taxonID	type	description	language	source
D20787A1FFBAFFFEFF13FEABFDC8C1BC.taxon	description	(Figs 1 – 15, 66)	en	Sánchez, Pável, Camargo, Alexssandro (2023): The ampliatus species group of Ommatius Wiedemann, 1821 (Diptera, Asilidae, Ommatiinae) in Peru with the description of four new species. Zootaxa 5352 (4): 501-520, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.5352.4.3, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.5352.4.3
D20787A1FFBAFFFEFF13FEABFDC8C1BC.taxon	diagnosis	Diagnosis. Femora wholly black (Figs 1 – 2); male with apex of epandrium rod-like, strongly narrowed and long, longer than base of epandrium and markedly curved upwards, meeting the inflated apex of the extremely developed subepandrial sclerite, which forms an arc above the terminalia (Figs 4 – 5). Female with sternite 8 mostly yellow setose (Fig. 13), strongly produced medially, medioapical margin as long as half the length of the sternite, and as wide as half its width (Fig. 14).	en	Sánchez, Pável, Camargo, Alexssandro (2023): The ampliatus species group of Ommatius Wiedemann, 1821 (Diptera, Asilidae, Ommatiinae) in Peru with the description of four new species. Zootaxa 5352 (4): 501-520, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.5352.4.3, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.5352.4.3
D20787A1FFBAFFFEFF13FEABFDC8C1BC.taxon	description	Description of male holotype. Length: body, 12.5 mm; wing, 10.5 mm Head (Fig. 1). Antenna black, black setose; two black ocellar setae; face, frons and vertex black, the first golden pruinose, about seventh width of head, the latter with sparse brownish yellow pruinosity; mystacal macrosetae black above and yellowish below; palpus black, yellowish setose; proboscis black, white setose ventrally, labial setae yellowish; occiput black, gray pruinose with white setae, upper half of margin of eye with 10 – 12 postocular black macrosetae, uppermost ones proclinate. Thorax (Fig. 1). Black; antepronotum and scutum brown pruinose, except for yellow sparse pruinosity on corners of the latter, and around notopleural suture; postpronotum, scutellum, and pleura silver pruinose, except on upper side of anepisternum, yellow pruinose. Chaetotaxy: pronotum white setose, with two pairs of macrosetae on antepronotum, central ones black, lateral yellowish; postpronotal lobe white setose; scutum with black macrosetae, 3 notopleural, 1 supra-alar, 1 postalar and 3 postsutural dorsocentral; scutellar disc with few setae, mixed black and yellow, 2 apical scutellar black macrosetae; 1 anepimeral macroseta yellow; anatergal setae absent; katatergal macrosetae yellow; posterior meron + metanepisternum yellow setose. Wing (Fig. 3). Brownish, apical half darkened by microtrichia; veins dark brown, without costal dilation; crossvein r-m at middle of discal cell; R 4 + 5 bifurcation anterior to apex of discal cell; microtrichia on posterior margin of wing arranged in single row; halter yellow. Legs (Figs 1 – 2). Coxae silver pruinose; femora wholly black; tibiae yellow, with dark brown apex, almost apical third brown in hind one; tarsomeres dark brown, except first ones of fore and mid tarsi, yellow with dark apex (Figs 1 – 2). Chaetotaxy: fore femur black setose, long yellow setae ventrally, 1 anterodorsal short, black macroseta on basal third; mid femur black setose, long yellow setae ventrally, black macrosetae, 2 anterior, 2 anteroventral, 1 anterodorsal, and 1 posterodorsal subapical; hind femur mostly yellow setose, macrosetae mostly yellowish, 2 anterior, 6 – 7 anteroventral, 2 apical ones black, 9 posteroventral, 2 apical ones black, 1 anterodorsal, also black, subapical (Fig. 2); fore tibia with 2 long posteroventral yellow macrosetae; mid tibia with 2 anterodorsal and 2 anteroventral black macrosetae, 2 posteroventral yellow macrosetae; hind tibia with 4 black macrosetae dorsally and 1 apical spur-like macroseta; tarsi with black setae, except for one yellow seta on first tarsomere of fore leg. Abdomen (Fig. 1). Black, predominantly with yellow setae, setae longer on posterior margin of tergites; lateral marginal macrosetae on tergite 1 yellow. Terminalia (Figs 4 – 6). Black (except apical tip of epandrium, reddish brown), yellow setose; epandrium strongly narrowed apically, narrow apex long and curved upwards, meeting the extremely developed subepandrial sclerite, which is strongly curved basally and broadened at apex due to strong ventral process with rounded apex (Figs 4 – 5); cercus very long, four times as long as broad (Figs 9 – 10); gonostylus narrow, hook-like (Fig. 8); gonocoxite entirely sclerotized, narrowed apically, gonocoxal apodeme large, flattened (Fig. 8); ejaculatory apodeme wide in lateral view, twice length of phallus (Fig. 