3.1. The Description of Ochlerotatus Lynch Arribálzaga, 1891
The genus
Ochlerotatus Lynch Arribálzaga, 1891 was described by Lynch Arribálzaga [
13], who distinguished it from the similar valid genera at the time,
Culex Linnaeus, 1758,
Janthinosoma Lynch Arribálzaga, 1891,
Psorophora Robineau-Desvoidy, 1827, and
Taeniorhynchus Lynch Arribálzaga, 1891, based on the morphology of the palpi of females and the tarsal claws (of both sexes). In the newly described genus, he included
Culex albifasciatus Macquart, 1838, synonymizing under it
Culex vittatus Philippi, 1865. Moreover, he described a new species,
Ochlerotatus confirmatus Lynch Arribálzaga, 1891, based on material he collected in May of 1887 near the Salado River, Buenos Aires province, Argentina, and from material sent to him by Dr. Eduardo L. Holmberg from Formosa, Chaco province, Argentina. Lynch Arribálzaga remarks on the similarity of this later species with the description of
Culex vittatus Philippi (not Bigot), but points to the lack of an abdominal dorsal stripe on his specimens as very distinctive.
Unfortunately, Lynch Arribálzaga did not disclose the whereabouts of the specimens in his publication, and in the early 1900s he gave his entomological collections to the museum now known as the Museo Argentino de Ciencias Naturales “Bernardino Rivadavia” (MACN) [
14]. O. H. Casal designated a lectotype from material found in the MACN. The lectotype is a female specimen in good condition with labels by F. Lynch Arribálzaga, identified as
Ochlerotatus confirmatus and collected in May 1887 from Navarro (a partido in close proximity to Salado river), Buenos Aires province, Argentina (Casal in [
15]).
Thereafter, in his publication on the type species of North American Diptera, in 1910, Coquillett [
16] designated
Ochlerotatus confirmatus as the type species for
Ochlerotatus. Coquillett further expanded the genus by synonymizing under it
Protomacleaya Theobald, 1907 and
Pseudohowardina Theobald, 1907, for which he had previously, in 1906, already included several described genera, including:
Culicada Felt, 1904;
Culicelsa Felt, 1904;
Ecculex Felt, 1904;
Protoculex Felt, 1904; and
Pseudoculex Dyar, 1905 [
17].
3.2. From Culex Linnaeus, 1758 to Aedes Meigen, 1818, Genera with All-Encompassing Definitions
In 1900, Giles [
18] was the first to synonymize Lynch Arribázaga’s genera (including
Heteronycha Lynch Arribálzaga, 1891 and
Ochlerotatus Lynch Arribálzaga, 1891) with
Culex Linnaeus, 1758. Although he did not give a synonymy list for the genus, his treatment of species made it clear that he believed those genera belonged with
Culex entirely. Later, in 1901, Theobald [
19,
20] independently utilized the same systematic treatment but gave a full synonymy list for
Culex, along with a brief explanation for his preferred schema. However, it was Blanchard [
21] who, in 1905, first published a reinterpretation of these taxa and a full explanation for the basis of his classification schema, which relied heavily on Theobald’s, focusing mostly on palpal morphology and on scale shapes. Moreover, Blanchard [
21] synonymized
Ochlerotatus confirmatus Lynch Arribálzaga, 1891 (and the treatments of
Culex confirmatus by Giles [
18,
22] and Theobald [
20]) under
Culex scapularis Rondani, and provided a redescription.
Dyar and Knab [
23], in 1906, discussed both Theobald’s recent classification system and Blanchard’s interpretation. They expressed concern over the validity of palpal length and scale shape as reliable characters with which to define genera. They claimed that larval characters would be of much more value for classification, and rearranged a large portion of the classification of Culicidae, with new generic definitions based on larval characters, in one of the first large revisions of the family.
One of Dyar and Knab’s [
23] key contributions to the classification of Culicidae was their redefinition of the genus
Aedes Meigen, 1818. Meigen [
24] published in 1818 the description of
Aedes, containing a single species
Aedes cinereus Wiedemann, 1818. The description was very short but one character stood out: “
Palpi brevissimi”. The presence of short palpi both in males and females became the mark of Meigen’s definition of
Aedes. As short palpi in both sexes is a rare character among the Culicidae, Meigen had established already a fairly restrictive definition of the genus. Thus, the genus held very few species, and many were later removed in favor of the formation of other genera including
Haemagogus Williston, 1896,
Uranotaenia Lynch Arribálzaga, 1891,
Aedeomyia Theobald, 1901, and
Wyeomyia Theobald, 1901. When Theobald published his monograph on the Culicidae of the world, in 1901, he included only eight species under the name
Aedes, four of which were new species [
20].
