taxonID	type	description	language	source
03CDB311FF88FF8E75BFFEC8FB56F9C8.taxon	diagnosis	Diagnosis. C. parafenestratus Chen & Freidberg, sp. nov. is generally similar to C. obnubilus, but can be differentiated by the absence of a hyaline transverse band from the anterior to the posterior margin next to pterostigma, R 4 + 5 setose present till R-M and hyaline spot present in cell m (Fig. 7), and also by the slender tube connecting sac like structures of spermathecae (Fig. 6). Description. Female, body length 5.8 mm, wing 4.0 mm. Head (Fig. 3). Frons yellow to fulvous, length about 1.2 – 1.3 times of width, 1.0 times as wide as eye. Lunule yellow. Ocellar triangle dark brown and vertex yellow to fulvous. Face, parafacials and genae yellow; genae narrow, about 1 / 10 height of eye. Occiput yellow with upper 2 / 3 along eye margin usually brown. Antennal segments 1 and 2 yellow, segment 3 fuscous, ratio of length / width being 3.0 – 4.0, tip blunt; arista dark brown, plumose, longest rays about half width of antennal segment 3. Head setae black. Three pairs of frontals and two pairs of orbitals, lowest orbitals placed on or almost on line of highest frontals; one pair of medial vertical, lateral vertical and genal setae. Thorax. Scutum (Fig. 4) completely yellow to fulvous with 2 narrow dark brown submedian vittae extending from anterior margin to posterior margin and 1 narrow vague gray median vitta extending from anterior margin to before level of dorsocentral bristles and 4 narrow vague gray crossbands between submedian and median vittae. Postpronotal lobes white to pale yellow. Pleura predominantly yellow to fulvous, with dorsal and posterior margins of anepisternum whitish and surrounded by a dark brown edge; katepisternum and anatergite brown; mediotergite and subscutellum dark brown. Scutellum yellow. Thoracic chaetotaxy: 2 pairs scutellar, 2 notopleural, 1 postsutural supra-alar, 1 postalar, 1 intra-alar, 2 anepisternal and 4 scapular setae, 2 prescutellar acrostichal, 2 dorsocentral setae. Wing (Fig. 7) hyaline in ground colour, with blackish brown markings as follows: a large apical patch connected with a band from stigma to anal extension, leaving hyaline indentation separately in wing apical part, cell r 1, basal part of cell cua 1 and dm, cell m, and a small hyaline spot in cell r 4 + 5 (sometime an additional spot in cell dm); stigma brown. Vein R 4 + 5 setulose to crossvein r-m. Legs yellow to fulvous, fore femora with two rows of 6 – 8 black spines on apical 2 / 5; mid femora with two rows of 14 – 16 black spins on apical 2 / 5 of each; hind femora with two rows of 14 – 16 black spins on apical 1 / 3. Abdomen (Fig. 5). Elongate-oval in shape, generally dark brown to black, except for a yellow-white, irregularly shaped mark in middle of tergites 2 and 3; tergite 5 slightly longer than tergite 4; oviscape almost equal to length of tergites 5 + 6. Aculeus (Fig. 10) length / width about 3.0 times, tip (Fig. 8) blunt, with two pairs of setae (very close and resembles 1 pair if not observed carefully); 3 spermathecae (Fig. 6), each with 2 sack-like structures, bigger saccate structure round-shaped, and tube connecting two saccate structures slender. Material examined. Holotype ♀ (CAS), Democratic Republic of Congo, Wamba, forest Malaise, 4 ° 15 ′ S, 17 ° 10 ′ E, 20 April 2006, leg. S. L. Heydon & S. E. Stevenson. Paratypes. 1 ♀ (CAS), same data as Holotype; 1 ♀ (CAS), Democratic Republic of Congo, Bandundu, Wamba, Enchenche Forest, Malaise trap primary forest, 19 April 2006, leg. S. L. Heydon & S. E. Stevenson; 1 ♀ (CAS), Democratic Republic of Congo, Wamba, Malaise just inside forest, 4 ° 15 ′ S, 17 ° 10 ′ E, 24 April 2006, leg. S. L. Heydon & S. E. Stevenson. Distribution. Democratic Republic of Congo. Etymology. The species epithet is from a Latin adjective referring to the marks on wing like windows.	en	Huangfu, Ning, Zhu, Chaodong, Chen, Xiaolin (2019): A new species of Celidodacus Hendel, with notes on C. coloniarum (Speiser) and C. obnubilus (Karsch). Zoological Systematics 44 (3): 240-246, DOI: 10.11865/zs.201919, URL: http://zoobank.org/f1d7e6e7-4318-42cc-9566-6156b44b7c75
