Your browser doesn't support javascript.
loading
Show: 20 | 50 | 100
Results 1 - 2 de 2
Filter
Add filters








Language
Year range
1.
Tropical Biomedicine ; : 60-65, 2022.
Article in English | WPRIM | ID: wpr-936398

ABSTRACT

@#Simulium triglobus Takaoka & Kuvangkadilok from Thailand, in the Simulium (Simulium) multistriatum species-group, is unique among species in the family Simuliidae in having the female terminalia with three spermathecae (rather than one spermatheca). This species was described from Nan province, northern Thailand based on larvae, pupae and females but its male has remained unknown. In this study, the male of S. triglobus is described for the first time based on adult males reared from pupae collected from the type locality. The most distinctive characteristic of the male of S. triglobus is the shape of the ventral plate, which is hexagonal when viewed ventrally. No other members of S. multistriatum species group known thus far have such a unique ventral plate. In addition, the number of upper-eye (large) facets and color patterns of the legs can be used to differentiate this species in the male from other members of the S. multistriatum species-group. Mitochondrial cytochrome c oxidase I sequences enabled association of adult male specimens of S. triglobus with previously known life stages. Phylogenetic analysis based on these sequences revealed that specimens of S. triglobus formed a strongly supported monophyletic clade, being genetically distinct from other members of S. multistriatum species-group in Thailand.

2.
Tropical Biomedicine ; : 281-290, 2022.
Article in English | WPRIM | ID: wpr-940067

ABSTRACT

@#Cytoform C, one of three cytoforms in the Simulium angulistylum Takaoka & Davies complex from a high mountain in northeastern Thailand was morphologically and molecularly investigated. All known life stages (larva, pupa, adult male and female except egg) were morphologically similar to, but distinguishable from S. angulistylum s. str. and S. isanense Takaoka, Srisuka & Saeung in the adults by the relative length of the fore and hind basitarsi and relative length of the tooth to the claw. It is also morphologically distinct from other species of the S. epistum species-group. Here, it is formally described as a new species, S. prayooki. Molecular genetic data based on mitochondrial cytochrome c oxidase subunit I (COI) also supported the morphological similarity between the new species and the two related known species (S. angulistylum s. str. and S. isanense) as phylogenetic analysis retrieved them all from a single clade and with a low level of interspecific genetic divergence (1.74%). This might possibly have resulted from incomplete lineage sorting as they are likely to share a recent common ancestor. Despite limitation of molecular genetic differentiation, the new species was distinctly different from two other cytoforms of S. angulistylum complex based on polytene chromosome banding patterns and ecology of the immature stages. Thus, this study highlights the necessity of using an integrated approach for fully understanding black fly biodiversity.

SELECTION OF CITATIONS
SEARCH DETAIL