Pedrowygomyia
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| Pedrowygomyia | |
|---|---|
| Scientific classification | |
| Kingdom: | Animalia |
| Phylum: | Arthropoda |
| Class: | Insecta |
| Order: | Diptera |
| Family: | Simuliidae |
| Tribe: | Prosimuliini |
| Genus: | Pedrowygomyia Miranda-Esquivel and Coscarón, 1998 |
| Species | |
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See Text | |
Pedrowygomyia is a genus of neotropical simuliid flies erected in 1998 from the Gigantodax cortesi species group of the 1925 genus Gigantodax after a cladistics analysis of the species groups recognized in the genus indicated that it was paraphyletic.[1][2] The genus was named in recognition of the contributions to science of entomologist Petr Wolfgang Wygodzinsky. Pedrowygomyia originally comprised four species, P. cortesi, P. jatunchuspi, P. punapi and P. chacabamba,[1] all described in 1989 from high-elevation (above 3,000 m) areas in the Andean region.[2] In 2020, a new species, P. hanaq, was described from the south-central Andes of Peru at an altitude above 4,000 m.[2] Based on the pupal stage, the new species appears to be most closely related to P. punapi, a species known from Argentina, Bolivia, and Chile.[2]