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9 October 2018 First Tropical American Species of the “Relict” Genus Litoleptis, and Relationships in Spaniinae (Diptera: Rhagionidae)
David A. Grimaldi
Author Affiliations +
Abstract

The genus Litoleptis has consisted of nine described species, seven of them Asian and only two in the New World: L. alaskensis Chillcott, known from two specimens from northwest Alaska, and L. chilensis Hennig, known from a male specimen from near Santiago, Chile. A third New World species is described here, Litoleptis tico, n. sp., based on a single female from Costa Rica. The species is unique for the genus in having a vestigial proboscis and lacking spermathecal accessory ducts and glands. Female terminalia are unknown for the other two New World species. A morphologically based, preliminary phylogeny of spaniines is provided, indicating Litoleptis is recently derived among spaniines and thus Rhagionidae; the Early Cretaceous Litoleptis fossilis is a stem group to the living species. A derived position of the genus, its apparently broad distribution, and an abundance in Japan where Litoleptis has been bred from liverworts (Imada and Kato, 2016a), all indicate that these flies are probably not at all relict, simply vastly undersampled because of a reliance on mass-collecting techniques.

INTRODUCTION

Rhagionidae is a family of some 500 species in 16 genera, more than half of them in the genus Chrysopilus Macquart, making it the second largest family of the Tabanomorpha after the Tabanidae, with some 4400 species (Kerr, 2010). The fossil records of these two families differ greatly: the oldest known tabanids are seven stem-group species from the Cretaceous (Grimaldi, 2016); Rhagionidae are among the most diverse and abundant Mesozoic Brachycera (reviewed in Evenhuis, 1994), extending to the Early Jurassic. The geological antiquity of Rhagionidae sensu lato suggests a particularly archaic group, providing that the many fossils known merely from wings are accurately assigned. Antiquity may reflect the biogeography of Rhagionidae, which display more disjunction than, for example, Tabanidae, particularly southern austral (Austroleptis [now in Austroleptidae: Kerr, 2010], Arthroteles, Atherimorpha) and Laurasian (Arthroceras, Rhagio, and many Spaniinae) (Kerr, 2010) distributions. The subject of this paper is Spaniinae, a relatively small group of six genera with ca. 80 species, most in the genus Symphoromyia Frauenfeld (Kerr, 2010).

FIG. 1.

Global distribution records of the genus Litoleptis. Numbers correspond to records in table 1.

f01_01.jpg

Litoleptis Chillcott consists of nine described extant species, seven of them Asian (six in Japan) and only two in the New World (fig. 1, table 1), L. chilensis Hennig from Chile, and L. alaskensis Chillcott from northwest Alaska, known from only one and two specimens respectively. Such disjunction and geological age has led some authors to regard the distribution of Litoleptis as relict, the result of extensive extinction (Arillo et al., 2009; Saigusa, 2006). The oldest spaniine is Litoleptis fossilis in San Just amber from the Escucha Formation of Teruel Province, Spain, ∼105 mya (Arillo et al., 2009), discussed below.

The natural history of spaniines is a dramatic departure from that of the rest of the Tabanomorpha, a group whose larvae are typically predators and occasionally known or presumed to be saprophages. Three genera of spaniines are now known to be bryophagous, feeding on liverworts (Marchantiophyta) and/or mosses (Musci): Ptiolina, Spania, and Litoleptis. Life histories of the Holarctic genus Omphalophora and the Australian genus Spaniopsis are unknown. Scattered reports of bryophagy in a few species have been in the literature for over a century: Spania nigra mining the leaflike thalli of the liverwort Pellia neesiana (Mik, 1896; Nartshuk, 1995), and the green larvae of Ptiolina feeding on mosses (Brauer, 1883; Brindle, 1959) as well as the liverwort Marchantia polymorpha (Nartshuk, 1995). The studies by Imada and Kato (2016a, 2016b) have transformed our understanding of spaniines.

TABLE 1.