Dyar and Knab [
23], by strictly utilizing larval characters for taxonomic evaluation, created broadly defined generic groupings within the subfamily Culicinae. Importantly for this work, they synonymized 13 genera within
Aedes (namely:
Ochlerotatus Lynch Arribálzaga, 1891,
Haemagogus Williston, 1896,
Stegomyia Theobald, 1901,
Grabhamia Theobald, 1903,
Howardina Theobald, 1903,
Verrallina Theobald, 1903,
Culicelsa Felt, 1904,
Culicada Felt, 1904,
Ecculex Felt, 1904,
Protoculex Felt, 1904,
Pseudoculex Dyar, 1905,
Gymnometopa Coquillett, 1906, and
Lepidoplatys Coquillett, 1906). This broadly encompassing definition of
Aedes is currently more representative of the tribe Aedini rather than a single genus, and their action had important repercussions on the systematics of the Aedini.
3.3. Early Subgeneric Divisions of Aedes Meigen, 1818
Edwards [
25], in his 1917 publication, was the first to make subgeneric divisions to
Aedes sensu Dyar and Knab [
23]. Based on adult female characters, with supplemental information from male genitalia structures, he broke the genus into five subgenera (
Aedes Meigen, 1818,
Armigeres Theobald, 1901,
Ochlerotatus Lych Arribálzaga, 1891,
Skusea Theobald, 1903, and
Stegomyia Theobald, 1901), further dividing
Aedes (
Ochlerotatus) into three groups (
Diceromyia Theobald, 1911,
Finlaya Theobald, 1903, and
Ochlerotatus Lynch Arribálzaga, 1891), with the nominotypical group divided into three sections (
Aedimorphus Theobald, 1903,
Ecculex Felt, 1904, and
Ochlerotatus Lych Arribálzaga, 1891).
In 1918, Dyar [
26] reinterpreted and complemented Edward’s findings with more data from New World species. He split
Aedes into two informal series, the Old World series and the New World series. Dyar’s [
26] groupings were based exclusively on male genitalia structures, which he claimed to contain the most valuable characters for subgeneric divisions. Dyar [
26] identified six groups in the Old World series, each of which he assigned a roman numeral and then tentatively named according to Edward’s subgenera, as follows: Group I—
Stegomyia Theobald, 1901; Group II—
Skusea Theobald, 1903; Group III—
Finlaya Theobald, 1903; Group IV—
Armigeres Theobald, 1901; Group V—
Ecculex Felt, 1904,
Aedimorphus Theobald, 1903, and
Diceromyia Theobald, 1911; Group VI—
Aedes Meigen, 1818. Dyar [
26] applied the same system to the New World series, dividing it into five groups and tentatively naming his groups according to Edward’s subgenera or, when none was available, as he found appropriate: Group I—
Howardina Theobald, 1903; Group II—
Gualteria Lutz, 1904; Group III—
Taeniorhynchus Lynch Arribálzaga, 1891; Group IV—
Ochlerotatus Lynch Arribálzaga, 1891; Group V—
Culicada Felt, 1904.
Later, in 1920, Dyar [
27] formalized his groups as subgenera, making some modifications to his original analysis and leaving the divisions as follows:
Howardina Theobald, 1903 [=New World series, Group I—Howardina];
Heteronycha Lynch Arribálzaga, 1891 [=New World series, Groups IV—Ochlerotatus and V—Culicada];
Taeniorhynchus Lynch Arribálzaga, 1891 [=New World series, Group III—Taeniorhynchus];
Finlaya Theobald, 1903 [=Old World series, Group III—Finlaya and New World series, Group II—Gualteria];
Stegomyia Theobald, 1901 [=Old World series, Group I—Stegomyia];
Aedes Meigen, 1818 [=Old World series, Group VI—Aedes];
Ecculex Felt, 1904 [=Old World series, Group V—Ecculex, Aedimorphus, and Diceromyia].
Most notably for the work presented herein, he decided to change the association of his New World Series, Group IV, from his own understanding of Edward’s genus
Ochlerotatus to
Heteronycha, which became the
de facto name of his new subgenus (
Heteronycha) which included former Groups IV and V. Furthermore, Dyar [
27] created several informal groups within the subgenus
Heteronycha, namely: Group
pullatus, Group
serratus, Group
curriei, Group
punctor, Group
scapularis, Group
impiger, Group
stimulans, Group
thibaulti, Group
trichurus, and Group
innuitius.
