A revision of the Australian genus Pleuroseta Richards (Diptera, Sphaeroceridae)
Author
Kuwahara, Gregory K.
2E2D313F-7249-4F76-AF5D-615516840188
University of Guelph Insect Collection and Insect Systematics Laboratory, School of Environmental Sciences, University of Guelph, Guelph, Ontario, N 1 G 2 W 1, Canada.
gkuwahar@uoguelph.ca
Author
Marshall, Stephen A.
6C1C1C9E-365F-48BF-B8C7-31163EC5F3A7
University of Guelph Insect Collection and Insect Systematics Laboratory, School of Environmental Sciences, University of Guelph, Guelph, Ontario, N 1 G 2 W 1, Canada.
samarsha@uoguelph.ca
text
European Journal of Taxonomy
2023
2023-12-07
910
69
97
https://europeanjournaloftaxonomy.eu/index.php/ejt/article/download/2361/10335
journal article
281316
10.5852/ejt.2023.910.2361
43a5768f-e8c1-4484-81da-78217a053132
2118-9773
10306494
2B90DE6E-E70A-4199-B485-5A13FDD43056
Genus
Pleuroseta
Richards, 1973
Pleuroseta
Richards, 1973: 355
(feminine).
Type
species:
Leptocera
(
Pleuroseta
)
wentworthi
Richards, 1973
, by monotypy.
Pleuroseta
–
Marshall 1989: 605
(as genus, Australasian/Oceanian catalog). —
Roháček
et al.
2001: 199
(world catalog). —
Kuwahara & Marshall 2022: 17
(key).
Diagnosis
Pleuroseta
species differ from all other genera of
Sphaeroceridae
in having a patch of setae on the posterodorsal corner of the anepisternum (
Fig. 1
). The genus is further diagnosed by the combination of a relatively tall gena (eye height 1.5–2.4× genal height), a brown microtrichose notum, 3–5 pairs of dorsocentral bristles including at least one presutural pair, 2–4 pairs of dorsal bristles on the basal half of the mid tibia, an enlarged ventral seta on the mid basitarsus, male S5 with a posteromedial emargination surrounded by thick or long setae, and a surstylus divided into anterior and posterior parts (usually with long setae on the posterior section). The eastern Australian species form a monophyletic group further diagnosed below, but the single Western Australian species differs widely and is only provisionally included in the genus, as discussed below.
Redescription
BODY
. Length
1.8–4.4 mm
.
HEAD
. Golden-brown to dark brown. Frontal width 1.9–2.3 × height. Interfrontal bristles in 4–5 pairs; two large lateroclinate orbital bristles, anterior orbital slightly smaller (0.8–0.9 ×) than posterior; ocellar and outer vertical bristles large and subequal; inner vertical bristle very large; paravertical bristle large, occipital bristle strong. Vibrissa large, subequal to genal length, vibrissal angle often with one distinct subvibrissal seta and 1–2 setulae; gena with large (0.6–0.7 × genal length) upcurved seta and 8–17 setulae. Lunule small, triangular; palpus elongate, clavate, narrow with 2–4 ventral setae. Antenna divergent; pedicel large, at least 0.7–1.0 × postpedicel; arista long pubescent. Eye with slight notch at about level of anterior edge of frons, eye height 1.5–2.4 × genal height.
THORAX
. Dark brown to black, paler around margins, scutum and scutellum with fine brown microtrichia. Three to five pairs of dorsocentral bristles, middle pair(s) separated by 8–14 rows of fine acrostichal setulae. Two postpronotal bristles, inner bristle smaller; two notopleural bristles, anterior bristle larger; two supra-alar bristles, anterior bristle larger; postalar and intrapostalar bristles large. Anepisternum with posterodorsal patch of 3–8 setae and 0–13 setulae; katepisternum with distinct anterior seta, larger posterior seta, and several ventral setae. Scutellum large, length 0.4–0.6 × width, with four long marginal bristles, basal pair 0.8–0.9× length of apical pair.
LEGS
. Brown to dark brown, with or without yellow bands on femora and/or tibiae; tarsi brown to yellow. Mid tibia with 4–8 dorsal bristles (2–4 pairs) in proximal half and 3–4 dorsal bristles (one anterodorsal, 1–2 dorsal, and one posterodorsal) in distal half. Ventral surface of mid tibia with strong apical seta in males of the
P. wentworthi
species group (see below) and row of thickened setae (but no enlarged apical) in male
P. occidentalis
sp. nov.
; females with large apical seta. Mid basitarsus with enlarged ventral seta.
WING
. Evenly infuscate or mostly infuscate with ill-defined pale spots and darker patches (mostly around the crossveins). Second costal sector 0.9–1.5 ×length of third costal sector. Vein R
2+3
sinuate; R
4+5
sinuate or gently upcurved; costa ending at or extending past apex of R
4+5
. M
1
not tubular beyond dm-m (except slightly in
P. occidentalis
sp. nov.
