Published October 2, 2012 | Version v1
Taxonomic treatment Open

Orthocladius (Orthocladius) nitidoscutellatus Lundstrom

  • 1. Haihe River Water Environmental Monitoring Center, Haihe River Water Conservancy Commission, Tianjin 300170, China & College of Life science, Nankai University, Tianjin 300071, China
  • 2. The Natural History Museum, Bergen Museum, University of Bergen, N- 5007, Norway
  • 3. College of Life science, Nankai University, Tianjin 300071, China

Description

Orthocladius (Orthocladius) nitidoscutellatus Lundström

(Figs 14–16)

Orthocladius nitidoscutellatus Lundström, 1915: 11.

Orthocladius (Orthocladius) trigonolabis Edwards, 1924: 170.

Orthocladius (Orthocladius) nitidoscutellatus Lundström: Saether 2004: 14; Saether 2005: 50; Makarchenko & Makarchenko 2011: 117.

Material examined. CHINA: Sichuan Province, Litang County, Shiliang River, 2 males, 13.vi.1996, light trap, X. Wang.

Diagnostic characters. The species can be separated from other members of the subgenus by having a medial projection of the gonostylus, superior volsella collar-like, inferior volsella with dorsal part short and squared and ventral part extended prominently below, and well developed crista dorsalis.

Description. Male (n = 2).

Total length 4.53–4.68 mm. Wing length 2.85–3.00 mm. Total length / wing length 1.51–1.62. Wing length / length of profemur 2.88–2.91.

Coloration. Head brown. Antenna, legs and abdomen yellowish brown. Thorax dark brown.

Head. AR 1.36–1.52. Ultimate flagellomere 750–760 µm long. Temporal setae 11–13, including 1–2 inner verticals, 4–5 outer verticals and 5–7 postorbitals. Clypeus with 12–15 setae. Cibarial pump, tentorium and stipes as in Fig. 14. Tentorium 198–240 µm long, 40–57 µm wide. Stipes 180–183 µm long, 55–63 µm wide. Palpomere lengths (in µm): 42–44, 62–79, 110–123, 110–128, 176–198. Length ratio of palpomeres 5/3 1.52–1.60.

Wing (Fig. 15). Anal lobe well developed. VR 1.06–1.09. Costal extension 30–50 µm long. R with 6 setae, other veins bare. Squama with 21–28 setae.

Thorax. Antepronotum with 4–6 setae. Dorsocentrals 8–10, acrostichals 3, prealars 4. Scutellum with 9 setae.

Legs. Spur of fore tibia 65–75 m long, spurs of mid tibia 27–29 µm and 22–26 µm long; of hind tibia 67–78 µm and 22–38 µm long. Comb of 8–11 setae, shortest seta 22–25 µm, longest seta 40–48 µm. Width at apex of fore tibia 35–48 µm, of mid tibia 45–68 µm, of hind tibia 53–66 µm. Pseudospurs present on ta 1 and ta 2 of mid and hind leg, 24–28 µm long. Lengths (in µm) and proportions of legs in Table 5.

Hypopygium (Fig. 16). Tergite IX including anal point with 20–24 setae. Laterosternite IX with 10–14 setae. Anal point 38–40 µm long, 20–23 µm wide. Phallapodeme 88–100 µm long; transverse sternapodeme 113–150 µm long, oral projections well developed. Gonocoxite 288–312 µm long, superior volsella collar-like, inferior volsella with ventral part not extended below dorsal part. Virga present, 25–30 µm long. Gonostylus widest medially, 125– 130 µm long; crista dorsalis well developed; megaseta 14–16 µm long. HR 2.30–2.40, HV 3.48–3.74.

Notes

Published as part of Kong, Fanqing, A. Saether, Ole & Wang, Xinhua, 2012, A review of the subgenera Euorthocladius and Orthocladius s. str. from China (Diptera: Chironomidae), pp. 76-88 in Zootaxa 3537 on pages 83-84

Files

Files (3.3 kB)

Name Size Download all
md5:a80fd4b1d14c9c2b2490e5d0c62e0d74
3.3 kB Download

System files (15.8 kB)

Name Size Download all
md5:1264d6994cdfc594474ff0f038a899ed
15.8 kB Download

Linked records

Additional details

Biodiversity

Event date
1996-06-13
Family
Chironomidae
Genus
Orthocladius
Kingdom
Animalia
Order
Diptera
Phylum
Arthropoda
Scientific name authorship
Lundstrom
Species
nitidoscutellatus
Taxon rank
species
Verbatim event date
1996-06-13

References

  • Lundstrom, C. (1915) Resultats scientifiques de l'Expedition Polaire Russe en 1900 - 1903, sous la direction du Baron E. Toll. Section E: Zoologie. Volume II, livr. 8. Diptera Nematocera aus den arctischen Gegenden Sibiriens. Memoires de l'Academie Imperiale des Sciences, Classe Physico-Mathematique, VIII Serie, 29 (8), 1 - 33.
  • Edwards, F. W. (1924) Results of the Merton College Expedition to Spitsbergen, 1923 - No. 4. Diptera Nematocera. Annals and Magazine of Natural History, 9, 14, 162 - 174.
  • Saether, O. A. (2004) The chironomids described by Lundstrom (1918) from arctic Siberia (Diptera, Chironomidae) with a redescription of Derotanypus sibiricus (Kruglova & Chernovskii). Zootaxa, 595, 1 - 35.
  • Saether, O. A. (2005) A new subgenus and new species of Orthocladius van der Wulp, with a phylogenetic evaluation of the validity of the subgenera of the genus (Diptera: Chironomidae). Zootaxa, 974, 1 - 56.
  • Makarchenko E. A. & Makarchenko M. A. (2011) Fauna and distribution of the Orthocladiinae of the Russian Far East. In: Wang, X. & Liu, W. (Eds). Proceedings of the 17 th International Symposium on Chironomidae. Nankai University Press, pp. 107 - 125.