Wasp-mimicking soldier flies of the Australian Region: revision of Ampsalis Walker, Elissoma White and Lagenosoma Brauer (Stratiomyidae: Clitellariinae)
Author
Winterton, Shaun L.
text
Zootaxa
2023
2023-02-24
5246
1
1
63
http://dx.doi.org/10.1094/PDIS-04-22-0755-PDN
journal article
56506
10.11646/zootaxa.5246.1.1
18dd960f-0b84-4056-a916-b7438813f724
1175-5326
7673215
BDE8C45B-4F03-403D-8D57-4EFC1584BFE8
Elissoma
White
Elissoma
White, 1916: 86
—
Hardy, 1920: 49
[key, checklist], 1933: 409 [key, revision];
Woodley, 1989: 314
[catalogue], 2001: 166 [catalogue].
Type
species:
Elissoma lauta
White, 1916
, by monotypy.
Pycnothorax
Kertész, 1923: 124
—
Woodley, 1989: 315
[catalogue], 2001: 172 [catalogue].
Type
species:
Pycnothorax australis
Kertész, 1923: 125
, by original designation.
Syn. n.
Diagnosis
. One pair of minute to moderately-sized scutellar spines, shorter than scutellum length; notopleural spine absent; wing vein M
3
present or absent; M
4
arising on discal cell, cross-vein r–m present; wing straight, not bent over abdomen; face flat to broadly rounded, without nose-like process; male eyes contiguous medially below ocellar tubercle; eye not pilose; postocular ridge broadly carinate in female, male narrow to broadly carinate; antenna greatly elongate, scape much shorter than flagellum; flagellum cylindrical, circular sensory pits on flagellomeres I–III, flagellomeres IV–V very short and of similar length; flagellomere VIII longer than all other flagellomeres combined, covered with deeply plumose microtrichia or more sparse larger setae, sometimes white apically; abdomen narrowed basally, ovoid to strongly petiolate, frequently strongly sexually dimorphic.
Included species
.
Elissoma australis
(
Kertész, 1923
)
comb. n.
;
E. brunnea
Hardy, 1933
;
E. gilva
sp. n.
;
E. danielsi
sp. n.
;
E. hauseri
sp. n.
;
E. ichneumonoides
sp. n.
;
E. hespera
sp. n.
;
E. lauta
White, 1916
;
E. minuta
sp. n.
and
E. scapula
sp. n.
Comments
.
Hardy (1933)
noted that
Elissoma
and
Pycnothorax
were very similar and belonged to the same group of genera, even suggesting that they may be congeneric. He discussed that the generic distinctions amongst these genera are poor and went on to state that: “…variations of this nature cannot be accepted as of generic importance and it becomes very evident as more species accumulate, that the genera will need to be erected on better grounds than has been done in the past.” (
Hardy 1933
: p. 410).
White (1916)
did not list the gender of
Elissoma
in his original description and the etymology of the genus is unclear, although the species epithet of the
type
species is feminine. In contrast to all previous authors,
Woodley (1989)
used the neutral form of the combinations of
E. lautum
and
E. brunneum
, and then the original feminine form in
Woodley (2001)
; the feminine form for
Elissoma
is likewise used here. Most
Elissoma
species
are found in the eastern Australian states of
New South Wales
,
Victoria
and
Queensland
, with the bulk of species found in coastal
Queensland
. Two species are known from
Western Australia
.
Elissoma
is very similar to
Ampsalis
but is differentiated by a rounded or flat face, lacking the ‘nose’-like process of the latter. The scutellar spines are general very small to minute; when present in other genera they are larger. The only other clitellariine genera in the Oriental and Australian regions with scutellar spines (and lacking notopleural spines) are
Campeprosopa
and
Ampsalis
. Antennal length is extremely variable in this genus (ranging from
1.5 mm
in
E. minuta
sp. n.
to
8.5 mm
in
E. ichneumonoides
sp. n.
), but proportions of flagellomeres remain relatively constant; these proportions are typically not found in other
Clitellariinae
genera aside from
Ampsalis
and some
Lagenosoma
.
