Abstract

The diversity and endemism of Australian Tanypodinae (Diptera: Chironomidae) has been unclear from morphological comparisons with well-grounded northern hemisphere taxonomy. As part of a comprehensive study, here we focus on one of the few described endemic genera, Yarrhpelopia Cranston. Extensive and intensive new sampling and newly-acquired molecular data provides clarity for the type species, Yarrhpelopia norrisi Cranston and allows recognition of congeners and potential sister group(s). We describe Yarrhpelopia acorona Cranston Krosch sp. n., and we recognise a third species from Western Australia, retaining an informal code 'V20' due to inadequate reared / associated material for formal description. We recognise a robust clade Coronapelopia Cranston Krosch gen. n., treated as a genus new to science for two new species, Coronapelopia valedon Cranston Krosch sp. n. and Coronapelopia quadridentata Cranston Krosch sp. n., from eastern Australia, each described in their larval and pupal stages and partial imaginal stages. Interleaved between the independent new Australian clades Yarrhpelopia and Coronapelopia are New World Pentaneura and relatives, that allow a tentative inference of a dated gondwanan (austral) connection. Expanded sampling indicates that Y. norrisi, although near predictably present in mine-polluted waters, is not obligate but generally indicates acidic waters, including natural swamps and Sphagnum bogs. The inferred acidophily, including in drainages of mine adits, applies to many taxa under consideration here.

Highlights

  • The aquatic immature stages of the large and diverse family Chironomidae are abundant and diverse in aquatic biomonitoring surveys (Cranston 1994; Ferrington 2007)

  • Bayesian support statistics for nodes are interpreted as Posterior Probability (PP) of 0.99–1.0 being robust and of 0.98–0.94 modestly supported

  • The genesis of this study arose from attempts to understand the biodiversity and systematics of the little-studied Chironomidae of seasonally wet tropical systems in northern Australia in relation to monitoring historic, ongoing and contemplated expansion of uranium mining in an area of outstanding natural beauty, Kakadu National Park

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Summary

Introduction

The aquatic immature stages of the large and diverse family Chironomidae (non-biting midges; Diptera: the ‘true’ flies) are abundant and diverse in aquatic biomonitoring surveys (Cranston 1994; Ferrington 2007). In Australia, descriptions and keys to the immature stages associated to the adult allow identification often to morphospecies (e.g., Aphroteniinae: Cranston & Edward 1992; Podonominae: Cranston et al 1987; 2002; Orthocladiinae: Boothroyd & Cranston 1995; Cranston 2000a, 2009; Cranston & Sæther 2010; Chironominae: Cranston & Hare 1995; Cranston 1996, 1997, 2000b, 2019a, 2019b). Keys to the immature stages include Cranston (1996, 2010, 2019c), Cranston & Dimitriadis (2004), Madden (2010) and Leung et al (2011). The subfamily Tanypodinae is inadequately understood in its immature stages, and, Accepted by B.

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