Global Records of Litoleptis species (for map, see fig. 1).

t01_01.gif

In Japan, a species of Spania and six species of Litoleptis feed as larvae on liverworts, and a species of Ptiolina feeds on mosses (Imada and Kato, 2016a, 2016b). Each of the Japanese Litoleptis species feeds on only one of three liverwort genera: Conocephalum (Conocephalaceae) (Litoleptis japonica); Reboulia (Aytoniaceae) (L. kiiensis, L. niyodoensis, L. himukaensis, L. izuensis); and Asterella (Aytoniaceae) (L. asterellaphile). A species of Spania mines thalli of the liverwort Pellia (Pelliacae), and a species of Ptiolina bores the axis of mosses (Imada and Kato, 2016a, 2016b). Larval lifespan is approximately 11 months, with adults emerging in early spring (generally April). As expected, larval morphology of the bryophagous spaniines differs significantly from the typical, predatory morphology (Imada and Kato, 2016b). Spania and Litoleptis (but not Ptiolina) lack creeping welts; the mandibles are reduced in size (not the typical bladelike hooks), with the preapical orifice shifted from the adoral surface to a dorsal position (the central canal is retained), and the mandibular brush is lost, including in Ptiolina. The labrum of the larva has biserial rows of coarse, retrorse teeth (Imada and Kato, 2016b).

I am providing the description and a discussion of a new species from Costa Rica because of its distinctive features, the biogeographic significance, and the uncertainty as to whether this species will be found again.

METHODS AND MATERIALS

The unique specimen was found in Malaise trap samples from Zurquí de Moravia, near San José, Costa Rica (see locality data under holotype, and commentary of the locality in Discussion). The traps were set by Paul Hanson (University of Costa Rica) in the early 1990s at the edge of a very dense cloud forest surrounded by pasture, the traps positioned on a slope close to and at the same level as the forest canopy The specimen was critical-point dried en masse with other Diptera selected from the samples. The right wing was removed and temporarily slide mounted in glycerin for photomicrography. To observe internal reproductive organs the apex of the abdomen was removed and macerated in hot lactic acid, rinsed in distilled water, briefly soaked in 70% ethanol, then liquid glycerin, and temporarily slide mounted in glycerin-jelly for study and photomicrography at 200–400x. Photomicrography used a Nikon SMZ1500 with 16 MP camera and NIS Elements software, and a Nikon Eclipse compound microscope. Details of the head and mouthparts were studied using a Zeiss Evo60 Variable Pressure scanning electron microscope, without any gold or carbon coating of the specimen, at 10kV voltage between 500x and 2500x magnifications.

SYSTEMATICS

Litoleptis Chillcott

  • Litoleptis Chillcott, 1963: 1186. Type species: L. alaskensis Chillcott; Kerr, 2010 (rediagnosis of genus); Imada and Kato, 2016a, 2016b (revision, life histories, larvae).

  • Emended Diagnosis: Like closely related spaniine genera, antenna with single flagellomere (usually tapered or abruptly narrow apically) (fig. 2C), laterotergite bare of fine setulae (fig. 2B); bases of cerci widely separated in female (figs. 5, 6), connected to epandrium in male; adult mandibles lost (except Spaniopsis); thickened portion of vein C ending at/near apex of R5 or M1; spermathecae lightly to weakly sclerotized (figs. 5, 6). Larvae graze/mine bryophytes, mandibular brush absent, creeping welts absent. Litoleptis is unique among spaniines by loss of all tibial spurs, proboscis reduced, pseudotracheae highly reduced, wing with membrane having very dense microtri chia (fig. 4B) and costal margin with long setulae (fig. 4A); vein M3 absent, crossvein dm-cu lost (no discal cell), base of M spectral in living species; apex of vein CuA abruptly incomplete in most species (fig. 4).

  • Litoleptis tico, new species
    Figures 26

  • Diagnosis: Small, grayish-brown fly with thorax small, wings large (slightly longer than body) (fig. 2A), venation as in other Litoleptis; tibial spurs absent, empodium pulvilliform; abdomen slender (figs. 2A; 5A, B), cercus 2-segmented (figs. 5, 6). Best distinguished from other members of the genus by reduced proboscis, the labellum and theca much smaller than palps (figs. 2C, 3A); maxillary palp with one segment, base connected directly to head capsule (fig. 3A); wing with branches of M1-M2 fork curved (vs. virtually straight), crossvein cua-m significantly shorter than r-m (vs. slightly longer) (fig. 4A); spermatheca completely lacking accessory glands (ducts and sacs) (figs. 5C, 6).

