Cordiluroides inca, Fogaça & Couri & Vieira-Araújo & Carvalho, 2020

Fogaça, João Manuel, Couri, Márcia Souto, Vieira-Araújo, Angelina Pimentel & Carvalho, Claudio José Barros de, 2020, Cordiluroides Albuquerque (Diptera: Muscidae): new species and key to the Neotropical genus, Revista Brasileira de Entomologia (e 20200028) 64 (4), pp. 1-10 : 5-7

publication ID

https://doi.org/10.1590/1806-9665-RBENT-2020-0028

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.15635529

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/A332CE0B-E23A-FF9C-FFB1-6DB2FDCBFE48

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Cordiluroides inca
status

sp. nov.

Cordiluroides inca sp. nov.

( Figs. 1 View Figure 1 , 10 View Figure 10 and 11 View Figure 11 )

urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act:0104A390-04B2-4AC5-97E6-0F63BBAB11AA

Material. Holotype: Male. “ Peru: Cuzco: Est. Biol. \ Wayqecha jct. Trochas \ Schefflera Picaflor, \ Malaise trap, WP 583, \ 13. 17385 S \ 71.58808 \ W 2905m, 1- 12 Jun \ 2012, A. L. Norrbom, B. \ D. Sutton, B. Luz Puma \ & C. Quispe (white printed label)” ( USNM) . Paratypes: 2♂. Same data as holotype (1♂ DZUP / 1♂ USNM) .

Diagnosis. Apical scutellar seta reduced, yellow legs, brown tarsi and abdomen entirely dark brown easily distinguish Cordiluroides inca sp. nov. from the other Cordiluroides . Ground color brown with grey pollinosity ( Fig. 1a View Figure 1 ). Head ( Fig. 1d View Figure 1 ): Frons brown; face, fronto-orbital plate and gena silvery pruinose; antenna and arista dark brown; palpus brown. Thorax ( Fig. 1c View Figure 1 ): Scutum with 5 light brown vittae. Calypter whitish; halter yellow.Wing: Slightly infuscate.Legs: Fore coxa yellow, mid and hind coxae grey pruinose; fore femur yellow, mid and hind femora yellow with apical third brown; tibiae yellow; tarsi brown; pulvilli yellowish-white; claws black. Abdomen: Male ( Fig. 1e View Figure 1 ) with all tergites brown with grey lateral margin.

Length. Male: body: 2.0mm mm; wing: 2.3mm.

Head. Interocular space about one-third of head-width at level of anterior ocellus. Eyes sparsely ciliated ( Fig. 10c View Figure 10 ). Four pairs of frontal setae with different lengths; one pair of long reclinate orbital setae; ocellar setae long ( Fig. 10b View Figure 10 ), similar in length to the reclinate orbital. Antennae inserted a little above middle of eyes; flagellomere about 3 times as long as pedicel; arista short pubescent ( Fig.10c–d View Figure 10 ). Gena narrow. Vibrissa strong and long ( Fig. 10b View Figure 10 ). Proboscis with developed teeth.

Thorax chaetotaxy ( Figs. 1c View Figure 1 and 10e View Figure 10 ). acr s 1+2; dc s 1+3, all long; ial s 1+2, the second longer;spal s 1+1; pal s 1;b pprn s 1;npl 2;anepst 6; a kepst s 1+1+1. b sctl s longer than the sctl s length. Sternite 1 bare.

Legs. Fore femur with a row of sparse setae on pd and pv. Fore tibia with one long median p seta; one d, p preapical seta; one pv apical seta, these three shorts. All pulvilli and claws developed. Mid femur with 4 long sparse pv setae; p with two preapical setae. Mid tibia with a submedian a to av seta; one d, p, v and pv preapical seta, the v is larger than the others. Hind femur with 4 long apical ad setae; one apical d, pd seta and pv with 3 long, thin and sparse setae. Hind tibia with one long median pd, ad seta; one long submedian d seta; one ad, av preapical seta.

Wing ( Figs. 1a View Figure 1 and 10f View Figure 10 ). All veins bare, except costal.

Abdomen ( Fig. 1a and 1e View Figure 1 ). Elongated. All tergites with very small setae.Sternite 5 quadrate, with setae concentrated on apical half ( Fig.11a View Figure 11 ).

Terminalia ( Fig. 11a–d View Figure 11 ). Surstylus well-developed, longer than cercus, enlarged on lateral view ( Fig. 11c View Figure 11 ). Cercus longer than wide, wider basally than apically, covered with median to long setae ( Fig.11b View Figure 11 ). Hypandrium moderate to long tubular ( Fig.11d View Figure 11 ). Phallic complex ( Fig.11d View Figure 11 ): phallapodeme enlarged apex; epiphallus curved apex; praegonite well developed with a few setulae; postgonite long, curved with a few setulae; distiphallus short and sclerotized, acrophallus membranous.

Female. Unknown.

Etymology. The specific epithet, inca , refers to the pre-Colombian South American peopling.

Distribution. PERU, Cuzco: Est. Biol. Wayqecha.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Diptera

Family

Muscidae

Tribe

Coenosiini

Genus

Cordiluroides

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