Key to
Elissoma
species
1.
Wing vein M
3
absent (
Fig. 21A
)........................................................................ 2.
-
Wing vein M
3
present (
Fig. 21B–D
)..................................................................... 3.
2
. Body predominantly orange with black markings (
Fig. 32C
); antennae yellow basally; foretarsi white; wing with smoky infuscation medially (
Figs 11C, D
;
21A
) (
Queensland
).............................................
E. brunnea
Hardy.
-
Body predominantly black with dark yellow line dorsally along anepisternum and laterally on abdomen (
Figs 13E
;
32E
); antennae entirely black; foretarsi black; wing hyaline (
Fig. 13F
) (
Western Australia
).......................
E. minuta
sp. n.
3.
Wing largely uniform dark infuscate; scutum tri-coloured, anteriorly dark yellow (orange in living specimen), black in middle section and white (pink in living specimen) posteriorly, concolourous with scutellum (
Figs 2
;
13C, D
) (
Victoria, New South Wales
).................................................................................
E. lauta
White.
-
Wing hyaline; scutum and scutellum otherwise coloured.....................................................
4
.
4
. Antennae completely dark; setae present along flagellomeres V–VIII; male postocular ridge raised and angular (
Figs 25J
;
26A, B
)................................................................................................
5
.
-
Antennae dark with distal flagellomeres white (
Fig. 25E–I
) (completely black in
E. hauseri
sp. n.
(
Fig. 27K
); setae absent on flagellum; male postocular ridge not raised and angular......................................................
6
.
5
. Scutum yellow with dark brown markings (
Fig. 12E–H
); abdomen yellow with brown markings (
Fig. 32G
); scutellar spines minute (
Fig. 28G
) (
Queensland
)............................................................
E. hespera
sp. n.
-
Scutum orange with black punctate markings indicating setal bases, pitch black anteriorly and anterolaterally (
Fig. 13G, H
); scutellar spines well developed (
Fig. 29A
) (
Western Australia
)....................................
E. scapula
sp. n.
6
. Pleuron predominantly black, narrowly yellow around base of wing (
Fig. 13A
); antennae very long (
ca
. 5x head length) (
Fig. 25I
); scutellar spines at least half the length of scutellum (
Fig. 28I
) (
Queensland
)..............
E. ichneumonoides
sp. n.
-
Pleuron predominantly pale (orange, yellow or white) with portions of some sclerites black; antenna length at most 4x head length; scutellar spines less than half the length of scutellum...................................................
7
.
7
. Scutellum orange-brown with cream-white margin (
Fig. 28E
); anepisternum with dark brow spot dorsally; hind tibia with dark brown band (
Fig. 12A–D
) (
Queensland
)......................................................
E. danielsi
sp. n.
-
Scutellum otherwise coloured; anepisternum black anteriorly, white to yellowish green posteriorly (sometimes also dorsally); hind tibia entirely yellow or brownish black................................................................
8
.
8
. Scutellum orange (
Fig. 28F
); hind tibia dark yellow (
Fig.11E, F
) (
New South Wales
)....................
E. gilva
sp. n.
-
Scutellum green to white (depending on preservation) (
Fig. 28C, H
); hind tibia brownish black.......................
9
.
9
. Flagellum white distally (
Fig. 25E
); scutellum uniform green to white (
Fig. 28C
); postpronotum and katatergite black, anepisternum brownish black anteriorly, green to white posteriorly; hind tarsi white apically (
Fig. 11A, B
) (
Queensland
)..........................................................................................
E. australis
(Kertész)
.
-
Flagellum entirely black (
Figs 4
,
27K
); scutellum with brown central marking contiguous with dark stripe on scutum (
Fig. 28H
); postpronotum and katatergite green to white, anepisternum brownish black anteriorly, green to white dorsally and posteriorly; hind tarsi entirely black (
Fig. 11G, H
) (
Queensland, Victoria
)...............................
E. hauseri
sp. n.