  • Description: Body length 2.7 mm (not including antennae); abdomen length 1.75 mm; thorax length 0.70 mm; head width 0.61 mm; frontal width (between eye margins, at level of antennae) 0.29 mm; wing length 2.8 mm; wing width 1.2 mm. HEAD: Broader than tall; eyes dark, silvery gray, large, occupying entire lateral portion of head (no cheek exposed laterally); no differentiation of facets (only female known), eye completely bare; inner margins on frons nearly parallel, margins bordering face slightly diverging ventrad, no emargination. Frons dark brown, slightly raised above level of eyes; shiny, with scattered, fine, long setulae (lengths ca. 2.5x diameter of facet). Lower part of frons and area between antennal bases with faint, vertical median furrow. Ocelli light, large, of equal size; lying on shallow, velvety-black tubercle; ocellar triangle/tubercle slightly recessed into vertex of head. Occiput concave; dorsal portion with dark, fine, stiff setulae pointing upward. Antennal bases widely separated, by distance slightly greater than diameter of scape; scape ringlike, hidden frontally by pedicel, encircled by larger, exposed membranous area; pedicel short, slightly conical, without apical ring of setulae; basal flagellar article long, tapered, heavily setulose; apex lacking style, with pair of stiff, needlelike setae at apex, length ca. 0.4x that of basal flagellar article. Face broad, slightly broader than frons, dark brown; clypeus slightly swollen, paraclypeal sulci faintly impressed. Palp one-segmented; base slender, ca. 0.3x width of apex, which is swollen; base with longer setulae; palp connected directly to head capsule (membranous articulation visible frontally). Proboscis very small, length approximately equal to that of basal palpomere, labellum very small, appears nonfunctional, with 5–6 fine setae per lobe; labrum tiny, whitish, membranous. Anterior tentorial pit deep, well defined; located just above base of palp.

  • THORAX: Short, broad, scutum slightly wider than long. Scutum shiny, dark brown, with two large glabrous/shiny patches laterally, two smaller paramedian glabrous patches; other portions of scutum with dense, dark microtrichia forming trident shape; scutellum entirely matte. Stiff, fine, dark setae on paramedian stripes, and laterally on notopleural and supraalar areas. Transverse suture barely developed. Area between notopleura and pleura, and surrounding wing base, whitish. Pleura entirely glabrous, devoid of setae, setulae, microtrichia; sclerite proportions and sizes shown in figure 2B. Mesothoracic spiracle a large vertical slit. Legs slender but relatively short; coxal lengths cx1 > cx2 > cx3, bases of cx1 by posterior portion of head; coxae with 5–6 setulae on each. Legs with fine, scattered dark setulae; lengths slightly greater than podite width; apices of all podomeres except femora are dark. Femoral lengths f3 > f2 > f1; profemur shorter than protibia; meso- and metafemur about same length as tibiae; hind femur slightly swollen apically. All tibiae lack apical spurs. Tarsus shorter than respective tibia; basitarsomere slightly shorter than distal tarsomeres combined (2–5), distal tarsomere widest. Claws, pulvilli well developed; empodium pulvilliform, slightly larger than pulvilli.

  • WINGS: Large, slightly longer than body, uniformly dusky, with dense microtrichia (fig. 4B). Venation very similar to the other two New World species, with differences as noted: like alaskensis with R3 slightly curved costad (vs. straight, as in chilensis); like chilensis with fork of R4+5 only slightly divergent, lengths of branches nearly equal (R4/R5 0.82 in tico, 0.84 in chilensis, 0.75 in alaskensis). Unique to tico are branches of M1-M2 fork curved (vs. virtually straight); crossvein cua-m very short (ca. 0.5x length of r-m crossvein, vs. slightly longer than r-m in chilensis, alaskensis, and species from Japan; fig. 4C, D). Halter large, length approximately equal to width of scutum, length of knob and stalk approximately equal; knob very swollen, with dense covering of microtrichia (fig. 2D).