It is important to note that in Lynch Arribálzaga’s [
13] description of the genus
Heteronycha, he included a single (newly described) species,
Heteronycha dolosa Lynch Arribálzaga, 1891, which is the type by monotypy. Later, in 1900, Giles [
18] clearly treated
Heteronycha as synonymous with
Culex (along with other genera described by Lynch Arribálzaga [
13]). Even though he does not give a formal synonymy list for
Culex, this is evidenced by his use of the combination
Culex dolosus for Lynch Arribálzaga’s species. Theobald [
20], in his 1901 work “A monograph of the Culicidae”, performed a major taxonomic revision of the family, also synonymizing
Heteronycha under
Culex. However, Theobald synonymized the name
Heteronycha dolosa under
Culex fatigans Wiedemann, 1828. Currently,
Culex fatigans is a synonym of
Culex quinquefasciatus Say, 1823, while the name
Heteronycha dolosa is recognized under the combination
Culex dolosus (Lynch Arribálzaga, 1891).
In 1917, Howard et al. [
28] noted the morphological discrepancies between the descriptions of the male and the female in Arribálzaga’s description, observing that, although the described male was possibly a
Culex, the female clearly belonged to
Aedes, and so they synonymyzed
Heteronycha with
Aedes, creating the combination
Aedes dolosa. Later, in 1919, Dyar [
29] suggested that
Aedes (
Ochlerotatus)
lynchii (Brèthes, 1910) could be a synonym of
Aedes dolosa sensu Howard et al. [
28]. If that were true, in his own words, he believed
Heteronycha would take precedence over
Ochlerotatus, which led to Dyar’s erroneous substitution of the name
Ochlerotatus with
Heteronycha in his 1920 paper on the classification of American
Aedes [
27]. The substitution was erroneous since the name
Ochlerotatus confirmatus appears in an earlier page in Lynch Arribálzaga’s 1891 publication of both name bearing contestants for Dyar’s subgenus (namely,
Ochlerotatus confirmatus [
13] (p. 146) and
Heteronycha dolosa [
13] (p. 156), and, as such, takes position precedence as the name for the taxon (recommendation 69A.10 of the Code [
30]). Afterwards, in 1921, Dyar [
31] seems to believe the principle of priority would restrict the name
Heteronycha to the synonymy of
Culex, on the basis of Theobald’s treatment. If that were the case, he arguably failed to recognize that the earliest treatment of the name as
Culex was actually by Giles. Even so, he was mistaken in his assertion, since none of the actions taken by Giles [
18], Theobald [
20], Howard et al. [
28] or Dyar [
27,
29,
31] would have any effect under consideration of the Code [
30].
Dyar did, in the end, reverse his actions, and reinstituted
Aedes scapularis syn.
Ochlerotatus confirmatus as the name bearer for the subgenus (as opposed to
Aedes dolosa sensu Howard et al. [
28]). He also resurrected
Aedes (
Ochlerotatus)
lynchii and treated the name
Heteronycha dolosa under
Culex, but giving the incorrect combination
Culex dolosa [
sic], which should be
Culex dolosus for gender agreement, as the name
Culex is of masculine gender and the specific epithet is a Latin adjective (
dolosa being the feminine form of
dolosus, meaning deceitful) (Article 31.2 of the Code [
30]). O. H. Casal in [
15] finally resolved the
Heteronycha by designating a lectotype for
Heteronycha dolosa Lynch Arribálzaga, 1891, and as the specimen is a male
Culex, this action finally resolved the name
Heteronycha as a synonym of
Culex.
In the end, the type species for Dyar’s subgenus
Ochlerotatus is
Ochlerotatus confirmatus Lynch Arribálzaga, 1891 as the subjective synonym of
Culex scapularis Rondani, 1848. Dyar’s Group
scapularis, subgenus
Ochlerotatus (later referred to as Scapularis Group [
32]) therefore became a key point of reference for taxonomic changes in the subgenus, which grew significantly in the following years, as described below.
