Published September 29, 2022 | Version v1
Taxonomic treatment Open

Diamesa amplexivirilia Hansen 1976

  • 1. Federal Scientific Center of the East Asia Terrestrial Biodiversity, Far East Branch of the Russian Academy of Sciences, 100 let Vladivostoku 159, 690022 Vladivostok, Russia
  • 2. Federal Scientific Center of the East Asia Terrestrial Biodiversity, Far East Branch of the Russian Academy of Sciences, 100 let Vladivostoku 159, 690022 Vladivostok, Russia & semenchenko _ alexander @ mail. ru; https: // orcid. org / 0000 - 0001 - 7207 - 9529
  • 3. A. N. Severtsov Institute of Ecology and Evolution of the Russian Academy of Sciences, Leninskij prosp. 33, 119071 Moscow, Russia triops @ yandex. ru; https: // orcid. org / 0000 - 0002 - 8826 - 9316

Description

Diamesa amplexivirilia Hansen

(Figs. 8–11)

Diamesa amplexivirilia Hansen in Hansen & Cook, 1976: 53; Makarchenko 1980: 86, 1981:108, 1985: 77, 2006: 261, 473, 614; Ashe & O’Connor 2009: 270; Krasheninnikov et al. 2020: 591.

Material examined. RUSSIA: 15 adult males, Magadan Region, Tenkinsky District, neighborhood of Sibit-Tyellakh Village, spurs of the peak Vlastny, Olen’ Stream (Kolyma River basin), alt. 1300–1400 m a.s.l., 27–30.VII.1977, leg. Е. Makarchenko; 10 adult males, Chukotka, Wrangel Island, upper stream of Somnitelnaya River, 22.VII.1978, leg. E. Makarchenko; 33 adult males, the same data, except Krasnyi Flag River, middle stream, 4.VII.1979, leg. E. Makarchenko and M. Makarchenko; 138 adult males, 19 pupae and 65 larvae, the same data, except unnamed stream in upper part of Somnitelnaya River, 14.VII–2.VIII.1979, leg. E. Makarchenko and M. Makarchenko; 1 adult male, Severnaya Zemlya Archipelago, Bolshevik Island, Mikoyan Bay, Chernaya River, 1.IX.2019, 79.20768 N, 102.31090 E, leg. A. Krasheninnikov.

Description

Adult male (n = 16). Total length 2.4–4.2 mm. Total length/wing length 0.92–1.23.

Coloration. Dark brown to black; wing grayish, veins yellowish brown.

Head. Eyes hairy, microtrichia visible along lateral eye margin when head is viewed from front. Temporal setae including 3 frontals and 8 verticals. Clypeus with 2–5 setae. Antenna with 8 flagellomeres and reduced plume of setae, 24–48 μm long; number of setae in flagellomeres 1–7, respectively 2–3: 2: 1–2: 1–2: 2: 2: 4; terminal flagellomere with 3 subapical setae, 12–16 μm long and with 3 setae basally, 32–36 μm long; pedicel with 3 setae. Flagellomeres 1–8 length (μm): 38–76–109, 36–55, 28–50, 24–42, 24–38, 24–38, 24–46, 96–134; AR 0.30–0.46. Palpomeres lengths (in μm): 32–40; 40–80; 72–109; 60–109; 78–143. Palpomere 3 in distal part with sensilla capitata with diameter 16 μm. Antennal length/palpal length 1.18–1.45.

Thorax. Antepronotum with 3–15 ventrolateral setae. Dorsocentrals 9–12, prealars 4–10, scutellars 7–22.

Wing. Length 2.24–3.79 mm, width 0.96–1.25 mm. R and R 1 with 6–26 setae; R 4+5 with 5–9 setae in distal part. Costa extension49μm long.RM/MCu2.0–4.6.Anal lobe well developed,rounded.Squama with13–27setae.VR0.93.

Legs. Spur of front tibia 31–46 μm long; spurs of mid tibia 20–46 μm long; of hind tibia 44–80 μm and 30–46 μm long. Hind tibial comb with 9–21 setae. Lengths and proportions of leg segments as in Table 3. We did not include in this table the data on the male from the Severnaya Zemlya Archipelago which are given in the article by Krasheninnikov et al. (2020).