  • ABDOMEN: Slender, with very broad attachment to thorax (essentially no constriction), only slightly tapered in width apicad. Tergites lightly sclerotized, light brown, with subtle ridge running down middle of abdomen (fig. 5A); tergite 1 approximately 0.5x length of other tergites (2–7). Tergites with microtrichia plus scattered, very fine setulae. Pleural membrane well exposed, spiracles in membrane at level of segment divisions. Sternites approximately same size as tergites (fig. 5A, B), with similar vestiture but lighter and less sclerotized; lateral margins of sternite 8 with apical third tapered, posterior margin slightly concave. Cercus short, two-segmented, apical cercomere slightly conical (figs. 5C, 6).

  • Etymology: As a noun in apposition, taken directly from “ticos,” a familiar and affectionate name that Costa Ricans give to each other, in reference to their tendency to add the diminutive “tico” to the end of words.

  • Type: Holotype, female: COSTA RICA: San José, Zurquí de Moravia, 1600 m., VII/92, P. Hanson, Malaise trap. Latitude 10.047 N, longitude 84.008 W. In AMNH. The specimen is in excellent condition, originally critical-point dried from alcohol; originally fully intact (except for loss of setae on one antennal tip). The right wing and terminalia were removed for temporary slide mounting (using glycerin-jelly) and photography; they are stored in a genitalia vial in glycerin on the pin with the type.

  • FIG. 2.

    Litoleptis tico, new species, holotype. A. Dorsal habitus of intact specimen, prior to dissection of terminalia and removal of wing. B. Anterior half of body, lateral view. C. Frontal view of head. D. Dorsal view of head and thorax.

    f02_01.jpg

    FIG. 3.

    Litoleptis tico, holotype. A. Drawing of facial region. B. Detail of antennal tip (based on scanning electron micrographs of uncoated holotype).

    f03_01.jpg

    FIG. 4.

    Wing of Litoleptis species. A, B. L. tico, holotype. A. Entire wing. The dark pseudostigma is only preservational, due to air trapped in this swollen area. B. Base of wing. C. L. kiiensis Imada and Kato. D. L. japonica Imada and Kato.

    f04_01.jpg

    FIG. 5.

    Terminalia of L. tico, holotype. A, B: Abdominal apex of intact specimen, prior to dissection. A. Dorsal. B. Ventral. C. Macerated dissection. Spermathecae are collapsed.

    f05_01.jpg

    FIG. 6.

    Drawing of L. tico terminalia (cf. fig. 5C). Spermathecae have been reconstructed to their original shape.

    f06_01.jpg

    RELATIONSHIPS

    Below is a list of characters used in reconstructing spaniine relationships. The original sources of most characters are cited accordingly, including Chillcott (1963), Hennig (1972), Kerr (2010), and Imada and Kato (2016a, 2016b), along with the character number used in that study (e.g., Kerr, 2010: 109) and a number in brackets after that signifies the character state. Figure 7 depicts relationships; the matrix table of character-state distributions is in the appendix.

    Spaniinae (including Symphoromyia):

    • 1. Genital chamber in female well defined by median sclerotization of sternite 9 (Kerr, 2010: 109) (vs. sternite 9 without median sclerotization).

    • 2. Tergite 9 in female with pair of forward-projecting apodemes (“ventrolateral processes”) flanking sternite 9 (Kerr, 2010: 64) (vs. processes absent).

    • 3. Larval thoracic segment 1 with anterior edge having scalelike lobes (Imada and Kato, 2016b) (vs. without lobes).

    Symphoromyia synapomorphies:

    • 4. Basal flagellomere reniform (vs. oblong).

    • 5. Scape enlarged (Kerr, 2010: 7[3]).

    Omphalophora + rest of spaniines except Symphoromyia:

    Ptiolina + Spaniopsis + Spania + Litoleptis:

    • 12. Larvae graze on/mine bryophytes (Imada and Kato, 2016b) (may also include Omphalophora, but its larva and that of Spaniopsis are unknown).

    • 13. Larval mandibular brush lost (Imada and Kato, 2016b) (larva of Spaniopsis unknown).

