Orientisargidae fam. n., a new Jurassic family of Archisargoidea (Diptera, Brachycera), with review of Archisargidae from China
Author
Zhang, Junfeng
College of Palaeontology, Shenyang Normal University, Shenyang, 110034, P. R. China & Nanjing Institute of Geology and Palaeontology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Nanjing 210008, P. R. China
text
ZooKeys
2012
2012-11-06
238
57
76
http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.238.3624
journal article
http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.238.3624
1313-2970-238-57
928C2017C15A4F67956EB5747F3BF6D8
FFCDE657FFBEFFAEFF94FFFDA240FFB3
577750
Family
Archisargidae Rohdendorf, 1962
Uranorhagionidae
KY Zhang, Yang et Ren, 2010, p. 564, syn. n.
Origoasilidae
KY Zhang, Yang et Ren, 2011, p. 995, syn. n.
Type genus.
Archisargus
Rohdendorf, 1938
Included subfamilies.
Archisarginae
Rohdendorf, 1962 and
Uranorhagioninae
KY Zhang, Yang et Ren, 2010, stat. n. (=
Mostovskisarginae
JF Zhang, 2010, syn. n.)
.
Redefinition.
Moderate- to large-sized flies. Body robust but usually narrow and long, strongly pubescent but devoid of bristles; first flagellomere of antenna unsegmented, arista well developed at tip of first flagellomere; hind legs stout and long, femora clavate; tibial spurs and pulvilliform empodium well developed; wing narrow and long, subpetiolate, alula absent; all longitudinal veins well developed, ending at wing margin; C running around entire wing margin although thinned near to, or beyond, wing tip, C and R strong, Sc and R1 long, R4+5 bifurcated, R2+3 usually straight and long but in some specific members R2+3 short and significantly curved [see
Figure 4
,
Daohugosargus eximius
(KY Zhang et al., 2008) comb. n., originally
Sharasargus eximius
KY Zhang et al., 2008], in most representatives crossvein r-m meeting R4+5 distad to Rs fork but in some specific members far basad to Rs fork (see
Figure 4
,
Daohugosargus eximius
), origin of Rs usually basad to, but in some specific members distad to, d base (see
Figure 4
,
Daohugosargus eximius
), discoidal cell shifted distally of wing midpoint.
Figure 4.
Daohugosargus eximius
(KY Zhang, Yang et Ren, 2008) comb. n. (originally
Sharasargus eximius
KY Zhang, Yang et Ren, 2008; after KY Zhang et al. 2008).
Remarks.
Rohdendorf (1962)
defined the family
Archisargidae
based on a single poorly preserved wing from the Callovian-Oxfordian Karabastau Formation.
Kovalev (1981)
argued that this family was described from very poor material and thus nothing definite can be said about its systematic position. However, the type genus
Archisargus
Rohdendorf, 1938, the only representative of the
Archisargidae
, clearly has little in common with the Jurassic
Rhagionidae
: it is a large fly with a long (16 mm) narrow wing.
Mostovski (1996a
,
1996b
) described many new species referred, respectively, to some new genera or the known genera and assigned these to
Archisargidae
. Immediately after these, he re-described the type species of type genus based on the holotype; and a redefinition of the
Archisargidae
was proposed: wing venation not, or slightly, costalized; C running around entire wing margin although thinned beyond wing tip
or
R4 end; R1 long; R4+5 bifurcated; crossvein r-m meeting R4+5 distad to Rs fork; base of discoidal cell distad to origin of Rs from R; M4, if present, connecting with discoidal cell (
Mostovski 1997
).
Recently, numerous well preserved archisargid flies have been recovered from the Daohugou biota, China (
JF Zhang and HC Zhang 2003
;
JF Zhang 2010a
,
2012b
;
KY Zhang et al. 2007a
,
2007b
,
2008a
,
2009
,
2010a
,
2010b
). The familial diagnosis may be further supplemented based on information derived from these new results.