3.4. The Evolution of the Definition of Ochlerotatus scapularis (Rondani, 1848)
Rondani’s description of
Culex scapularis in 1848 is fundamental to understanding the subgenus
Ochlerotatus. Rondani used material brought by Vittore Ghiliani from Pará, Brazil, to the Museo e Instituto di Zoologia Sistemática dell’Università di Torino (TORINO), Torino, Italy, to publish a treatise on Brazilian Diptera, in which he describes
Culex scapularis. Unfortunately, Rondani was an independent entomologist and did not leave his collections to any particular museum. Indeed, many museums acquired material from Rondani and from his publishers, Braudi and Truqui. Some believe he had left his collections in the TORINO, since Ghiliani, the original collector of the Brazilian specimens, worked there. Papavero [
14] claimed that the Rondani material there was lost. Belkin et al. [
15] stated that the material is “probably in Bologna”, and Arnell [
11] claimed “possibly Naples”. The material from the TORINO was transferred to the Museo Regionale di Scienze Naturali, Torino, Italy, in 1978. Dr. Fulvio Giachino, the current curator for the entomology section of this museum, declared that, there are only three pins with labels written “
Culex” present in the collection, but no specimens or any other indications (personal communication, 11 May 2016). Dr. Luca Bartolozzi, from the Florence Natural History Museum, disclosed that there is no material from Rondani housed there (personal communication, 22 November 2012). Dr. Stefano Maretti, from the Pavia Natural History Museum, informed us that only Rondani’s material of Italian origin is housed there (personal communication, 6 December 2018). The natural history museum in Milano was completely destroyed during the second World War. Dr. Alessandra Sforzi, who is currently compiling a catalog of the Rondani material, kindly informed us she had visited all of the Italian museums that collected Rondani’s material and there is a single pinned specimen that bears Rondani’s label “
Culex scapularis”, in the Napoli museum (MZUN) [M. Zool. Num: 10866]. Unfortunately, the specimen is, in her words, very moldy, and in such bad condition that the sex cannot be determined (personal communication, 7 December 2018). Having exhausted all options in the search for the original type specimen, and given that there is no syntype in suitable conditions for a lectotype designation, and due to the polymorphic nature of the current understanding of the taxon, we conclude that a taxonomic revision of the species should include a neotype designation from topotypical material.
After Blanchard [
21] synonymized, in 1905,
Ochlerotatus confirmatus Lynch Arribálzaga, 1891, under the name
Culex scapularis Rondani, 1848, Dyar and Knab [
23] reassessed specimens previously identified by others as
Culex confirmatus and described many new species in 1906. These include:
Aedes infirmatus Dyar and Knab, 1906 for specimens from Baton Rouge, Louisiana, USA;
Aedes habanicus Dyar and Knab, 1906, from Havana, Cuba (currently a subjective synonym of
Ochlerotatus tortilis (Theobald, 1903)); and
Aedes hemisurus Dyar and Knab, 1906 from near Spanish Town, Saint Catherine Parish, Jamaica (currently a subjective synonym of
Ochlerotatus scapularis). In the case of the material from Jamaica, Dyar and Knab did not believe that the insular population could be conspecific with the one described from Argentina, thus they proposed a new name.
Later, in 1909, Pazos [
33] added
Aedes hemisurus Dyar and Knab, 1906 to the synonymy list of
Aedes scapularis [
34]. In the following year, Theobald [
35] transferred
Aedes scapularis to the genus
Leucomyia Theobald, 1907, which is currently a synonym of the subgenus
Culex. Other authors kept the species in the genus
Aedes. In fact, Howard et al. [
28] synonymized
Aedes indolescens Dyar and Knab, 1907, and Dyar [
27] later synonymized
Aedes (
Ochlerotatus)
camposanus Dyar, 1918 under
Aedes scapularis.
In successive publications, Dyar frequently revised his assessment of the Scapularis Group. In his first revision of his Scapularis Group, in 1922, Dyar [
32] synonymized three taxa as subspecies, thus creating
Aedes scapularis euplocamus,
Aedes scapularis infirmatus, and
Aedes scapularis condolescens. Later, in 1924, he suggested the name
Pseudohowardina Theobald, 1907 for a subgeneric treatment of the Scapularis Group [
36]. Moreover, in that same publication, Dyar [
36] decided to redescribe syn.
Aedes hemisurus as a subspecies of
Aedes scapularis, synonymizing
Aedes indolescens under it. He also redescribed and elevated all three taxa from his previous publication to species again (i.e.,
Aedes euplocamus,
Aedes infirmatus, and
Aedes condolescens).
Dyar later abandoned the subgeneric treatment of the Scapularis Group in favor of maintaining it inside the subgenus
Ochlerotatus in his 1925 publication. He also moved
Aedes camposanus Dyar, 1918 from synonymy with
Aedes scapularis into synonymy with
Aedes euplocamus Dyar and Knab, 1906 [
37]. He also revoked the status of subspecies from
Aedes scapularis hemisurus, synonymizing it with
Aedes scapularis [
38].
