreeing with the description of this species has also been collected by M. v. Tschirnhaus in the high Andes (
4000–5000 m
elevation) of northern
Chile
(M. von Tschirnhaus, pers. comm.).