    • 14. Basal cercomere of female radially symmetrical, narrow, no lobes (figs. 5C, 6) (vs. asymmetrical, with one side enlarged into a small lobe).

    • 15. Vein C circumambient but thickened portion ending at apex of vein R5 or near (fig. 4A, C, D) (vs. gradually tapered).

    • 16. Ptiolina synapomorphy: tergite 9 of female narrow and rectangular (Kerr, 2010: 85) (vs. broad, semicircular).

    Spaniopsis + Spania + Litoleptis:

    • 17. Hind tibial spur lost (vs. present).

    • 18. Larva with creeping welts lost (Imada and Kato, 2016b) (larva of Spaniopsis unknown) (vs. present).

    • 19. Spermathecae moderately to weakly sclerotized (figs. 5C, 6) (vs. heavily sclerotized, dark).

    • 20. Maxillary palp with a single palpomere. The palp in Litoleptis is variously reported to be one- or two-segmented: two in alaskensis (Chillcott, 1963); one in chilensis (Hennig, 1972) and other members of the genus (Kerr, 2010; Imada and Kato, 2016a). Courtesy of Yume Imada, I was able to examine specimens of L. japonica and L. kiiensis, for which I dissected and slide-mounted the mouthparts, confirming one-segmented palps. Palp segmentation is obscure on intact specimens, since the palp base is slender and has longer setulae, giving the appearance of two segments, which is why I suspect that Chillcott's (1963) observation is probably incorrect. The closely related genera Spania and Spaniopsis are reported to have one-segmented palps, and Ptiolina to have one- and two-segmented palps (Kerr, 2010).

    • 21. Spaniopsis synapomorphies: cornu fused apically to pharyngeal pump (Kerr, 2010); adult mandibles present (Kerr, 2010).

    Spania + Litoleptis:

    • 22. Wing membrane with dense microtrichia (fig. 4B); vein C (or at least the thick, leading edge) with long, fine setulae, length of setulae greater than thickness of C (fig. 4B).

    • 23. Spania synapomorphy: Sternite 8 of female lacking medial emargination (Kerr, 2010: 83).

    Litoleptis, including fossilis:

    • 24. Tibial spurs lost (Chillcott, 1963), though hind tibial spur apparently present and minute in L. fossilis (Arillo et al. 2009). This needs to be carefully checked in the fossil since hind tibial spurs do not occur in any living Litoleptis nor in the closely related genera Spania and Spaniopsis, and small spurs (i.e., articulating in the intersegmental membrane) are sometimes difficult to discern even in modern specimens.

    • 25. Vein M3 lost (Chillcott, 1963; Kerr, 2010: 50[3]) (fig. 4).

    • 26. Discal cell lacking (crossvein dm-cu lost) (Chillcott, 1963) (fig. 4).

    Litoleptis, excluding fossilis:

    • 27. Base of vein M highly reduced, spectral and foldlike (fig. 4B) (vs. tubular).

    • 28. Apex of CuA2 vein incomplete, usually abruptly (fig. 4A), sometimes just weakened (i.e., L. kiiensis, izuensis). The apex of CuA2 seems complete in L. japonica, but there is actually a small gap between it and CuP, best seen in an oblique view.

    • 29. Pseudotracheae: Great reduction or loss. The pseudotracheae are described as lost in the two Litoleptis species that Kerr (2010) examined; the condition in orientalis and fossilis is unknown. The vestigial labellum in L. tico would have required dissection of the proboscis in the unique specimen (the mesal surfaces of the labellar lobes are not exposed); the pseudotracheae are presumably absent in it given the vestigial proboscis. Imada and Kato (2016a) mentioned the loss of pseudotracheae in the generic diagnosis, but my dissection of a L. japonica female found five very fine tracheae on the inner surface of each labellar lobe, and I suspect that this may be the situation in most other Litoleptis. Determining whether these are functional pseudotracheae will probably require SEM, but these structures should probably be best described as highly reduced, which seems to be a reliable synapomorphy of Litoleptis. Arillo et al. (2009) did not mention the presence/absence of pseudotracheae in L. fossilis (they probably are too obscure), but I am assuming that they are developed and functional, given the long proboscis.

