A review of subtribe Phrosinellina Verves, 1989, with description of Phrosinella (Asiometopia) kocaki sp. nov. from the Middle East (Diptera: Sarcophagidae: Miltogramminae: Metopiaini)
Author
Verves, Yury
Author
Khrokalo, Liudmyla
text
Turkish Journal of Zoology
2017
2016-05-28
41
1
43
59
http://dx.doi.org/10.3906/zoo-1512-60
journal article
295431
10.3906/zoo-1512-60
55612074-37ed-42bc-b2cf-54986e32523e
1303-6114
10973790
A87957B6-B51C-4B90-ADCA-36F0EAD5572E
Phrosinella
(
Euhilarella
)
aurifacies
Downes, 1985
Phrosinella aurifacies
Downes, 1985: 269
[
♂
♀
].
Phrosinella aurifacies
:
Spofford and Kurczewski, 1985: 273
[habits];
Hager and Kurczewski, 1986: 453
[habits];
Kurczewski and Spofford, 1986: 13
[habits];
Spofford et al., 1986: 350
[habits];
Kurczewski, 1989: 397
[habits];
Spofford et al., 1989: 256
[hosts];
Spofford and Kurczewski, 1990: 731
[habits];
Kurczewski, 1991: 300
[habits];
Spofford and Kurczewski, 1992: 995
[hosts];
Pape, 1996: 123
[catalogue];
O’Hara et al., 2000: 172
[faunistic].
Holotype
(male):
USA
,
Michigan
,
Shiawassee Co.
,
Rose
Lake Conservation Area. Deposited
in
USNM
.
Phrosinella fulvicornis
[misidentification: not
Gymnoprosopa fulvicornis
Coquillett, 1895
]:
Brown, 1934: 249
[faunistic];
Cole and Lovett, 1921: 303
[faunistic];
Cole, 1923: 205
[faunistic];
Criddle, 1928: 92
[faunistic]; Knowton, 1936: 237 [faunistic];
Ristich, 1956: 271
[habits];
Evans and Lin, 1959: 115
[habits];
Krombein and Kurczewski, 1963: 139
[faunistic, habits];
Evans, 1966b: 35
[habits]; 1970: 451 [habits]; 1973: 888 [habits]; 1975: 888 [habits];
Peckham, 1977: 823
[habits];
Evans et al., 1980: 865
;
O’Hara et al., 2000
[faunistic, habits],
Pickering, 2011: 1627
, 1631.
Distribution:
Nearctic:
Canada
(
Alberta
, Labrador,
Manitoba
,
New Brunswick
,
Ontario
,
Quebec
,
Yukon Territory
),
USA
(
Colorado
,
Connecticut
,
Florida
7
,
Illinois
,
Iowa
,
Kansas
,
Massachusetts
,
Michigan
,
Minnesota
,
Mississippi, Missouri, Nebraska, New Jersey, New York, Ohio, Oregon, Pennsylvania, South Carolina, South Dakota, Texas, Wyoming
8
).
Habits:
This species is one of the most common sarcophagids in sandy xerophytic places in North America, and it is a “hole searcher”; therefore, the larviposition response could be initiated in situations other than a wasp bringing in its prey (
Downes, 1985
). Both sexes feed on honeydew of aphid colonies in psammophilic xerophilous vegetation. Courtship and compound mating behavior are highly specific for this species (
Spofford and Kurczewski, 1985
). Gravid
♀♀
zigzag several millimeters above the surface of sand and sometimes land to investigate temporarily closed entrances into wasps’ ground nests. Then
♀♀
larviposit one or several maggots on the depression over the closed entrance, and larvae wriggle quickly through the entrance stopper into the burrow (
Spofford et al., 1986
). In another way, gravid flies pursue wasps lugging prey and enter into open burrows immediately after hosts (
Kurczewski and Spofford, 1986
;
Kurczewski, 1989
,
1991
). Sometimes flies larviposit into the burrow before the beginning of wasp foraging (
Peckham, 1977
). Larvae develop in ground nests in sandy areas of different sphecid and occasionally pompiloid wasps, where they feed at host prey (paralyzed or freshly killed insects or spiders), viz:
Pompilidae
.