In the 1950s, Levi-Castillo [
39,
40] resurrected and redescribed
Aedes (
Ochlerotatus)
camposanus Dyar, 1918. Unfortunately, he did not assign a type to this name, for which a type was not originally designated. This compounds the confusion surrounding this taxon. Similarly, in 1970, Belkin et al. [
41] redescribed
Aedes (
Ochlerotatus)
hemisurus Dyar and Knab, 1906 (also a typeless taxon), synonymizing
Ae.
indolescens Dyar and Knab, 1907 under it, in agreement with Dyar’s work from 1924 [
36].
Arnell [
11] performed the last major revision of the Scapularis Group in 1976. In his work, he synonymized
Aedes camposanus,
Aedes hemisurus (together with
Aedes indolescens), and
Aedes (
Ochlerotatus)
rhyacophylus Costa Lima, 1933 under
Aedes (
Ochlerotatus)
scapularis. Later,
Aedes (
Ochlerotatus)
rhyacophylus was resurrected and redescribed in 1988 by Sallum et al. [
42], complete with a lectotype designation.
No taxonomic revision of
Ochlerotatus scapularis or the Scapularis Group has been performed since Arnell published in 1976. There is understandably a significant confusion about the morphological characters that constitute the species and define the group, particularly for the type species for the subgenus,
Oc. scapularis. It is clear that the elevation of
Ochlerotatus Lynch Arribálzaga to genus [
5] and subsequent works on the phylogeny of Aedini [
6,
8,
9] suffer from the taxonomic uncertainty surrounding the type species of the group. This is made clear in the work by Reinert et al. from 2008 [
8], where they choose to simply “define” the nominotypical subgenus for
Ochlerotatus as the Scapularis Group
sensu Arnell [
11] as a provisional action.
3.6. Ochlerotatus confirmatus Lynch Arribálzaga, 1891
Translation of the description of
Culex scapularis Rondani, 1848 [
34], from Latin:
“Brown. First antenomere yellow. Proboscis all dark. Ommatidia dark, irregularly some silvery white (Always? Also while alive?). Occiput white scaled. Thorax dorso-anteriorly white scaled, posteriorly pilose; short setae reddish, long setae brown. Pleura reddish brown, with white spots. Scutellum and mesopostnotum reddish brown. Halteres with pedicelum light brown, capitellum darker. Abdomen dark dorsally, with a pale stripe medially extending from second segment to last; at last segments more conspicuous and wider. All segments with triangular pale spots at each side. Sternites pale scaled. Legs dark anteriorly, yellowish-white posteriorly; tarsi dark. Wing membrane transparent, fourth and seventh dorsal [veins] equidistant to base of wing”.
Translation of the description of
Ochlerotatus confirmatus Lynch Arribálzaga, 1891 [
13], from Latin:
“Brown; occiput with silky-gray scales; Mesonotum with more than half of the anterior part covered in silky-silvery-goldish, posteriorly with brown falcate scales, with dark setae; dorsal part of the abdomen dark brown, slightly purplish, base of the segments silky-white, sternites silky-gray; Antennae, palpi, knees of tibiae and apex of tarsi dark. Apex of proboscis dark, base at venter lighter. Legs pale yellow. Antennae dark-brown with apexes of antenomeres with dark setae, tori and ventral base of the first antenomere scaled. Head anteriorly [clipeus?] glabrous pitch-black, posteriorly [occiput] silky-gray slightly silvery scales, brown setae, ventrally dark. Eyes in life green, after death greyish olive. Proboscis with dark scales, apex ventrally dark. Palpi dark almost black. Thorax above antral suture [scutum] densely covered in the middle with appressed silvery-grey, slightly silky-goldish, scales, posteriorly and both sides outer edges with dark falcate scales, anteriorly apparently without setae but posteriorly densely covered with long dark setae. Scutellum with dark falcate [scales?] and brown setae. Pleurae anteriorly dark, medially and posteriorly dark and silky-grey bright silvery. Wing transparent densely covered with dark scales. Halteres pale, capitellum lightly scaled. Legs pale yellow, tarsi anteriorly slightly obfuscated; knees of posterior tibial apex and tarsi diluted dark [more pale?]. Abdominal tergites dark-brown, under the light iridescent, slightly purple at margins, crosswise with a silky-white stripe, sternites with silky-gray scales”.