    • 30. Proboscis short, length ≤ length of palp (e.g., fig. 3A). Dissection of a L. japonica specimen found the cibarium to be poorly developed, evidence in addition to the vestigial pseudotracheae that the proboscis is probably nonfunctional. The proboscis in L. tico is more reduced than in the other species, including the labrum. The labrum of L. tico is minute and barely sclerotized; in L. japonica it is slender and shaped like a chemistry spatula.

    • Arillo et al. (2009) indicated that the holotype of L. fossilis was a female, but based on the large, “nearly holoptic” eyes, this specimen is almost certainly a male. Those authors may have been misled by the small, obscure male genitalia of the specimen, typical of Litoleptis in general.

    Litoleptis japonica + tico + orientalis + cliilensis:

    • 31. One or two long setae at apex of gradually tapering flagellomere (figs. 2C, 3B). For L. orientalis this condition is based on the original description by Frey (1954). Hennig (1972) illustrated the antennal apex in chilensis as having two minute, peglike setae, but in the photograph by Kerr (2010: fig. 12) these are clearly setiform, though distinctly shorter than the long setae in tico. These setae are easily dislodged, but their absence in all the Japanese species except japonica (which has a single terminal seta) is no doubt real since Imada and Kato (2016a) studied pristine, reared specimens.

    All Japanese species of Litoleptis except japonica:

    • 32. Lateral ejaculatory process present, in all Japanese species except L. japonica (it is also absent in L. chilensis and L. alaskensis) (Imada and Kato, 2016a).

    • 33. Basal (and only) flagellomere not tapered to point, but oblong, which is found in many species from Japan.

    There are several characters that probably will define species groups in Litoleptis, but were not included in the phylogeny, because either character states are uncertain for some terminals or the sampling of sexes thus far is incomplete (i.e., no females in L. alaskensis, L. chilensis, and L. izuensis; no male in L. tico):

    • (1) Spermathecal accessory gland sacs highly reduced to lost. Reduced accessory gland sacs occur in all of the Japanese species, although these were shown only in the figure for L. niyodeoensis (Imada and Kato, 2016a) (gland sacs readily disintegrated in preparations of the Japanese species, Y. Imada, personal commun., to D.A.G., April 2018). In L. tico there is absolutely no trace of even a vestigial accessory gland duct.

    • (2) Duct of spermathecal accessory gland a short, sclerotized collar. This occurs in all the Japanese species (Imada and Kato, 2016a).

    • (3) Bases of spermathecal ducts do not connect to a common duct or trunk, but rather emerge separately from the genital chamber (fig. 6). This condition occurs in three Japanese species (L. kiiensis, L. niyodoensis, and L. asterallaphile), as well as in L. tico, n. sp. The common duct/trunk is very short in L. japonica.

    • (4) Ejaculatory apodeme present, as reported for all of the Japanese species (Imada and Kato, 2016a), although existence of the structure is surely plesiomorphic.

    • (5) Apex of aedeagus with “numerous tiny pustulae,” as reported for all the Japanese species (Imada and Kato, 2016a).

    DISCUSSION

    Kerr (2010) did not include Litoleptis in his phylogenetic analysis because at that time females were unavailable, and his study found that female terminalia have a rich array of systematic characters for Rhagionidae. My cladogram (fig. 7) differs from Imada and Kato's (2016b) 28S rRNA phylogeny, with Spania + Litoleptis as sister groups, rather than Spaniopsis + Litoleptis. The most important point, though, is that in both schemes Litoleptis is a highly derived genus of Spaniinae, and according to Kerr's (2010) analysis, Spaniinae is a highly derived group within Rhagionidae (Stuckenberg [2001] notwithstanding). Also, the Cretaceous fossil L. fossilis is clearly a stem group to the living species, lacking characters 26–28 (above) that define living species in the crown group. Crown-group Litoleptis may be Late to post-Cretaceous in age.

    FIG. 7.