7); parameral sheath with ventral crest, tooth-like (Fig. 7); hypandrium dome-like in ventral view, posterior apex well projected, narrow and rounded (Figs 5 – 6). Female (Figs 11 – 15). Similar to male, except for: anepimeral macroseta black; 4 postsutural dorsocentral macrosetae; crossvein r-m posterior to middle of discal cell; hind tibia without apical spur-like macroseta; tarsi with black setae; tergites 7 and 8 mostly black setose (Figs 11 – 12); tergite 8 with posterior margin rounded, shiny black (Fig. 12); tergite 9 + 10 short dorsally; sternite 8 mostly yellow setose (Fig. 13), strongly produced medially, medioapical margin as long as half the length of tergite, and as wide as half its width (Fig. 14); cercus as long as wide (Fig. 12); arms of genital fork lanceolate, convergent posteriorly, furcal apodeme very short, platelike; three spherical spermathecae (Fig. 15). Variation. All paratypes (male and females) with 4 postsutural dorsocentral macrosetae.	en	Sánchez, Pável, Camargo, Alexssandro (2023): The ampliatus species group of Ommatius Wiedemann, 1821 (Diptera, Asilidae, Ommatiinae) in Peru with the description of four new species. Zootaxa 5352 (4): 501-520, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.5352.4.3, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.5352.4.3
D20787A1FFBAFFFEFF13FEABFDC8C1BC.taxon	etymology	Etymology. A masculine noun in apposition, from the Quechua language, meaning serpent, animal that in the Andean cosmovision symbolizes the world below or the world of the dead (the uku pacha).	en	Sánchez, Pável, Camargo, Alexssandro (2023): The ampliatus species group of Ommatius Wiedemann, 1821 (Diptera, Asilidae, Ommatiinae) in Peru with the description of four new species. Zootaxa 5352 (4): 501-520, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.5352.4.3, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.5352.4.3
D20787A1FFBAFFFEFF13FEABFDC8C1BC.taxon	materials_examined	Holotype condition. Good. Taxonomic discussion. Ommatius amaru sp. nov., can be readily distinguished from all of its congeners, including Ommatius uturuncu sp. nov., by the extremely developed subepandrial sclerite (Figs 4 – 5, 9 – 10) and the additional features given in the diagnosis above. Additionally, the wholly black femora in all legs (Fig. 1) and the presence of 1 – 3 anterior and 3 – 5 posterior posteroventral macrosetae yellow or white (Fig. 2) help to separate this species from other species in the ampliatus group. The most similar species is O. ampliatus in which the subepandrial sclerite is only slightly pronounced ventrally at the apex; the apex of the epandrium is smaller in length and clavate distally; the gonocoxite has 3 long and thin macrosetae which are lacking in Ommatius amaru sp. nov.	en	Sánchez, Pável, Camargo, Alexssandro (2023): The ampliatus species group of Ommatius Wiedemann, 1821 (Diptera, Asilidae, Ommatiinae) in Peru with the description of four new species. Zootaxa 5352 (4): 501-520, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.5352.4.3, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.5352.4.3
D20787A1FFBAFFFEFF13FEABFDC8C1BC.taxon	distribution	Distribution. Peru, Department of Cuzco, Kosñipata valley (Fig. 66), cloud forest on the eastern slopes of the Andes. Known specimens were collected in December.	en	Sánchez, Pável, Camargo, Alexssandro (2023): The ampliatus species group of Ommatius Wiedemann, 1821 (Diptera, Asilidae, Ommatiinae) in Peru with the description of four new species. Zootaxa 5352 (4): 501-520, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.5352.4.3, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.5352.4.3
D20787A1FFBAFFFEFF13FEABFDC8C1BC.taxon	materials_examined	Type material. Holotype: PERU, CU [Cuzco] Valle de Kosñipata, Rocotal 2052 m 13 ° 06 ’ 48 ” S, 71 ° 34 ’ 13 ” W 10. xii. 2007 C. Castillo / HOLOTYPE ♂ Ommatius amaru Sánchez & Camargo (MUSM). Paratypes: Same data as holotype (1 ♂, 2 ♀) (MUSM).	en	Sánchez, Pável, Camargo, Alexssandro (2023): The ampliatus species group of Ommatius Wiedemann, 1821 (Diptera, Asilidae, Ommatiinae) in Peru with the description of four new species. Zootaxa 5352 (4): 501-520, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.5352.4.3, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.5352.4.3
D20787A1FFBCFFFDFF13F972FD48C0E6.taxon	description	(Figs 16 – 30, 66)	en	Sánchez, Pável, Camargo, Alexssandro (2023): The ampliatus species group of Ommatius Wiedemann, 1821 (Diptera, Asilidae, Ommatiinae) in Peru with the description of four new species. Zootaxa 5352 (4): 501-520, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.5352.4.3, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.5352.4.3