It is important to note here that only the patch of pale scales on the anterior part of the mesonotum and the stripe of pale scales on the terga overlap between the original descriptions of
Culex scapularis Rondani and
Ochlerotatus confirmatus Lynch Arribálzaga. Other currently recognized species also present a patch of pale scales on the anterior portion of the mesonotum (
Oc.
tortilis,
Oc.
condolescens,
Oc.
euplocamus,
Oc.
patersoni,
Oc.
infirmatus,
Oc.
raymondi, and
Oc.
rhyacophilus), and at least one other (
Oc.
phaeonotus) also presents (in addition to the mesonotal character) a stripe of pale scales on the terga. Yet another (
Oc.
comitatus) is unknown in the female form, but assumed by Arnell [
11] to also present both characters. Additionally, it is clear that Arnell does not attribute much importance to the abdominal stripe character, and he says that the character is indistinct and occurs “often”, implying that it may be absent. With this consideration, the number of species that could fit the description increases considerably.
Translation of the redescription of
Culex scapularis and synonymy of
Ochlerotatus confirmatus within it by Blanchard in 1905, from French [
21]:
“Head: falcate light cream scales medially, ochre more laterally and posteriorly, spatulate laterally; scales ochre in life [?]. Eyes: purple black and silver, encircled with spatulate ochre scales. Thorax divided into 2 zones: anteriorly, falcate scales in bright yellow, silky; posteriorly and laterally, brown scales, with 4 rows of golden brown bristles. Abdomen dark brown, with a mid-dorsal line of ochre scales, thicker at the base of the segments, clearer and wider at last one. Each segment with a white latero-basal spot. Ungues formula: 1.1.-1.1.-0.0 in the female. 2.1.-2.1.-1.1. in the male”.
Note that the ungues formula was used by culicidologists mostly in the early 1900s, to describe the state of character regarding the ventral projections of each unguis (i.e.: Presence and number of “teeth”) for the outer and inner unguis for the fore-, mid-, and hindlegs, respectively. However, little is known about the conception of this formula, and its use (in lieu of a simple description) seems to have had little to no benefit for culicidologists, as it was phased out from the literature around midcentury (personal communication, Dr. Thomas Zavortink, Dr. Ralph Harbach, 11 December 2018).
It should be noted that, for the females of
Ochlerotatus sensu Reinert [
8] the inner and outer ungues of each leg are equal. It is clear that Blanchard [
21] thought the female had unequal fore- and midungues, also that they had the hindungues both untoothed (simple), but Arnell [
11] considers the species as having all ungues toothed. Blanchard worked at the Faculté de Médecine de Paris. Unfortunately, we could not locate information about a voucher collection of Culicidae deposited there, thus it was impossible for us to verify the specimens he had worked with. Blanchard simply mentions a distribution including Chile, Buenos Aires (likely meaning Argentina, in general), Brazil, Guyana, and Jamaica.
The first author had access to specimens from Argentina, Brazil, and Jamaica, including the lectotype of
Oc. confirmatus and topotypical material for
Oc. scapularis (from Belém, Pará, Brazil). Every specimen that the first author has identified as
Oc. aff.
scapularis presents hindungues toothed, in accordance with Arnell [
11]. Arnell describes simple hindungues (untoothed) for
Ochlerotatus condolescens, giving its distribution as follows: Bahamas, Cuba, and Cayman Islands. The first author observed that the holotype of
Culex bracteatus (a syn. of
Ochlerotatus tortilis) also presents simple hindungues, and Arnell considers the Tortilis subgroup, which includes
Oc. tortilis and
Oc. auratus, to have hindungues toothed or simple. The distribution of
Oc. tortilis is considered as follows: Southern Florida, Bahamas, Cuba, Grand Cayman Island, Antilles, and
Oc. auratus occurs only in Jamaica. The scutal patterning of these species is not very similar to the one from the
Oc. scapularis nor syn.
Culex confirmatus, but the descriptions of the shape of the patterning which were available at the time were too vague to make a definitive identification. Therefore, it is possible that Blanchard may have analyzed specimens of these aforementioned species (perhaps from Jamaica), and not
Oc. scapularis or
Oc. confirmatus. However, we believe it is much more likely that Blanchard mistakenly identified a species of
Culex, in the modern sense, as an
Ochlerotatus, based on Theobald’s 1901 description of
Culex confirmatus [
20]. This is likely due to the fact that Theobald mentioned “fore and mid ungues equal, toothed” with no mention of the state of the hindungues. This description also seems to have caused confusion to others as well, since later, in 1910, Theobald [
35], under his treatment of
Leucomyia scapularis [=
Oc. scapularis sensu Reinert et al. [
8]] mentions that Ludlow wrote in a letter to him that she had identified a similar species to
Culex confirmatus from Georgia, USA, with the only exception in character description being that the hind ungues were toothed. In response, Theobald clarifies that he never had seen any specimen that did not have the hind ungues toothed, and that he simply had not included the character earlier.
