Cladotanytarsus Kieffer (Diptera: Chironomidae): several distinctive species reviewed on the basis of records from Canada and USA
Author
Puchalski, Mateusz
Author
Giłka, Wojciech
text
Zootaxa
2017
4242
2
344
358
journal article
36303
10.11646/zootaxa.4242.2.7
8632c8ac-22fd-42bc-b95c-820c0c029c20
1175-5326
376427
8511A4B8-D82F-49EE-9132-E941B4C5D2C4
Cladotanytarsus
sp.
(
Fig. 4
)
Material examined.
USA
.
ILLINOIS
.
Du Bois
,
24 April 1914
,
1 male
hypopygium (S66-1261).
LOUISIANA
.
New Orleans
,
14 May 1952
,
4 male
hypopygia (S64-818, 821, 822, 823).
Main
body parts missing.
Ex
coll. M. & J.E. Sublette (legator unknown).
Deposit
in
DEUM
.
Diagnostic description
.
Adult male
(n = 5, hypopygia).
Hypopygium
(
Fig. 4
). Gonostylus shorter than gonocoxite,
ca.
85 µm long, with apex pointed. Anal tergite with V-type separated bands and 7–9 median setae placed in two irregular rows. Anal point with parallel-sided distal elongation, apically blunt or rounded, bearing 3 spinulae at most or spinulae absent (
Fig. 4
A, C). Superior volsella horn-shaped, with pointed apex, bearing field of microtrichia on 2/3 basal part or basal half at least, 5–8 dorsal setae and 3 long setae placed on conical tubercles at base. Digitus straight or very slightly curved, apex narrow, extending far beyond superior volsella (
Fig. 4
A, D). Stem of median volsella stocky,
ca.
30 µm long, shorter than its longest lamellae, bearing several setiform and 6–7 branched lamellae (4 strong and 2–3 weaker) (
Fig. 4
B, E). Inferior volsella as drawn in
Fig. 4
F, strongly broadened at base, with distinct round margin on ventral side, dorsomedian ridge thin (
Fig. 4
A, B, F).
Remarks.
Among the oldest specimens sampled from the Sublettes’ collection we found several male hypopygia belonging to a species which, in view of the set of diagnostic characters, deserves to be presented. The slender anal point with the parallel-sided distal elongation, the horn-shaped superior volsella, the stocky stem of the median volsella bearing stout branched lamellae and the inferior volsella strongly broadened at the base may indicate a close similarity to
Cladotanytarsus donmcbeani
Langton
et
McBean, 2010
(
cf.
Fig. 4
and
Langton & McBean 2010
, figs 1– 4). According to the original description (
op. cit.
), these two
Cladotanytarsus
species differ as adult males in the presence/absence of anal point spinulae and the shape of the digitus, apically hooked in
C. donmcbeani
.