    Cladogram of genera of spaniine Rhagionidae and species of Litoleptis. See text for description of numbered characters.

    f07_01.jpg

    Litoleptis is very rarely captured as adults using general collecting techniques such as Malaise traps and sweep netting. Prior to the work of Imada and Kato (2016a, 2016b) on the Japanese species, the three described species as well as several undescribed ones have been known entirely on the basis of one or two specimens for each. Incredibly, Litoleptis tico escaped detection by over 20 entomologists, myself included, who intensively surveyed the patch of cloud forest that is its type locality in Zurquí de Moravia, Costa Rica (Borkent et al., 2018; Brown et al., 2018). That survey, called ZADBI (Zurqui All-Diptera Biodiversity Inventory), recovered hundreds of thousands of fly specimens collected over 13 months using various trapping methods (Malaise, emergence, yellow-pan, bait, and light traps, as well as sweeping by hand), finding 4348 Diptera species in 72 families (Borkent et al., 2018; Brown et al., 2018). The only rhagionids from the ZADBI project were Chrysopilus. The unique specimen of Litoleptis tico was captured in a Malaise trap set 20 years earlier, a striking example of the difficulty in sampling some species.

    The chance discovery of Litoleptis in Costa Rica—well distant between the two other New World records in Alaska and Chile—and the work of Imada and Kato (2016a, 2016b) in Japan indicate that the genus probably has a very widespread distribution and can be locally abundant. These flies are simply far undersampled. As a genus, Litoleptis in Japan is not particularly rare or regionally restricted, based on over 220 specimens collected from 24 localities throughout the country (Imada and Kato, 2016a, 2016b), though four of the six Japanese species are known from 10 or fewer individuals from a single locality. These authors report that Litoleptis adults live for “only a few days” and were not observed feeding (although oviposition was observed), and that adults are “seldom found in the field.”

    This situation in Litoleptis is reminiscent of flies in the unrelated family Axymyiidae, which fits all criteria for relict status. There are seven species in three living genera of axymyiids sporadically distributed throughout the Holactic Region, Taiwan, and southern China (Sinclair, 2013); the family may be the sister group to the very diverse clade Bibionomorpha (Wiegmann et al, 2011); their fossil record extends to nearly 175 million years (Zhang, 2010; Guifeng et al., 2013). Adults are very rarely captured (e.g., Sinclair, 2013), but in an intensive survey of the larvae of the North American species, Axymyia furcata (which bore into partially submerged, decaying logs in streams) was found to be more widespread and far more abundant than previously thought (Wihlm and Courtney, 2011). There can be up to 200 larvae of A. furcata in a log (Wihlm and Courtney, 2011). The nonfeeding adults are rarely found because they have brief lives, the result of a vestigial labellum, as in Litoleptis tico.

    It seems that the apparent rarity of Litoleptis is due not merely to their small size and obscurity, but like Axymyia in their fidelity to a very specific habitat and especially because of an ephemeral adult life and flight period. I predict that Litoleptis is actually widespread in Holarctic boreal forests and in wet, cool montane forests rich in bryophytes, from western North America to Central America and Andean South America. Further fieldwork is essential.

    ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

    I am grateful to the people and organizations that have supported this study and my work in general: Paul Hanson, for letting me screen through some of his original Malaise trap samples from Zurquí; Yume Imada, Kyoto University, for loan of specimens of Japanese Litoleptis; and Andrew Smith of the AMNH Microscopy and Imaging Facility, for his work examining the uncoated holotype with a Zeiss Evo60 SEM. Fieldwork at Zurquí was sponsored by NSF grant DEB 1145890 to Brian Brown. My work on Brachycera fossils and phylogeny has been generously supported by U.S. National Science Foundation OPUS grant DEB 1556502. I am grateful for reviews by Dalton de Souza Amorim and Yume Imada.

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    Appendices

    APPENDIX
    Character Matrix

    See text for character number and descriptions.

    tA01_01.gif
    © American Museum of Natural History 2018
    David A. Grimaldi "First Tropical American Species of the “Relict” Genus Litoleptis, and Relationships in Spaniinae (Diptera: Rhagionidae)," American Museum Novitates 2018(3909), 1-18, (9 October 2018). https://doi.org/10.1206/3909.1
    Published: 9 October 2018
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