Redescription of Notholimnophila Alexander and Acantholimnophila Alexander, poorly known New Zealand endemics (Diptera: Tipulomorpha: Limoniidae)
Author
Ribeiro, Guilherme Cunha
text
Zootaxa
2012
3173
54
68
journal article
45580
10.5281/zenodo.279866
465ffc6f-023e-40fe-88f0-270e262d03d7
1175-5326
279866
Genus
Acantholimnophila
Alexander, 1924
Acantholimnophila
Alexander, 1924
: 368
.
Type
species:
Limnophila maorica
Alexander, 1922b
.
Diagnosis.
According to the analysis of
Ribeiro (2008)
, the genus
Acantholimnophila
can be recognized by the following combination of autapomorphic features: length of scape up to 1.5x the length of the pedicel; flagellomeres tubular in shape; veins R2 and R3 reaching the wing margin almost parallel to each other; gonostylus subterminal in position.
Redescription.
Coloration (male and female). General coloration pale brown.
Morphology.
Head (
Figs 19–20
). Antenna as long as body; Flagellum 14-segmented, tubular in shape, decreasing in length toward tip of antenna, bearing short verticils; scape slightly longer than pedicel and ca. 1.25x longer than wide; palpus 4-segmented, all segments tubular in shape; eyes separated dorsally by a wide area. Wing (
Figs 21–22
,
29
). Macrotrichia all along wing veins; Vein h situated near the origin of vein M+Cu; tip of Sc reaching wing margin at the same level as tip of vein A1; R1 long, slightly sinuous, reaching C at the level of tip of M4; r- r very faint or absent; origin of Rs situated near the level of vein A2; R2+3 very short; veins R2, R3 and R4 running parallel to each other, pointing downwards near tip of wing; r-m little shorter than basal section of M1+2+3; four branches of M reaching wing margin; cell M1 ca.
2x
longer than its petiole; discal cell present; position of m-cu variable; A1 reaching wing margin at the level of vein Sc; A2 reaching wing margin near the level of origin of Rs. Thorax (
Figs 18
,
23
,
28
). Thoracic sclerites as in
Figure 23
; tibial spurs very small, barely distinct. Male genitalia (
Figs 24–26
,
30–31
). Posterior margin of tergite 9 forming extensions longer than wide. Gonocoxite cone-shaped, ca. 2.15– 3.0x longer than wide, with an acute apex; gonostylus subterminal; lobe and clasper of gonostylus subequal in length, ca. 4.5x longer than wide; clasper of gonostylus harry, gradually narrowing and curved toward tip; interbase well developed, long and narrow, at least 5.0x longer than wide, not connected to each other medially; aedeagus relatively short, not extending posteriorly beyond mid length of gonocoxite; area of the aedeagal sheath between parameres and aedeagus very wide. Female terminalia (
Figure 27
): hypogynial valve greatly developed, in lateral view ca. 2.5x broader than cercus; apex of hypogynial valve reaching about 2/3 of the length of cercus.
FIGURES 10–11.
Notholimnophila exclusa
(Alexander)
. Female ovipositor. 10: lateral view. 11: dorsal view.
FIGURES 12–13.
Notholimnophila exclusa
(Alexander)
. 12: wing venation. 13: thoracic sclerites, lateral view.
Remarks.
The study of
Ribeiro (2008)
indicated a sister-group relationship between
Acantholimnophila
and the widely distributed genus
Epiphragma
, on the basis of shared apomorphic features such as the expansion of the aedeagal sheath between the medial margin of paramere and lateral margin of aedeagus, and the extended lateral margins of the interbases. In fact, the morphology of the male genitalia looks very similar in both genera. However,
Epiphragma
species are larger flies, with wings strongly patterned with ocelliform markings, one or more additional cross-veins in cell C and first and second flagellomeres fused.