) but extending almost to wing margin as more-orless (terminally) coloured pseudovein; M 4 extending beyond dm-m, about halfway to wing margin; crossveins r-m and dm-m separated by 1.2–1.5× length of dm-m. CuA+CuP distinct but not tubular in the
P. wentworthi
species group, indistinct in
P. occidentalis
; CuA slightly visible as a diffuselycoloured pseudovein in the
P. wentworthi
species group. Alula relatively large but narrow, length 2.8–4.5 × width, outer edge sinuate. Halter brown with pale apex.
MALE
ABDOMEN
. Preabdomen brown. T2–5 and S2–4 broad rectangular, desclerotized marginally, uniformly long setose in posterior half; T4 and T5 with long posterolateral setae. S5 broad, uniformly setose laterally with emarginate or desclerotized posteromedial area. Synsternite 6+7 (S6+7) highly modified in species other than
P. occidentalis
sp. nov.
; S6 highly modified in association with posteromedial part of S5, S7 with elongate dextral extension sometimes reaching right side of abdomen; ring sclerite usually present. Epandrium often large (0.5–0.9× head height), rounded, open posteroventrally (i.e, subanal plate absent) in
P. wentworthi
species group; cercus strongly fused to and usually indistinct from epandrium (prominent only in
P. occidentalis
), with several long setae; subepandrial sclerite well-developed and X- or Y-shaped. Hypandrium Y-shaped (as in
Fig. 5C
) or V-shaped, with a broad sclerotized sheet between the lateral arms (as in
Fig. 5D
), anteromedial apodeme sometimes weakly developed beyond articulation point with lateral arms; lateral arms strongly connected to anteroventral corners of epandrium and anteromedial apodeme of hypandrium (except in
P. occidentalis
, in which lateral arms are not strongly fused to anteromedial apodeme); no additional posterodorsal or ventral lobes. Surstylus various, bi- or trilobed and narrowly fused posterodorsally to ventral corner of subepandrial sclerite. Postgonite various. Distiphallus composed of several sclerites and divided into basal and apical sections.
FEMALE
ABDOMEN
. Preabdomen dark brown. T2–5 and S2–5 broad rectangular, desclerotized marginally, uniformly long-setose along entire surface; T4 and T5 with long posterolateral setae. Postabdomen telescoping, fitting fully or partially into segment 5 when at rest: elongate and largely membranous in
P. occidentalis
sp. nov.
, stout and well-sclerotized in the
P. wentworthi
species group. Spermathecae (2+1) elongate and pear-shaped with an elongate, subconical stem, or stout and spherical with a short stem; ducts elongate and membranous.
Similar genera
As noted by
Richards (1973)
,
Pleuroseta
and
Howickia
Richards, 1951
(=
Biroina
Richards, 1973
) have similar mid tibial chaetotaxy, and some characters of the male genitalia also suggest that the genera are closely related. Species of both genera often have multi-lobed surstyli, blunt setae on S5 and surstyli, and a distiphallus composed of several sclerites.
Pleuroseta
, however, does not have the ventral and posterodorsal hypandrial lobes that defines
Howickia
and further differs from
Howickia
in having at least three pairs of large dorsocentral bristles, a large globose epandrium, large phallic structures that often bulge out from between the surstyli, and a bipartite (as opposed to tripartite) female T8. Species in the
P. wentworthi
species group also differ from
Howickia
in having a sinuate R
4+5
, male tibia lacking ventral bristles other than an apicoventral bristle, a large alula, and conspicuous modifications to S6+7. Some highly distinctive characters of S6+7, especially the relatively complex structures on the ventral part of S6, are unique to the
P. wentworthi
group.
Richards (1973)
also noted the maculated legs and paired tibial bristles of
Pleuroseta
as superficial similarities to
Poecilosomella
Duda, 1920
, but
Pleuroseta
has an unmaculated thorax, less distinctly patterned wings, and a straighter R 2+3. The male and female genitalia of
Pleuroseta
and
Poecilosomella
are dissimilar, offering no evidence for a close relationship between these two genera.
Pleuroseta wentworthi
group species superficially resemble many species of
Leptocera
Olivier, 1813
,
Rachispoda
Lioy, 1864
, and
Pseudocollinella
Duda,
1924
in having a large body, multiple large dorsocentral bristles, paired (or almost paired) dorsal bristles on the basal half of the mid tibia, and an enlarged ventral mid basitarsal seta. However,
Pleuroseta
differs from those genera in having an apicoventral bristle on the mid tibia, and a patch of posterodorsal setae on the anepisternum; the former two genera also differ from
Pleuroseta
in having more than four scutellar bristles. No genitalic characters suggest that the above genera are related to
Pleuroseta
. Other genera with an enlarged ventral mid basitarsal seta (such as
Chaetopodella
Duda, 1920
,
Opacifrons
Duda, 1918
,
Paralimosina
Papp, 1973
, and
Spinilimosina
Roháček, 1983
) do not seem to have other characters that suggest a close relationship with
Pleuroseta
and differ widely in characters of the male terminalia.
Distribution
Pleuroseta
is thus far known only from
Australia
, where three species occur in
New South Wales
and/or
Queensland
, and one occurs in
Western Australia
.