03CDB311FF88FF8C75BFF9A6FD6AFE59.taxon	description	Redescription. Frons, gena, postgena and ventral part of occiput dark brown, dorsal part of occiput yellow-brown. Pleura dark, scutum (Fig. 15) red-brown with two narrow longitudinal black vittae and two pale brown bands; legs brown except femora almost black. Wing (Fig. 13) with isolated apical patch and 2 separate transverse black bands: apical patch having a hyaline spot in apex of cell r 4 + 5, subcostal band from pterostigma through vein BM-Cu to convergent point of vein Cu 2 and A 1; radial-medial band from wing anterior margin through crossvein R-M and almost reaching posterior edge of wing; subcostal band about twice as wide as radial-medial band; vein R 4 + 5 setulose to beyond crossvein R-M. Abdomen (Fig. 16) dark brown to black; tergites 1 + 2, 3 and 4 brown, tergites 5 – 6 black, tergites 1 + 2 with one pair vague medial yellow-brown patch; oviscape black, tapering and cylindrical, almost equal to combined length of tergites 5 – 6, middle width to length ratio about 0.5. Material examined. 1 ♀ (USNM), Kenya, Western Province, Kakamega forest, Malaise trap, 1550 m, 0 ° 14 ′ N, 34 ° 51 ′ E, 10 – 24 February 2007, leg. R. Copeland. Distribution. Equatorial Guinea, Nigeria, Cameroon, Zaire, Rwanda, Tanzania, Malawi, Kenya, Zimbabwe and Mocambique. Remarks. The species is first recorded in Kenya.	en	Huangfu, Ning, Zhu, Chaodong, Chen, Xiaolin (2019): A new species of Celidodacus Hendel, with notes on C. coloniarum (Speiser) and C. obnubilus (Karsch). Zoological Systematics 44 (3): 240-246, DOI: 10.11865/zs.201919, URL: http://zoobank.org/f1d7e6e7-4318-42cc-9566-6156b44b7c75
03CDB311FF8AFF8A75BFF8B9FB87FEEF.taxon	description	Redescription. Frons, gena, occiput, median occipital sclerite yellow. Sternum, pleura and legs yellow, scutum (Fig. 20) brown with two narrow longitudinal black vittae and one narrow longitudinal brown vitta. Wing (Fig. 24) with apical patch separated from subcostal band, subcostal band from pterostigma through vein BM-Cu to convergent point of veins Cu 2 and A 1; apical patch covering crossvein R-M and having a hyaline arched-round spot at cell m and a hyaline oval spot at apex of wing; vein R 4 + 5 setulose only at base. Abdomen (Fig. 21) elongate-oval in shape, dark brown, some specimens with two vague yellow-brown patches in middle of tergites 1 + 2 and 3. Female with oviscape almost equal to length of tergites 5 – 6; aculeus (Fig. 28) length / width about 3.5 times, tip blunt, with two pairs of setae (Fig. 26); 3 spermathecae (Fig. 25), each with 2 rounded and sack-like structures. Male terminalia: epandrium rounded in posterior view (Fig. 22); surstylus with apex rounded in lateral view; medial surstylus having 2 black prensisetae. Material examined. 1 ♀ (TAUI), Cameroon, Rt. N 11, Bafut, 20 km N. Bamenda, 17, 24 June 1987, leg. Fini Kaplan; 1 ♀ (USNM). Cameroon, Kribi, 25 June 1951, leg. J. M. Mc Gough; 2 ♂ (USNM), Cameroon, Ottotomo Forest, 11 September 1951, leg. J. M. Mc Gough; 1 ♂ 1 ♀ (QMB), Democratic Republic of Congo, Sandoa, Katanga, 19 May 1931; 1 ♀ (Type of C. fenestratus oculatus Bezzi, RMCA), Democratic Republic of Congo, Maluku, 17 April 1912, leg. Mus. Tervuren, R. DET. 865, Dr. Mouchet; 1 ♂ 1 ♀ (TAUI), Nigeria, Plateau State, Kurra Falls, 60 km SE Jos, 5, 7 July 1987, leg. A. Freidberg; 1 ♂ (genitalia missing) (TAUI), Nigeria, Niger State, Mariga River, 80 km NW Minna, 11 July 1987, leg. Fini Kaplan. Distribution. Angola, Cameroon, Democratic Republic of Congo, Equatorial Guinea, Kenya, Malawi, Nigeria, Zaire, Zambia, Zimbabwe. Remarks. The wing markings of C. obnubilus are variable according to Hancock (1986). In our examination, various markings are also found in 2 ♂ 1 ♀ from Cameroon and 1 ♀ from Democratic Republic of Congo. However, because we only examined limited materials, keeping all specimens under C. obnubilus is accepted here.	en	Huangfu, Ning, Zhu, Chaodong, Chen, Xiaolin (2019): A new species of Celidodacus Hendel, with notes on C. coloniarum (Speiser) and C. obnubilus (Karsch). Zoological Systematics 44 (3): 240-246, DOI: 10.11865/zs.201919, URL: http://zoobank.org/f1d7e6e7-4318-42cc-9566-6156b44b7c75