D20787A1FFBCFFFDFF13F972FD48C0E6.taxon	diagnosis	Diagnosis. Hind femur black, except narrow base, reddish ventrally (Fig. 16); epandrium with two apical processes, one dorsal, L-shaped, pointed apically and abruptly curved upwards, the other sub-dorsal, long and narrow, rod-like, as long as base of epandrium and also abruptly curved upwards (Fig. 17); subepandrial sclerite with ventral process truncate apically (rounded in lateral view and rectangular in ventral view) (Fig. 22). Female with sternite 8 mostly black setose (Fig. 28), well produced medially, medioapical margin as long as one third the length of the sternite, and as wide as one third its width (Fig. 29).	en	Sánchez, Pável, Camargo, Alexssandro (2023): The ampliatus species group of Ommatius Wiedemann, 1821 (Diptera, Asilidae, Ommatiinae) in Peru with the description of four new species. Zootaxa 5352 (4): 501-520, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.5352.4.3, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.5352.4.3
D20787A1FFBCFFFDFF13F972FD48C0E6.taxon	description	Description of male holotype. Length: body, 12.5 mm; wing, 10 mm. Head (Fig. 16). Antenna black, black setose; two black ocellar setae; face, frons and vertex black, the first golden pruinose, about a seventh width of head, the latter with sparse brownish yellow pruinosity; mystacal macrosetae black above and yellowish bellow; palpus black, mixed yellow and brown setose; proboscis black, white setose ventrally, labial setae yellowish; occiput black, gray pruinose with white setae, upper half of margin of eye with 8 – 10 postocular black macrosetae, uppermost proclinate. Thorax (Fig. 16). Black; antepronotum and scutum brown pruinose, except for yellow sparse pruinosity on corners of the latter, and around notopleural suture; postpronotum, scutellum, pleura silver pruinose, except on upper side of anepisternum, brown pruinose. Chaetotaxy: pronotum white setose, with two pairs of yellowish macrosetae on antepronotum; postpronotal lobe pale yellow setose; scutum with black macrosetae, 2 notopleural, 1 supra-alar, 1 postalar and 4 postsutural dorsocentral; scutellar disc with few yellow setae, 2 apical scutellar black macrosetae; 1 yellow anepimeral macroseta; anatergal setae absent; katatergal macrosetae yellow; posterior meron + metanepisternum yellow setose. Wing (Fig. 18). Brownish, apical half darkened by microtrichia; veins dark brown, without costal dilation; crossvein r-m at middle of discal cell; R 4 + 5 bifurcation slightly posterior to level of apex of discal cell; microtrichia on posterior margin of wing arranged in single row; halter yellow. Legs (Fig. 16). Coxae silver pruinose; fore and mid femora yellow ventrally, dark brown dorsally, hind femur black, except narrow base, reddish ventrally; tibiae yellow, apex of mid and hind tibia brown, almost apical half in the latter; tarsomeres dark brown, except first ones of fore and mid tarsi, yellow with dark apex (Fig. 16). Chaetotaxy: Fore femur black setose, long yellow setae ventrally, 1 anterodorsal short black macroseta on basal third; mid femur black setose, long yellow setae ventrally, black macrosetae, 2 anterior, 2 anteroventral, 1 anterodorsal, and 1 posterodorsal, subapical; hind femur mostly yellow setose, macrosetae mostly yellowish, two anterior, 6 – 7 anteroventral, 7 – 8 posteroventral, 2 – 3 apical ones black, 1 anterodorsal, also black, subapical; fore tibia with 2 long posteroventral yellow macrosetae; mid tibia with 2 anterodorsal and 2 anteroventral black macrosetae, 2 posteroventral, 1 yellow, 1 black; hind tibia with 4 black macrosetae dorsally and 1 apical spur-like macroseta; tarsi with black setae, except for one yellow seta on first tarsomere of fore leg. Abdomen (Fig. 16). Black, yellowish setose, except on tergites 5 to 8, mostly black setose; lateral marginal macrosetae on tergite 1 yellow. Terminalia (Figs 17, 19 – 20). Black (except narrow apex of epandrium, apex of gonocoxite and gonostylus, reddish brown), mostly yellow setose, except some black setae on epandrium; epandrium with two apical processes, one dorsal, prominent, L-shaped, pointed apically and abruptly curved upwards, another sub-dorsal, rod-like, long and narrow, as long as base of epandrium and also curved upwards (Fig. 17); subepandrial sclerite with ventral process with truncate apex, rounded in lateral view and rectangular in ventral view (Fig. 22); gonostylus long and narrow, pointed apically (Figs 24 – 25); gonocoxite less sclerotized apically and posteriorly, in area of insertion of the gonostylus, gonocoxal apodeme virtually absent (Figs 24 – 25); ejaculatory apodeme slightly wide in lateral view, as long as phallus (Fig. 23); hypandrium dome-like in ventral view, posterior apex projected, thin and rounded (Figs 17, 20). Female (Figs 26 – 30). Similar to male, except for: palpus mainly brown to black setose, yellow setae also present; anepimeral macroseta black; 3 postsutural dorsocentral macrosetae; crossvein r-m posterior to middle of discal cell; hind tibia without apical spur-like macroseta; tarsi with black setae (Fig. 26); tergite 8 shiny black, tergite 9 + 10 short dorsally (Fig. 27); sternite 8 mainly black setose, with row of 4 – 5 stout black macrosetae obliquely arranged from proximal two-thirds towards its apical corner (one yellow mixed), well produced medially, medioapical margin as long as third the length of tergite, and as wide as a third its width (Figs 28 – 29); arms of genital fork thin, furcal apodeme short, plate-like; three spherical spermathecae (Fig. 30).	en	Sánchez, Pável, Camargo, Alexssandro (2023): The ampliatus species group of Ommatius Wiedemann, 1821 (Diptera, Asilidae, Ommatiinae) in Peru with the description of four new species. Zootaxa 5352 (4): 501-520, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.5352.4.3, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.5352.4.3
D20787A1FFBCFFFDFF13F972FD48C0E6.taxon	etymology	Etymology. A masculine noun in apposition, from the Quechua language, meaning condor, sacred animal that in the Andean cosmovision symbolizes the world above or the world of the gods (the hanan pacha).	en	Sánchez, Pável, Camargo, Alexssandro (2023): The ampliatus species group of Ommatius Wiedemann, 1821 (Diptera, Asilidae, Ommatiinae) in Peru with the description of four new species. Zootaxa 5352 (4): 501-520, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.5352.4.3, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.5352.4.3
D20787A1FFBCFFFDFF13F972FD48C0E6.taxon	description	Variation. A female paratype from Ayacucho presents hind femur apically with two anteroventral macrosetae black, in addition the abdomen is mostly black setose dorsally.	en	Sánchez, Pável, Camargo, Alexssandro (2023): The ampliatus species group of Ommatius Wiedemann, 1821 (Diptera, Asilidae, Ommatiinae) in Peru with the description of four new species. Zootaxa 5352 (4): 501-520, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.5352.4.3, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.5352.4.3
D20787A1FFBCFFFDFF13F972FD48C0E6.taxon	materials_examined	Holotype condition. Right foreleg missing. Taxonomic discussion. Ommatius kuntur sp. nov. can be separated from other species in the ampliatus group by the diagnosis given above. Additionally, other useful characters to separate this species are palpus partially to predominantly brown setose; fore and mid femora at least yellow on basal third to half posteriorly (Fig. 16); hind femur mostly dark reddish brown to black (Fig. 16); and unusually thick gonocoxal macroseta absent (Figs 24 – 25). The most similar species is O. quadratus (Figs 58 – 65). However, through a comparison of the original description, drawings, and images of the holotype, some slight differences are noted. O. quadratus has a dark reddish brown hind femur with the extreme base yellow (Fig. 62), while Ommatius kuntur sp. nov., has a shiny black hind femur with only the extreme base ventrally with a small dark reddish spot (Fig. 16). The hind tibia in O. quadratus is almost entirely yellow with apical third dark yellow; hind tarsus almost completely yellow with last four tarsomeres slightly dark brown towards apex (Fig. 58). In Ommatius kuntur sp. nov. the apical half of the hind tibia and the hind tarsus are dark brown to almost completely black (Fig. 16). The main differences can be observed in the female terminalia. In O. quadratus, according to Scarbrough (2002), the cercus is apically strongly oblique; the internal apical margin of the hypoproct is rounded; the T 9 + 10 has its apical corner concave with a long spoon-shape depression (Figs 64 – 65); the S 8 has its medioapical margin produced and truncate with corners acutely angled, and sides parallel, slightly raised, joined with a deep notch laterally, notched surface slightly excavated with 1 stout macroseta (Figs 64 – 65 [socket of macrosetae indicated by yellow arrows]). In Ommatius kuntur sp. nov. the cercus is rounded apically; the hypoproct has a small notch at the apical margin, internally, and with a slight projection internally, subapically; the T 9 + 10 has rectangular corners and its apical corner is straight without long spoon-shaped depression; the S 8 also possesses a medioapical margin produced and truncate with acute corners, and sides parallel, slightly raised (Fig. 29). However, the parallel sides are joined to a shallow notch laterally and the notched surface is not excavated and does not possess a stout macroseta (Fig. 29). In contrast, there is a row of 4 – 5 stout macrosetae obliquely arranged from the proximal two-thirds of the S 8 surface to its apical corner (Fig. 29). Such an array of macrosetae is absent in O. quadratus (Figs 64 – 65).	en	Sánchez, Pável, Camargo, Alexssandro (2023): The ampliatus species group of Ommatius Wiedemann, 1821 (Diptera, Asilidae, Ommatiinae) in Peru with the description of four new species. Zootaxa 5352 (4): 501-520, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.5352.4.3, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.5352.4.3