Systematics
Of the four known species of
Pleuroseta
, three (
P. wentworthi
,
P. ingens
sp. nov.
,
P. monteithi
sp. nov.
) are externally similar, with a relatively large body, striped legs, patterned wings, eight proximodorsal bristles on the mid tibia, at least two pairs of distinct presutural dorsocentral bristles, distinctively enlarged male genitalia with modifications to the male S6+7, short female terminalia, and pear-shaped spermathecae with elongate, subconical stems; these three species form the
P. wentworthi
species group. The remaining species,
P. occidentalis
sp. nov.
, is much smaller and uniform in colour, with reduced overall chaetotaxy, smaller male genitalia with a simple male S6+7, and female terminalia with segments 6–9 elongated to form a largely membranous, telescopic ovipositor similar to that of most species of
Howickia
. Other characters such as the posterodorsal patch of setae on the anepisternum, enlarged presutural dorsocentral bristle, mid basitarsus with an enlarged ventral bristle, posteromedial emargination of the male S5, and two-part surstyli support the placement of
P. occidentalis
in the genus.
The placement of
P. occidentalis
sp. nov.
in
Pleuroseta
is provisional, given the marked differences between this species and the more homogeneous
P. wentworthi
species group, and the relatively weak putative synapomorphies linking
P. occidentalis
to the
P. wentworthi
group. However, there are no characters suggesting that
Pleuroseta
including
P. occidentalis
is a paraphyletic group (i.e, there are no synapomorphies linking either the
P. wentworthi
group or
P. occidentalis
to another genus). In the absence of such evidence, it is better to treat
P. occidentalis
as a provisional member of
Pleuroseta
, to which it is easily keyed on the basis of the patch of anepisternal setae, than to place it in a monobasic new genus. Some characters of
P. occidentalis
(unmaculated wings and legs, gently curved R 4+5, elongate telescopic female terminalia) superficially resemble some species in the large, heterogeneous genus
Howickia
.
Pleuroseta occidentalis
, however, lacks the tripart hypandrium that defines
Howickia
.
Fig. 1.
Pleuroseta ingens
sp. nov.
, anepisternum showing posterodorsal patch of setae and setulae (debu00161215). Scale bar =0.50 mm.
Key to species of
Pleuroseta
1. Small species (
1.8–2.3 mm
). Legs entirely dark brown; wing uniformly infuscate and not patterned. Proximal half of mid tibia with four dorsal bristles. Male S5 with stout, tooth-like setae flanking posteromedial emargination; ventral part of S6 unmodified (
Fig. 3B
). Female terminalia elongate, telescoped, largely membranous (
Fig. 4A–B
) .......................................
P. occidentalis
sp. nov.
(WA)
–
Large species (
2.8–4.4 mm
). Legs dark brown with yellow bands; wing infuscate with pattern of light spots. Proximal half of mid tibia with eight dorsal bristles. Male S5 bare or with unmodified setae flanking posteromedial emargination; S6 with additional lobes situated beneath posteromedial edge of S5 (as in
Fig. 7B
). Female terminalia short, well-sclerotized (
Figs 9A–B
,
14A–B
)............ 2
2. Fore tibia entirely brown; fore tarsomeres 2–5 white. Interfrontal bristles in two larger pairs and two smaller pairs. First postsutural pair of dorsocentral bristles separated by 9–14 acrostichal setulae. Male terminalia extremely large, epandrium almost as large as head (
Figs 6A
,
10A
)...................... 3
– Fore tibia with basal two-thirds yellow; all fore tarsomeres yellow. Interfrontal bristles in three large pairs and one small pair. First postsutural pair of dorsocentral bristles separated by 7–9 acrostichal setulae. Male terminalia relatively small, epandrium much smaller than head (
Fig. 12A
)................. .....................................................................................
P. wentworthi
(
Richards, 1973
) (NSW, QLD)
3. First postsutural pair of dorsocentral bristles separated by 12–14 rows of acrostichal setulae. Male S5 with deep, linear posteromedial emargination extending almost to anterior margin of sternite (
Fig. 7B
). S6 with three distinct, parallel, posteriorly directed lobes (
Fig. 8A
). Anterior section of surstylus with closely approximated dorsal and ventral lobes, dorsal lobe rectangular and ventral lobe short. Basal section of distiphallus short, stout and boot-shaped, apical section longer ............. .....................................................................................................................
P. ingens
sp. nov.
(QLD)
– First postsutural pair of dorsocentral bristles separated by 9–10 rows of acrostichal setulae. Male S5 with large, triangular posteromedial emargination reaching at most to anterior fifth of sternite (
Fig. 11B
). S6 with a dark T-shaped sclerotization, only the middle lobe of which extends posteriorly. Anterior section of surstylus with well-separated dorsal and ventral lobes, dorsal lobe semicircular and ventral lobe elongate. Basal section of distiphallus elongate, curved, apical section shorter ......................................................................................................
P. monteithi
sp. nov.
(QLD)