Flower flies (Diptera, Syrphidae) of French Polynesia, with the description of two new species
Author
Ramage, Thibault
8DE31F66-13BF-4516-A205-60F2EA39E3DD
9 Quartier de la Glacière, 29900 Concarneau, France. Laboratoire de Biométrie et Biologie Evolutive, Université de Lyon, CNRS (UMR 5558), Université Lyon 1, 69622 Villeurbanne, France. Zoologisches Forschungsmuseum Alexander Koenig, Leibniz Institut für Biodiversität der Tiere, Adenauerallee 160, D- 53113 Bonn, Germany.
thibault.ramage@hotmail.fr
Author
Charlat, Sylvain
A9AE69C2-039D-47FD-9DD2-B34C4363CB71
sylvain.charlat@univ-lyon1.fr
Author
Mengual, Ximo
A509310D-B567-4830-B8A4-BCB139BB8768
x.mengual@leibniz-zfmk.de
text
European Journal of Taxonomy
2018
2018-07-04
448
1
37
journal article
22322
10.5852/ejt.2018.448
0ba05318-1eec-44bc-8017-b6e2789b4811
3814059
413AE92E-862A-4879-B72F-1C0DCF1F7240
Simosyrphus grandicornis
(
Macquart, 1842
)
Figs 5F, I
,
6B
Syrphus grandicornis
Macquart, 1842: 96
(
holotype
: ♂, MNHN; type locality:
Australia
, Sydney, Port Jackson).
Syrphus sydneyensis
Macquart, 1846: 263
.
Syrphus pusilla
Macquart, 1847: 77
.
Syrphus melanurus
Bigot, 1884: 97
.
Syrphus obesus
Hutton, 1901: 41
.
Syrphus vitiensis
Bezzi, 1928: 71
.
Ischiodon scutellaris
Bryan, 1934: 412
.
Metasyrphus fasciatus
Shiraki, 1963: 186
.
Syrphus australiensis
Van der Goot, 1964: 220
.
Syrphus huttoni
Van der Goot, 1964: 220
.
Differential diagnosis
Simosyrphus grandicornis
has often been confused with species of
Ischiodon
, especially
I. scutellaris
, as they are sympatric and the males of both species have large genitalia. The morphological characteristics to distinguish
S. grandicornis
are the broadly rounded basoflagellomere (subacute apically in
I. scutellaris
), black katepisternum (
Fig. 5F
) (with a dorsal yellow marking in
I. scutellaris
;
Fig. 3G
), simple male metatrochanter (
Fig. 6B
) (with a spine-like process in
I. scutellaris
,
Fig. 6A
) and black metafemur, yellow on the apical fourth (mostly yellow, black only subapically in
I. scutellaris
).
Fig. 6. A
.
Ischiodon scutellaris
(
Fabricius, 1805
)
, ♂ (ZFMK-DIP-00019713), metacoxa and metatrochanter. Arrow indicates the ventral spine-like process.
B
.
Simosyrphus grandicornis
(
Macquart, 1842
)
, ♂ (ZFMK-DIP-00019736), metacoxa and metatrochanter.
C–E
.
Allograpta jacqui
Mengual & Ramage
sp. nov.
, holotype ♂ (ZFMK-DIP-00026906). C. Lateral view. D. Dorsal view. E. Frontal view.
F–G
.
Melanostoma polynesiotes
Mengual & Ramage
sp. nov.
, paratype, ♂ (ZFMK-DIP-00026902). F. Dorsolateral view. G. Lateral view. Scale bars = 0.5 mm.
Material examined
Not collected or studied from
French Polynesia
, but
Nishida (2008)
reported it from the Society Islands. We believe that Nishida’s records might be a misidentification of
I. scutellaris
.
Geographical distribution
Very common Australasian species, found throughout Oceania (from
New Caledonia
and
Fiji
to Hawaii),
New Zealand
and
Australia
(all states).
Simosyrphus grandicornis
is absent from the island of New
Guinea
.
Status in
French Polynesia
Unknown.
Flowers visited
No records.
References
Nishida 2008
(list).
Remarks
Among the material examined there were no individuals of this species from
French Polynesia
; thus, we believe that
S. grandicornis
is not present in the archipelago. Mengual (2015) stated that the dispersal of this species into many of the occupied Oceanic islands in its range was due to human activities, probably introduced by the early Polynesians who might have brought them in as larvae on fruits and plants they were transporting. Because it is plausible that
S. grandicornis
will reach the islands of
French Polynesia
in the near future, we have included this species in the identification key (indicated with an asterisk *).