Episyron quinquenotatus
at paralyzed orb weaver spiders,
Araneidae
(
Spofford et al., 1989
;
Spofford and Kurczewski, 1992
).
Sphecidae
. 1. At paralyzed adult beetles (
Buprestidae
):
Cerceris fumipennis
(
Spofford and Kurczewski, 1992
)
.
2. At paralyzed caterpillars (
Geometridae
,
Gelechiidae
,
Noctuidae
,
Pyralidae
):
Ammophila harti
(
Hager and Kurczewski, 1986
)
.
3. At freshly killed adult flies:
Crabro argusinus
(
Spofford and Kurczewski, 1992
)
,
C. monticola
(
Evans et al., 1980
;
Spofford and Kurczewski, 1992
),
C. virgatus
(
Evans et al., 1980
)
,
Lindenius armaticeps
(
Spofford and Kurczewski, 1992
)
;
L. columbianus
(
Spofford and Kurczewski, 1992
;
Lucas, 1997
);
Oxybelus bipunctatus
(
Spofford and Kurczewski, 1992
)
,
O
.
emarginatus
(
Krombein and Kurczewski, 1963
;
Peckham, 1977
),
O
.
subulatus
(mainly
Therevidae
:
Peckham, 1977
;
Spofford and Kurczewski, 1992
);
O
.
uniglumis
(mainly
Muscidae
:
Evans, 1970
;
Lucas, 1997
).
4. At freshly killed solitary and honey bees:
Phylanthus crabroniformis
(
Evans, 1970
)
;
P. gibbosus
(
Evans, 1970
;
Spofford and Kurczewski, 1992
;
Lucas, 1997
);
P. lepidus
(
Evans, 1970
;
Spofford and Kurczewski, 1992
);
P. politus
(
Spofford and Kurczewski, 1992
)
;
P. solivagus
(
Ristich, 1956
;
Spofford et al., 1989
;
Spofford and Kurczewski, 1992
);
P
.
zebratus
(
Evans, 1970
)
.
7
after
Krombein and Kurczewski, 1963
8
after
Evans, 1970
5. At paralyzed nymphs and adult
Orthoptera
:
Tachysphex acutus
(
Melanoplus
spp.
:
Kurczewski, 1964
, 1989, 1991);
T. antennatus
(Acridoidea:
Spofford and Kurczewski, 1992
);
T. intermedius
(Acridoidea:
Spofford and Kurczewski, 1992
);
T. similis
(Acridoidea:
Kurczewski, 1964
),
T. tarsatus
(Acridoidea:
Kurczewski, 1964
;
Spofford and Kurczewski, 1992
),
T. terminatus
(Acridoidea:
Krombein and Kurczewski, 1963
;
Kurczewski, 1964
;
Spofford and Kurczewski, 1992
),
Tachytes mergus
(
Tridactylus
spp.
:
Krombein and Kurczewski, 1963
),
T. parvus
(
Tetrix ornata
:
Kurczewski and Spofford, 1986
;
Spofford and Kurczewski, 1992
).
6. At paralyzed or freshly killed adult Homoptera:
Clitemnestra bipunctata
(Cicadoidea, Psiloidea:
Spofford and Kurczewski, 1992
; Evans and O’Neill, 2007);
Gorytes canaliculatus
(
Cicadellidae
:
Evans, 1970
;
Spofford and Kurczewski, 1992
);
Sphecius speciosus
(great-sized
Cicadidae
species from genera
Diceroprocta
,
Magicicada
,
Neocicada
,
Quesada
, and
Tibicen
:
Kurczewski and Spofford, 1987
).
7. At paralyzed
Hemiptera
:
Plenoculus davisi
(tarnished plant bug,
Lygus lineolaris
:
Spofford and Kurczewski, 1992
).