Nematode-induced demasculinization of Nearctic Dolichopodidae (Diptera) with five new synonyms
Author
Runyon, Justin B.
text
Zootaxa
2022
2022-01-24
5092
5
545
558
journal article
2447
10.11646/zootaxa.5092.5.3
851d995a-7acd-410b-9ab8-c38a81a2fc4f
1175-5326
5896385
5E84BAA2-9CD2-4471-93A2-56A468E69DF3
Dolichopus cuniculus
Van Duzee, 1921: 145
(=
Dolichopus remotus
Walker, 1849: 666
)
Potential infected species: possibly
Dolichopus remotus
.
Dolichopus cuniculus
was described from
one male
collected on
Grand Island
,
New York
,
USA
. This male has a short, rather slender hypopygium and
Van Duzee
commented “The name was suggested by the small hypopygium which reminded me of a rabbit’s tail” (
Van Duzee
1921: 146). The illustration of the apex of the abdomen and postabdomen (
Van Duzee
et al.
1921
, fig. 98) shows a small and improperly rotated hypopygium that is characteristic of nematode infection
.
Parent (1934) synonymized
D. cuniculus
with
D. remotus
but gave no justification. It is possible that
types
of both species are demasculinized. Van Duzee noted the similarity of
D. cuniculus
to
D. abbreviatus
(see above) and the widespread species
D. ramifer
(Van Duzee 1921: 145)
.
Dolichopus ramifer
is unlikely to be the host species since both sexes have a stump vein (lacking in
D. cuniculus
) and shiny bluish frons (green in
D. cuniculus
), characters not predicted to be affected by nematode infection.
Dolichopus abbreviatus
, on the other hand, could be synonymous with
D. cuniculus
.