3.7. Aedes hemisurus Dyar and Knab, 1906
Aedes hemisurus Dyar and Knab, 1906 [
23] was originally described from the larva and apparently synonymized with
Oc. scapularis by Pazos in 1909 [
33]. Pazos gives both
Ochlerotatus confirmatus and
Aedes hemisurus as synonyms of
Aedes scapularis sensu Pazos, and states that the synonymy list is given by Dyar and Knab. However, those authors did not synonymize
Aedes hemisurus in any of their publications. Pazos provides a text formatted as a reference right beside his mention of
Aedes hemisurus, the text is as follows: “Pazos. Rev. Med. Trop., Habana (1908). t. J. p. 99”. We were unable to locate any publication or journal archive under this name, so the synonymy apparent in the literature is Pazos, 1909. Pazos [
33] also provides a description, in Spanish, for the name
Aedes scapularis. Pazos states that the description is from Theobald, thus giving the impression it is only a translation. He is misleading in this, as his description is different from Theobald’s.
Original English text from the redescription of
Culex confirmatus by Theobald in 1901 [
20]:
“Female. Head dark brown, clothed with pale creamy curved scales in the middle and with ochraceous ones at the sides and behind, and with upright ochraceous forked ones; sides with flat scales; eyes deep purplish-black and silver, with flat ochraceous scales round them; clypeus deep purplish-brown; antennae dark brown, basal joint and the greater part of the second joint testaceous; palpi short, black scaled; proboscis covered with shiny black scales. Thorax clothed in front with pale, silky, yellowish, narrow curved scales, which gradually become pure silky white about halfway across the mesonotum, the remaining part of the mesonotum darker, covered with scattered brown scales, as also are the sides, the posterior half of the mesonotum has four rows of golden-brown bristles; scutellum deep brown when viewed in one direction, ochraceous brown in the other, with creamy scales and a border of golden-brown bristles; in some specimens pale in the middle, dark at the sides; metanotum [corr.: mesopostnotum] chestnut-brown with a dull purplish tinge; pleurae chestnut-brown, with patches of white scales. Abdomen with the segments covered with deep blackish-brown scales, ground colour testaceous, this colour showing through the bases of the segments to a slight extent; down the middle of the abdomen runs a line of ochraceous scales, which are thickest at the bases of the segments, and which become lighter and spread out over the whole of the last segment; in some specimens these ochraceous scales are absent; each segment has a basal lateral patch of pure white; the hairs on the posterior borders pale brown; venter covered with creamy-yellow scales; in some specimens the apical borders of the venter have a triangular black patch on each side. Legs covered with deep brown scales with a bronzy ochraceous reflection in some lights; femora whitish beneath nearly to the apex, which is dark, coxae testaceous; hind meta tarsi [first tarsomere of hind leg] not quite so long as the hind tibiae; fore and mid ungues equal, toothed. Wings with the first sub marginal cell longer and narrower than the second posterior cell, its stem equal to about two thirds the length of the cell; stem of the second posterior cell nearly equal to the length of the cell; posterior cross-vein about its own length distant from the mid cross-vein; costa, first long vein and third long veins blackish; halteres pale with slightly fuscous knob. Length. 4.5 to 6 mm. Male. Antennae pale brownish ochraceous, with dark brown bands and brown plume-hairs; proboscis nearly as long as the palpi, dark brown; palpi covered with steel-black scales, last joint dark, like the rest of the palpus, hairs dark brown. Abdominal segments ochraceous at their bases, dark dusky-black on the apical half, which is covered with deep, dull, purplish-black scales, bases of the segments pale, partly owing to the ochraceous ground colour and partly to pale ochraceous scales, there are also a few basal white scales; from the fourth to the seventh segments are more or less triangular patches of white scales placed laterally and at the base of the segments; the last segment is covered with pule fuscous scales; claspers steel black; posterior border of the segments and the sides with long golden hairs. ungues unequal on the fore and mid legs, equal on the hind legs, similar to C. serratus”.