D20787A1FFBCFFFDFF13F972FD48C0E6.taxon	distribution	Distribution. Peru, Departments of Ayacucho (Moyobamba) and Cuzco (Kosñipata Valley) (Fig. 66). Both montane forests on the eastern slopes of the Andes. Known specimens were collected in April, July, August, October and December.	en	Sánchez, Pável, Camargo, Alexssandro (2023): The ampliatus species group of Ommatius Wiedemann, 1821 (Diptera, Asilidae, Ommatiinae) in Peru with the description of four new species. Zootaxa 5352 (4): 501-520, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.5352.4.3, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.5352.4.3
D20787A1FFBCFFFDFF13F972FD48C0E6.taxon	materials_examined	Type material. Holotype: PERU, CU Valle de Kosñipata, S. Pedro 1520 m 13 ° 03 ’ 23 ” S, 71 ° 32 ’ 55 ” W 24. x. 2007 C. Castillo / HOLOTYPE ♂ Ommatius kuntur Sánchez & Camargo (MUSM). Paratypes: Same data as holotype (1 ♂); same data as holotype, except date, 25. vii. 2007 (1 ♀); PERU, CU Valle de Kosñipata, Rocotal 2052 m 13 ° 06 ’ 48 ” S, 71 ° 34 ’ 13 ” W 10. xii. 2007 C. Castillo (1 ♀) / PARATYPE ♀ Ommatius kuntur Sánchez & Camargo (MUSM); PERU. AY. La Mar, Moyobamba 13 ° ’ 05 ’ 14 ” S, 73 ° 30 ’ 23.5 ” W, 1918 m. Malaise, “ bosque ” 27. iv. 2022 M. Alvarado / PARATYPE ♀ Ommatius kuntur Sánchez & Camargo (MUSM); same data as previous one except date, 30. viii. 2022 (3 ♂); PERU. AY. La Mar, Moyobamba 13 ° ’ 04 ’ 47 ” S, 73 ° 31 ’ 20 ” W, 1726 m. 29. viii. 2022 M. Alvarado Trampa de luz “ café sin sombra ” (1 ♂, 1 ♀).	en	Sánchez, Pável, Camargo, Alexssandro (2023): The ampliatus species group of Ommatius Wiedemann, 1821 (Diptera, Asilidae, Ommatiinae) in Peru with the description of four new species. Zootaxa 5352 (4): 501-520, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.5352.4.3, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.5352.4.3
D20787A1FFB0FFF0FF13FF1BFDA3C2BB.taxon	description	(Figs 31 – 45, 66)	en	Sánchez, Pável, Camargo, Alexssandro (2023): The ampliatus species group of Ommatius Wiedemann, 1821 (Diptera, Asilidae, Ommatiinae) in Peru with the description of four new species. Zootaxa 5352 (4): 501-520, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.5352.4.3, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.5352.4.3
D20787A1FFB0FFF0FF13FF1BFDA3C2BB.taxon	diagnosis	Diagnosis. Hind femur wholly black (Fig. 31); male with apex of epandrium strongly narrowed and long, gently curved upwards, subequal in length to the base of epandrium (Fig. 32); subepandrial sclerite with a ventral process having a rounded apex, divergent from axis of terminalia (Figs 36 – 37). Female sternite 8 with medioapical margin short and broad, as long as a fourth of the length of the sternite and as broad as half its width (Fig. 44).	en	Sánchez, Pável, Camargo, Alexssandro (2023): The ampliatus species group of Ommatius Wiedemann, 1821 (Diptera, Asilidae, Ommatiinae) in Peru with the description of four new species. Zootaxa 5352 (4): 501-520, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.5352.4.3, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.5352.4.3
D20787A1FFB0FFF0FF13FF1BFDA3C2BB.taxon	description	Description of male holotype. Length: body, 11 mm; wing, 9 mm. Head (Fig. 31). Antenna black, black setose; two black ocellar setae; face, frons and vertex black, the first golden pruinose, about an eight width of head, the latter with sparse brownish yellow pruinosity; mystacal macrosetae black above and yellowish bellow; palpus black, yellowish setose; proboscis black, white setose ventrally, labial setae yellowish; occiput black, gray pruinose with white setae, upper third of margin of eye with 5 – 6 postocular black macrosetae, uppermost proclinate. Thorax (Fig. 31). Black; antepronotum and scutum brown pruinose, except for yellow sparse pruinosity on corners of latter, and silver pruinosity around notopleural suture; postpronotum, scutellum and pleura silver pruinose. Chaetotaxy: pronotum white setose, with two pairs of yellowish macrosetae on antepronotum; postpronotal lobe yellow setose; scutum with black macrosetae, 2 notopleural, 1 supra-alar, 1 postalar and 4 postsutural dorsocentral; scutellar disc with few setae, mixed black and yellow, 2 apical scutellar black macrosetae; 