Revision of the fishfly genus Neochauliodes van der Weele (Megaloptera: Corydalidae) from India and adjacent regions of South Asia
Author
Liu, Xingyue
Author
Hayashi, Fumio
Author
Yang, Ding
text
Zootaxa
2010
2692
33
50
journal article
10.5281/zenodo.199566
9c049878-4174-40f5-bb4e-785b26cc147d
1175-5326
199566
Neochauliodes truncatus
Kimmins
(
Figures 7
,
35–39
)
Neochauliodes sinensis truncatus
Kimmins, 1954
: 440
.
Type
locality:
India
(Shillong).
Diagnosis.
This species is characterized by a dark head, by the pronotum having a pair of dark vittae, and by its hyaline forewings with median transverse markings separated into several small spots. Males can be distinguished by the rather broad and subtrapezoidal median plate of the tenth sternum. Female ninth gonocoxite is foliate, acutely produced posteriad, and much broader but shorter than the tenth tergum.
Male. Body length
24–36 mm
; forewing length
35–39 mm
; hindwing length
32–35 mm
.
FIGURES 35–39.
Neochauliodes truncatus
Kimmins.
35. Male genitalia, lateral view; 36. Male tenth sternum, ventral view; 37. Male tenth tergum, dorsal view; 38. Female genitalia, lateral view; 39. Female eighth sternum, ventral view. Scale bars = 1.0 mm.
Head dark, with clypeus yellowish brown (
Fig. 7
). Compound eyes dark, ocelli yellow, medially margined black. Antennae black. Mouthparts yellowish brown; mandible with distal half reddish brown, maxillary and labial palpi with terminal segments brown.
Pronotum yellowish brown, laterally with a pair of brown vittae; meso- and metathorax pale brown, each with dark, longitudinal markings laterally. Legs dark with short, dense, yellowish brown setae; tarsal claws reddish brown. Wings (
Fig. 7
) hyaline, with many brownish markings; pterostigmata short, pale. Forewing with a small brownish spots on proximal half of costal area, and with a long and a short brown stripe flanking the pterostigmata; other markings of small spots, isolated from each other, and respectively converged into proximal, median, and distal areas, with median spots slightly larger and more or less connected with each other, forming a transverse band that extends from R1 to Cu1. Hindwing similarly patterned, but with proximal half immaculate; median transverse band narrow and solid, extending from Sc to Cu1. Veins pale yellow, except for C, Sc, R1, proximal half of R2, and intercostal crossveins which are brown. Rs six-branched, with R4 and R5 strongly curved posteriorly in distal half; three crossveins between R1 and Rs.
Abdomen dark. Ninth tergum (
Fig. 35
) narrowed and produced anteroventrad in lateral view. Tenth tergum (
Figs 35
) in lateral view subtrapezoidal, arcuate on posterior and ventral margin, with posterodorsal corner roundly produced (
Fig. 37
). Tenth sternum (
Figs 35–36
) strongly sclerotized, lateral arms short and quadrate, connected with median plate by narrow strap; median plate in ventral view broadly rectangular with slightly concaved tip, its anteriorly margin incised V-shaped; median plate in lateral view spoon-shaped.
Female. Body length
20–39 mm
; forewing length
35–48 mm
; hindwing length
32–43 mm
. Eighth sternum (
Figs 38–39
) subtrapezoidal in lateral view, with posterior margin strongly produced and slightly concaved at tip in ventral view. Tenth tergum (
Fig. 38
) short and stout, with posterodorsal corner slightly produced in lateral view. Ninth gonocoxite (
Fig. 38
) much broader but shorter than tenth tergum, foliate, and acutely produced posteriad.
FIGURE 40.
Geographic distribution of
Neochauliodes
spp from India and adjacent regions. Lower map shows the general range of
Neochauliodes
, while upper map shows the distribution for each species. (●)
N. fletcheri
Kimmins
; (․)
N. indicus
(van der Weele); (□)
N. nepalensis
sp. nov.
; (˔)
N. obscurus
van der Weele; (Ο)
N. simplex
(Walker)
; ()
N. subfasciatus
(Westwood)
; (+)
N. truncatus
Kimmins.
Type
material.
Holotype
ɗ,
INDIA
: “Khasis;
5000 ft
. Shillong,
15.VI.1928
, Fletcher coll/
HoloType
/
Neochauliodes sinensis truncatus
Kim
[mins] ɗ D.E. Kimmins det. 1953./Abdomen in slide cabinet” (NHM). Allotype Ψ,
INDIA
: “Khasis;
5000 ft
. Shillong,
14.VI.1928
, Fletcher coll/Brit[ish]. Mus[eum].
1934-X16.
/ AlloType/
Neochauliodes sinensis truncatus
Kim
[mins] Ƥ D.E. Kimmins det. 1953./Abdomen in slide cabinet” (NHM).
Paratype
1Ψ,
INDIA
: “Khasis
5000 ft
Shillong
13.VI.1928
, Fletcher coll/
Paratype
/
Neochauliodes sinensis truncatus Kim
[mins] D.E. Kimmins det. 1953.” (NHM).
Additional material.
INDIA
: 2ɗ, Meghalaya, Shillong,
15.VI.1928
, B. Fletcher Coll. (NHM); 1Ψ, Sikkim, Chasseurs Indigenes, R.P. Breiaudeau, 1894 (NHM);
MYANMAR
: 1Ψ, Mandalay, Anisakan N.S.S. [
96°30'E
,
22°03'N
],
VI.1920
, Archbald Coll. (NHM).
Distribution.
India
(Arunachal Pradesh, Meghalaya, Sikkim);
Myanmar
(Mandalay).
Remarks.
This species was originally described as a subspecies of
Neochauliodes sinensis
(Walker)
by
Kimmins (1954)
.
Liu
et al.
(2007a)
elevated its specific status within the
N. sinensis
group. This species appears to be closely related to
N. nigris
Liu & Yang, 2005
from
China
and
Japan
by virtue of the similar wing patterns and male genitalia, but it can be distinguished from
N. nigris
by the median transverse markings of the forewings usually separated into several small spots and the female ninth gonocoxite without ventrally curved tip. In
N. nigris
the median transverse markings of the forewings are not separated and the female ninth gonocoxite is acutely pointed and curved ventrad.
Kimmins (1954)
named this species based on the nearly truncate tip of the male tenth sternum; however, the slightly concaved tip of the male tenth sternum is considered to be more typical for the species after we examined multiple male specimens.
Ghosh (1981
,
2000
) recorded
N. sinensis
from Arunachal Pradesh based on one male specimen. According to the description of
Ghosh (1981
,
2000
), we noticed that this male possesses a dark head and prothorax as well as a broad male tenth sternum, both of which are found in
N. truncatus
. Therefore, it is highly possible that the specimen of
N. sinensis
reported by
Ghosh (1981
,
2000
) is actually
N. truncatus
, and the true
N. sinensis
may not occur in
India
and in adjacent regions of South Asia.