Review of the yellow-bodied species of the genus Timia (Diptera: Ulidiidae) with description of two new species
Author
Galinskaya, Tatiana V.
text
Zootaxa
2011
2888
1
22
journal article
46855
10.5281/zenodo.202543
9db85aa1-c1a0-4042-8c2c-70798a1d8baf
1175-5326
202543
Timia
Wiedemann 1824
Type
species:
Timia erythrocephala
Pallas
in
Wiedemann, 1824
(by monotypy).
Diagnosis.
Timia
species are yellow or black flies. Frons usually with dents and bumps, shining or subshining, sometimes with white microtrichose areas. Antennal grooves deep, oval, well-separated by wide facial carina. Thorax and abdomen shining or shagreened, sometimes almost matt, sometimes with green metallic shine, often with microtrichose areas. Wings hyaline, some species with dark cells bc, c, sc and apical spot on wing. Male genitalia: epandrium with deep notch at apex; phallus long, coiled and partially flattened tube divided into two halves; pair of sclerotized taeniae ending approximately at its mid-length; another pair of taeniae beginning at phallus middle almost reaching phallus apex; phallus apical half bearing long membranous caecum-like membranous appendix. Distiphallus apex bowed and bearing numerous sclerotized cuticular spurs, and “glans” formed by hooks or lobes surrounding gonopore. Surstylus hook-like, sometimes with expressed postero-dorsal lobe. Cerci clearly bilobed. Female terminalia: aculeus moderately long and wide, with oval cercal unit; three spherical spermathecae with smooth or micropapillose surface.
Remarks.
Adults of
Timia
species, as well as many other ulidiid, feed mainly on various organic residues (decaying plant tissue, animal corpses, excrements). In arid habitats the surface of organic residues is quickly covered with dried crust, under which semi-liquid substrate remains for a relatively long time. The proboscis of
Timia
has longitudinal rows of pointed outgrowths located on the labellum; flies make a hole in such a crust by these appendages and then penetrate with long tubular appendage of the proboscis in it, then absorbing semi-liquid food (
Zaitzev, 1982
).
Sometimes it is difficult to separate
Timia
from
Ulidia
Meigen, 1826
. The differences used so far are mainly as follow: the frons smooth (in
Timia
) or dimpled (in
Ulidia
) (with some exceptions), head and thorax microtrichose (in
Timia
) or bare (in
Ulidia
, but some assigned to
Timia
have shiny head and thorax, and
Ulidia metope
Kameneva, 2010
has frons widely microtrichose) (
Chen & Kameneva, 2009
). The genus
Ulidia
contains no yellow representatives.