1 yellow anepimeral macroseta; anatergal setae absent; katatergal macrosetae yellow; posterior meron + metanepisternum yellow setose. Wing (Fig. 33). Hyaline, apical half darkened by microtrichia; veins dark brown, without costal dilation; crossvein r-m anterior to middle of discal cell; R 4 + 5 bifurcation slightly anterior to level of discal cell; microtrichia on posterior margin of wing arranged in single row; halter yellow. Legs (Fig. 31). Coxae silver pruinose; fore and mid femora yellow ventrally, dark brown dorsally, hind femora black; tibiae yellow, apex of mid and hind tibiae brown, almost apical half in the latter; tarsomeres dark brown, except first ones of fore and mid tarsi, yellow with dark apex. Chaetotaxy: fore femur black setose, long yellow setae ventrally, 1 anterodorsal short black macroseta on basal third; mid femur black setose, long yellow setae ventrally, black macrosetae, 2 anterior, 2 anteroventral, 1 anterodorsal, 1 posterodorsal, subapical; hind femur mostly yellow setose, macrosetae mostly yellowish, 2 anterior, 7 anteroventral, 1 apical black, 9 posteroventral, 2 – 3 apical ones black, 1 anterodorsal, also black, subapical; fore tibia with 2 long posteroventral yellow macrosetae; mid tibia with 2 anterodorsal, 2 anteroventral and 1 posteroventral black macrosetae; hind tibia with 4 black macrosetae and 1 apical spur-like macroseta; tarsi with black setae, except for one yellow seta on first tarsomere of fore leg. Abdomen (Fig. 31). Black, yellowish setose, except on tergites 5 to 8, mostly black setose; lateral marginal macrosetae on tergite 1 yellow. Terminalia (Figs 32, 34 – 35). Black, mostly yellow setose; epandrium strongly narrowed apically, narrow apex gently curved upwards (Fig. 32); subepandrial sclerite with ventral process of rounded apex, divergent of axis of terminalia (Fig. 37); gonostylus short, pincer-like (Figs 39 – 40); gonocoxite less sclerotized posteriorly, in area of insertion of gonostylus, gonocoxal apodeme virtually absent (Figs 39 – 40); ejaculatory apodeme wide in lateral view, as long as phallus (Fig. 38); hypandrium dome like in ventral view, posterior apex projected, thin and rounded (Figs 32, 35). Female (Figs 41 – 45). Similar to male, except by: anepimeral macroseta black; crossvein r-m at middle of discal cell; hind tibia without apical spur-like macroseta; tarsi with black setae (Fig. 41); tergite 8 shiny dark brown (Fig. 42); tergite 9 + 10 short dorsally; sternite 8 mixed black and yellow setose, with a row of 2 – 3 stout black macrosetae obliquely arranged from the distal basal half towards proximal three-thirds (one yellow mixed), medially produced, medioapical margin short and broad, as long as a fourth length of the sternite and as broad as half its width (Figs 43 – 44); arms of genital fork thin; three spherical spermathecae (Fig. 45).	en	Sánchez, Pável, Camargo, Alexssandro (2023): The ampliatus species group of Ommatius Wiedemann, 1821 (Diptera, Asilidae, Ommatiinae) in Peru with the description of four new species. Zootaxa 5352 (4): 501-520, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.5352.4.3, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.5352.4.3
D20787A1FFB0FFF0FF13FF1BFDA3C2BB.taxon	etymology	Etymology. A masculine noun in apposition, from the Quechua language, meaning jaguar, animal that in the Andean cosmovision symbolizes the world of the here and now (the kay pacha). Uturuncu also means “ he who kills with one leap ” so it seems to be an accurate name for a robber fly.	en	Sánchez, Pável, Camargo, Alexssandro (2023): The ampliatus species group of Ommatius Wiedemann, 1821 (Diptera, Asilidae, Ommatiinae) in Peru with the description of four new species. Zootaxa 5352 (4): 501-520, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.5352.4.3, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.5352.4.3
D20787A1FFB0FFF0FF13FF1BFDA3C2BB.taxon	materials_examined	Holotype condition. Good. Taxonomic discussion. Ommatius uturuncu sp. nov. can be easily separated from other species in the ampliatus group, including Ommatius amaru sp. nov. by the subepandrial sclerite with a ventral rounded apical process at each posterior corner (Figs 36 – 37). Additionally, other characters that are useful to separate this species are palpus entirely yellow setose; fore and mid femora at least yellow on basal third to half posteriorly (Fig. 31); hind femora wholly black (Fig. 31); unusually thick gonocoxal macroseta absent (Figs 39 – 40); apex of epandrium extremely narrow and long (Figs 32, 34 – 35). The most similar species to Ommatius uturuncu sp. nov. is Ommatius angulosus Scarbrough, 2002 which can be separated by the presence of gonocoxal macrosetae; fore and mid femora posteriorly brown on apical half and subepandrial sclerite with a basal process, slightly produced, J-shaped.	en	Sánchez, Pável, Camargo, Alexssandro (2023): The ampliatus species group of Ommatius Wiedemann, 1821 (Diptera, Asilidae, Ommatiinae) in Peru with the description of four new species. Zootaxa 5352 (4): 501-520, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.5352.4.3, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.5352.4.3
