Australian Biological Resources Study

Australian Faunal Directory

Museums

Regional Maps

Species Arachnocampa (Campara) richardsae Harrison, 1966

 

Distribution

States

New South Wales


Extra Distribution Information

Known only from Newnes and Blue Mountains, NSW.

Australian Endemic.


IBRA and IMCRA regions (map not available)

IBRA

NSW: Sydney Basin (SB)

Distribution References

Ecological Descriptors

Adult: volant.

Extra Ecological Information

Larva is luminous, produces sticky snares.

 

Diagnosis

Diagnosis. Body length 10-11 mm (♂♂ cave), 7-7.5 mm (♂♂ epigean), 9-11.5 mm (♀♀ cave), 9 mm (♀♀ epigean); wing length 6.5-7.5 mm (♂♂ cave), 5.2-6 mm (epigean ♂♂), 6-8.5 mm (♀♀ cave), 5-6 mm (♀♀ epigean); ♀♀ cave antennae 3 mm, epigean ♀♀ 2-2.2 mm. m-cu well distal to r-m. r-m cross vein straight. bm-cu curved and 1.5-3 times (SNSW1 1.8-2.8x, SNSW6 2.3x, SNSW4 1.5-3x) length of m-cu, sloping backwards, towards wing base (Fig. 12F). m-cu sloping forwards. Laterotergite with 0-21 setae. Larval malpighian tubules light to medium brown (Fig. 15I, J). Larval maxillary teeth 9 and 10 plus lobe (cf Fig. 16A, C). Larval colouration: head capsule sclerotised brown, body with green pigmentation extending along entire length of lateral edges of body. Some brown/red pigmentation at posterior end (Fig. 15I, J).

Harrison’s (1966) use of colour for distinguishing A. flava from A. richardsae can be problematic given the large colour variation within these species. The darkened malpighian tubules in the larvae of A. flava is a more reliable character to separate the species.

 

ID Keys

Baker (2010) provides a key to subgenus A. (Campara)

 

History of changes

Note that this list may be incomplete for dates prior to September 2013.
Published As part of group Action Date Action Type Compiler(s)
16-Nov-2011 01-Oct-2015 MODIFIED
25-Jul-2011 MODIFIED