Translation of the redescription of
Aedes scapularis and synonymy of
Aedes hemisurus within it by Pazos in 1909, from Spanish [
33]:
“Color: dark brown; thorax silvery white. Size: usually 4.5 to 6.0 mm of width [wingspan, probably]. Head: dark brown, with pale yellow scales medially and ocher laterally and posteriorly with some forked, erect and ocher in color; laterally flat scales; eyes dark, dark purple and silver; clipeus brown, dark purple; antennae dark brown; palpi with black scales; proboscis covered in shining scales. Thorax: covered anteriorly with narrow, falcate scales, silky, pale yellow, which gradually become all silky white up to the middle of the metanotum [corr.: mesonotum]; the rest of the metanotum [corr.: mesonotum] darker, covered in brown scales, tanned the same on the sides; the scutellum brownish with cream scales and dark golden setae; pleura dark brown with patches of white scales. Abdomen: dark brown with purple shine; with median line of ocher scales, denser [wider] at the base of the segments; sternites covered by cream yellow scales. Wings: with first submarginal cell [cell R2] longer and narrower than the second posterior [cell M1]; with the pedicel [vein R2+3] the same [size] as both margins of the cell [veins R2 and R3]; posterior transversal vein [M3+4] its own length distant from the median transversal vein [rm], but its location variable. Legs: covered in dark brown scales and femora whitish. Ungues: Female: all equal, not toothed. Male: anterior and median unequal, the smaller not toothed; posterior equal and not toothed”.
The most contentious aspects of these descriptions are (1) the lack of mention of the possibility for the absence of the median line of pale scales on the terga by Pazos, in contrast with Theobald, (2) the possible presence of triangular patches of dark scales on the sternites was omitted by Pazos, who describes all sternites as pale-scaled, and (3) the ungues of the female, which Pazos states are all not toothed, where Theobald says the fore- and midungues are toothed (and also clarifies later that the hindungues also is toothed [
35]). Similarly, Pazos states the ungues of the male are all not toothed with the exception of the larger front ones, while Theobald says they are similar to
Culex serratus. Theobald [
20] described the ungues of
Culex serratus as follows: “Fore and mid ungues unequal, larger one with two, smaller with one tooth; hind ungues equal, each with small thick tooth and basal swelling.” In our view, these aspects of Pazos’ description are irreconcilable with Theobald’s.
Later, in 1924, Dyar [
36] recognized the taxon as a subspecies,
Aedes scapularis hemisurus, on the basis of two male genitalia characters: 16–20 setae on basal lobe, spine [larger seta of basal lobe] stout (for
Aedes scapularis hemisurus); 10 setae on basal lobe, spine [larger seta of basal lobe] slender (for
Aedes scapularis scapularis). However, the same author later did not recognize this subspecific status for the taxon, in 1928, and slightly changed his view of the characters of the male genitalia of
Aedes scapularis, stating: “[…] basal lobe with four or five setae and other minute ones adjacent to a large spine with swollen base” [
38].
In 1970, Belkin et al. [
41] recognized specific rank to
Ae. hemisurus and provided a redescription of all life stages. These authors emphasized that the main difference of this species from
Aedes scapularis is the lack of a retrorse process on the claspette filament, and the presence of fewer setae on the distal part of the basal lobe; this is a departure from the previous interpretation by Dyar, i.e., that
Aedes scapularis has fewer setae on the basal lobe.
Arnell [
11] synonymized the taxon again within
Aedes scapularis in 1976, together with two more species (
Aedes camposanus and
Aedes rhyacophilus), in addition to his keeping of the synonyms given by earlier authors. He also gives a broader description of the male genitalia of this new concept of
Ae. scapularis, such that it became indistinguishable from
Aedes phaeonotus Arnell, 1976, a species of his own description.
Aedes phaeonotus is distinguishable from
Ae. scapularis only in the female based on the color of the anterior patch of pale scales of the mesonotum, which should be yellowish tan for
Aedes phaeonotus and white for
Aedes scapularis. This is not a useful character, for the following reasons: (1) Scale bleaching is a problem for identification of stored specimens, and (2) the first author has observed extreme variability in the coloration of the mesonotal patch of pale scales from mosquitoes from one single collection event, including freshly collected mosquitoes where the median portion of the patch was white and the edges were golden yellow. This in itself does not preclude the possibility that one species may emerge with white scaling and the other develops the character by sun exposure during life. However, it would be impossible to tell which of these phenomena has happened for any given specimen. Arnell restricted the occurrence of
Aedes phaeonotus to Grenada [
11], but the first author has observed mosquitoes from Brazil which have yellow anterior patches of mesonotal scales, which is in accordance with Arnell’s descriptions [
11]. Arnell was the first to restrict the coloration of the mesonotal anterior scale patch to white [
11].