Hypopygium (Figs. 8–11). Laterosternites very extend beyond posterior margin of tergite IX, evenly sclerotized and with relatively dense 5–9 setae, 16–20 μm long. Posterior margin of tergite IX gently rounded, with 4–5 setae (from one side), 8–12 μm long. Tergite bands weak, widely U-shaped (semi-circular) (Figs. 8–9). Anal point visible in dorsal view, relatively well developed and blunt-tipped, angled downwards, without microtrichia (Fig.10), 52–143 μm long; ratio of anal point length to gonostylus length 0.36–0.64. Transverse sternapodeme 68 μm high, triangular, with rounded apex (Figs. 8–9). Gonocoxite 360–400 µm long; superior volsella rounded, fairly well developed, slightly produced disto-medially, with numerous microtrichia. Gonostylus very strongly curved, broadest in basal 0.4–0.5, then abruptly narrowing, with 3 apical teeth of approximately the same size, with strong 3-4 setae between them and megaseta which in form of wide terminal spine (Fig. 11), 8–12 μm long; HR 1.60-2.27.

Pupa and larva are described by Makarchenko (1981).

Remarks. According to their main features, specimens from North America and Eurasia are close together, only slightly different is the male from Severnaya Zemlya, with total length 2.4 mm, wing length 2.24 mm, length of the anal point 52 μm, while males from North America, Wrangel Island and Kolyma River basin are 2.8–4.2 mm long, with wing length 2.52–3.79, anal point length 84–143 μm. We noted earlier that this species is closely related to D. alpina Tokunaga and D. davisi Edwards (Makarchenko 1980) as well as to D. saetheri Willassen and D. serratosioi Willassen (Makarchenko 1985). The barcoding data (see below) confirm a close similarity of D. amplexivirilia with the last two species.

Distribution. Holarctic arcto-alpine species. Known from Canada: Alberta, British Columbia, Northwest Territories, U.S.A.: Montana, Washington, Alaska (Hansen & Cook 1976; Namayandeh 2022) and Russia: Severnaya Zemlya Archipelago (Krasheninnikov et al. 2020), upper streams of Kolyma River, Vrangel Island.

Notes

Published as part of Makarchenko, Eugenyi A., Semenchenko, Alexander A. & Palatov, Dmitry M., 2022, Taxonomy of Diamesa steinboecki group (Diptera: Chironomidae: Diamesinae) with description and DNA barcoding of known species. II. Subgroups davisi, leona and loeffleri, pp. 361-392 in Zootaxa 5190 (3) on pages 365-366, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.5190.3.3, http://zenodo.org/record/7138200

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Additional details

References

  • Hansen, D. C. & Cook, E. F. (1976) The systematics and morphology of the Nearctic species of Diamesa Meigen, 1835 (Diptera: Chironomidae). Memoirs of the American Entomological Society, 30, 1 - 203.
  • Makarchenko, E. A. (1980) New or little known species of chironomid of subfamily Diamesinae (Diptera, Chironomidae) from the Soviet Far East. In: Freshwater fauna of the Far East. DVNC AN SSSR, Vladivostok, pp. 80 - 94. [in Russian]
  • Makarchenko, E. A. (1981) Taxonomy and distribution of some chironomids of subfamily Diamesinae (Diptera, Chironomidae) from the Soviet Far East. In: Invertebrate animals in ecosystems of salmon rivers of the Far East. DVNC AN SSSR Press, Vladivostok, pp. 89 - 113. [in Russian]
  • Makarchenko, E. A. (1985) Chironomids of the Soviet Far East. Subfamilies Podonominae, Diamesinae and Prodiamesinae (Diptera, Chironomidae). DVNC AN SSSR Press, Vladivostok, 208 pp. [in Russian]
  • Makarchenko, E. A. (2006) Subfamily Diamesinae. In: Key to the Insects of Russian Far East. Vol. 6. Diptera and Siphonaptera. Pt. 4. Dal'nauka, Vladivostok, pp. 253 - 276 + 468 - 480 + 607 - 621. [in Russian]
  • Ashe, P. & O'Connor, J. P. (2009) A World Catalogue of Chironomidae (Diptera). Part 1. Buchonomyiinae, Chilenomyiinae, Podonominae, Aphroteniinae, Tanypodinae, Usambaromyiinae, Diamesinae, Prodiamesinae and Telmatogetoninae. Irish Biogeographical Society & National Museum of Ireland, Dublin, 445 pp.
  • Krasheninnikov, A. B., Makarchenko, E. A., Semenchenko, A. A., Gavrilo, M. V. & Vshivkova, K. A. (2020) Morphological description and DNA barcoding of some Diamesinae (Diptera, Chironomidae) from the Severnaya Zemlya Archipelago and the Vaigach Island (Russian Arctic). Zootaxa, 4802 (3), 587 - 600. https: // doi. org / 10.11646 / zootaxa. 4802.3.13
  • Namayandeh, A. (2022) Selected Flies (Chironomidae). In: Working Group on General Status of NWT Species. 2021. NWT Species 2021 - 2025 - General Status Ranks of Wild Species in the Northwest Territories. Department of Environment and Natural Resources, Government of the Northwest Territories, Yellowknife, Northwest Territories, pp. 166 - 167 + 174 - 179.