D20787A1FFB0FFF0FF13FF1BFDA3C2BB.taxon	distribution	Distribution. Peru, Departments of Ayacucho (La Mar) and Pasco (Paucartambo) (Fig. 66). Known specimens were collected in March, August and November. Both localities correspond to mid-elevation Montane forests on the eastern slopes of the Andes. Both are impacted areas with secondary vegetation or crops nearby.	en	Sánchez, Pável, Camargo, Alexssandro (2023): The ampliatus species group of Ommatius Wiedemann, 1821 (Diptera, Asilidae, Ommatiinae) in Peru with the description of four new species. Zootaxa 5352 (4): 501-520, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.5352.4.3, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.5352.4.3
D20787A1FFB0FFF0FF13FF1BFDA3C2BB.taxon	materials_examined	Type material. Holotype: PERU, PA [Pasco] Paucartambo, Santa Isabel, 10 ° 43 ’ 19.2 ” S, 75 ° 38 ’ 42 ” W xi. 2019 P. Sánchez / HOLOTYPE ♂ Ommatius uturuncu Sánchez & Camargo (MUSM). Paratypes: Same data as holotype (1 ♂, 1 ♀); PERU, AY. La Mar, Moyobamba 13 ° 05 ’ 15.8 ” S, 73 ° 30 ’ 33.9 ” W 1847 m Malaise, “ café bajo sombra ” 29. iii. 2022 M. Alvarado / PARATYPE ♂ Ommatius uturuncu Sánchez & Camargo (MUSM); PERU, AY. La Mar, Moyobamba 13 ° 05 ’ 16 ” S, 73 ° 30 ’ 40 ” W 1847 m, 02. viii. 2022 Malaise N ° 8 M. Alvarado / PARATYPE ♀ Ommatius uturuncu Sánchez & Camargo (MUSM).	en	Sánchez, Pável, Camargo, Alexssandro (2023): The ampliatus species group of Ommatius Wiedemann, 1821 (Diptera, Asilidae, Ommatiinae) in Peru with the description of four new species. Zootaxa 5352 (4): 501-520, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.5352.4.3, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.5352.4.3
D20787A1FFB2FFF4FF13FA63FAEBC2F4.taxon	description	(Figs 46 – 57, 66) Description of male holotype. Length: body, 12.5 mm; wing, 10.5 mm.	en	Sánchez, Pável, Camargo, Alexssandro (2023): The ampliatus species group of Ommatius Wiedemann, 1821 (Diptera, Asilidae, Ommatiinae) in Peru with the description of four new species. Zootaxa 5352 (4): 501-520, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.5352.4.3, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.5352.4.3
D20787A1FFB2FFF4FF13FA63FAEBC2F4.taxon	diagnosis	Diagnosis. Femora black, except narrow bases, reddish (Figs 46 – 47); wing with costal dilation (Fig. 48); hind femur tumid (Fig. 47); epandrium narrowed and rounded apically (Fig. 50), narrow apex markedly curved backwards, meeting the opposite one (Figs 49, 51); gonocoxite wide with two macrosetae, one long and thick. Head (Fig. 46). Antenna dark brown, black setose; two black ocellar setae; face, frons and vertex black, golden pruinose, the first about a seventh width of head; mystacal macrosetae black above and yellowish bellow; palpus black, yellowish setose; proboscis black, white setose ventrally, labial setae yellowish; occiput black, gray pruinose with white setae, upper third of margin of eye with 8 – 10 postocular black macrosetae, uppermost proclinate. Thorax (Fig. 46). Dark brown; scutum brown pruinose, except for yellow sparse pruinosity on corners of the latter and around notopleural suture; pronotum, scutellum and pleura mixed silver and pale golden pruinose. Chaetotaxy: pronotum white setose, with two pairs of yellowish macrosetae on antepronotum; postpronotal lobe white setose; scutum with black macrosetae, 2 notopleural, 1 supra-alar, 1 postalar and 4 postsutural dorsocentral; scutellar disc with few pale-yellow setae, 2 apical scutellar black macrosetae; 1 black anepimeral macroseta; anatergal setae absent; katatergal macrosetae yellow; posterior meron + metanepisternum yellow setose. Wing (Fig. 48). Brownish, apical half darkened by microtrichia; veins dark brown, with costal dilation; crossvein r-m anterior to middle of discal cell; R 4 + 5 bifurcation slightly anterior to level of apex of discal cell; microtrichia on posterior margin of wing arranged in single row; halter brownish yellow. Legs (Figs 46 – 47). Coxae mixed silver and pale golden pruinose; femora black, narrow bases reddish, hind femur tumid; tibiae yellow, mid and hind tibia brown ventrally and apically; tarsomeres dark brown, except first ones of fore and mid tarsi, yellow with dark apex. Chaetotaxy: fore femur black setose, long yellow setae ventrally, 1 anterodorsal short black macroseta on basal third; mid femur black setose, long yellow setae ventrally, black macrosetae, 2 anterior, 2 anteroventral, 1 anterodorsal, 1 posterodorsal, subapical; hind femur mostly yellow setose, macrosetae mostly yellowish, 2 anterior, 6 anteroventral, stouter and longer basally, 6 posteroventral, 2 – 3 apical ones black, 1 anterodorsal, also black, subapical; fore tibia with 2 long posteroventral yellow macrosetae; mid tibia with 2 anterodorsal, 2 anteroventral and 2 posteroventral black macrosetae; hind tibia with 4 macrosetae dorsally and 1 spur-like macroseta; tarsi with black setae. Abdomen (Fig. 46). Black, mostly covered with white setae; lateral marginal macrosetae on tergite 1 white. Terminalia (Figs 49 – 51). Black (except reddish brown apex of epandrium and gonostylus), white setose, some black setae present; epandrium with apex narrowed (Fig. 50), rounded and strongly curved backwards, meeting opposite one (Figs 49, 51); subepandrial sclerite conical (Fig. 57); gonostylus short, curved and pointed posteriorly (Figs 53 – 54); gonocoxite less sclerotized, broad and curved posteriorly, in area of insertion of gonostylus, sclerotized area with 2 macrosetae, 1 strongly thickened (Figs 51 – 53); ejaculatory apodeme wide in lateral view, 1.5 times as long as phallus (Fig. 55); hypandrium dome-like, posterior apex less projected, very thin and pointed (Figs 51 – 53). Female. Unknown.	en	Sánchez, Pável, Camargo, Alexssandro (2023): The ampliatus species group of Ommatius Wiedemann, 1821 (Diptera, Asilidae, Ommatiinae) in Peru with the description of four new species. Zootaxa 5352 (4): 501-520, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.5352.4.3, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.5352.4.3
D20787A1FFB2FFF4FF13FA63FAEBC2F4.taxon	etymology	Etymology. A masculine noun in apposition, from the Quechua language that refers to a concept of complementary dualism between opposites, present in any aspect of the existence in the Andean cosmovision.	en	Sánchez, Pável, Camargo, Alexssandro (2023): The ampliatus species group of Ommatius Wiedemann, 1821 (Diptera, Asilidae, Ommatiinae) in Peru with the description of four new species. Zootaxa 5352 (4): 501-520, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.5352.4.3, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.5352.4.3
D20787A1FFB2FFF4FF13FA63FAEBC2F4.taxon	materials_examined	Holotype condition. Good, terminalia dissected. Taxonomic discussion. Ommatius yanantin sp. nov. can be differentiated from other species in the ampliatus group mainly by the black femora (Figs 46 – 47); most anteroventral macrosetae of hind femur yellow (Fig. 47); epandrium triangular ending in an angular process, rounded apically (Fig 49 – 51); gonocoxite with 1 long, thick macroseta (Fig. 51 – 53); and phallus narrowing apically (Fig. 55). The most similar species is O. nanciae Vieira, 2015 which can be separated by the subrectangular subepandrial sclerite; hypandrium with distal apex rounded; gonostylus conic distally; ejaculatory apodeme with a dorsal keel and phallus straight to body axis. Additionally, in the male of Ommatius yanantin sp. nov., the vein C is dilated anteriorly (Fig. 48) while in males of O. nanciae it is not dilated.	en	Sánchez, Pável, Camargo, Alexssandro (2023): The ampliatus species group of Ommatius Wiedemann, 1821 (Diptera, Asilidae, Ommatiinae) in Peru with the description of four new species. Zootaxa 5352 (4): 501-520, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.5352.4.3, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.5352.4.3
D20787A1FFB2FFF4FF13FA63FAEBC2F4.taxon	distribution	Distribution. Peru, Department of Cajamarca, Querocoto (Fig. 66). The type locality corresponds to a Montane shrubland on the western slopes of the Andes. The only known specimen was collected in April.	en	Sánchez, Pável, Camargo, Alexssandro (2023): The ampliatus species group of Ommatius Wiedemann, 1821 (Diptera, Asilidae, Ommatiinae) in Peru with the description of four new species. Zootaxa 5352 (4): 501-520, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.5352.4.3, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.5352.4.3
D20787A1FFB2FFF4FF13FA63FAEBC2F4.taxon	materials_examined	Type material. Holotype: PERÚ: CA. Querocoto, La Iraca [Cerro Paja blanca], 2350 m. 6 ° 21 ’ 38.55 ” S, 79 ° 07 ’ 29.42 ” W iv. 2021 I. Galindo / HOLOTYPE ♂ Ommatius yanantin Sánchez & Camargo (MUSM).	en	Sánchez, Pável, Camargo, Alexssandro (2023): The ampliatus species group of Ommatius Wiedemann, 1821 (Diptera, Asilidae, Ommatiinae) in Peru with the description of four new species. Zootaxa 5352 (4): 501-520, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.5352.4.3, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.5352.4.3
