A new species and new records of scuttle flies (Diptera: Phoridae) from Algeria
Author
Saifi, Mounir
Author
Disney, R. Henry L.
Author
Doumandji, Salaheddine
text
Zootaxa
2019
2019-06-18
4619
1
189
194
journal article
26469
10.11646/zootaxa.4619.1.11
9fdd2f5b-e519-4131-8f5c-96a3c19e8c58
1175-5326
3248415
7B9C3D74-A357-4F0B-A409-47CDB32E360D
Megaselia falsum
Disney
n. sp.
The association of the females with the male was based on their co-occurrence plus details of critical measurements of wing features etc.
Material examined
.
Holotype
male
,
ALGERIA
,
Ain Solane
,
Bordj BouArrenji
,
12.iv.2015
,
Mounir Saifi
(
UCMZ
, 26-87).
8 female
paratypes
, same locality, 11;
12.iv.2015
,
M.S.
(
ENSA
&
UCMZ
, 26-87 & 88).
Male
. Frons similar to female (
Fig. 7
) and likewise largely lacking fine microtrichia. Cheek with 5 bristles and jowl with 2 that are longer and more robust. Postpedicels, palps and proboscis as
Fig. 1
. Thorax brown. Two notopleural bristles and no cleft in front of these. Mesopleuron bare. Scutellum with an anterior pair of small hairs and a posterior pair of bristles. Abdominal tergites brown with small hairs, including at rear of T6 (
Fig. 4
). Venter gray, and with only a few small hairs on segments 4 to 6 (
Fig. 2
). Hypopygium as
Figs 2–4
. Legs yellowish brown with paler tarsi and distal half or more of front coxa. Fore tarsus with posterodorsal hair palisade on segments 1–4 and as female (
Fig. 13
). Dorsal hair palisade of mid tibia extends about 0.45 times its length (
Fig. 5
). Hind femur as
Fig. 6
. Hind tibia with a dozen moderately differentiated posterodorsal hairs but the most distal is longer and more robust, without anterodorsals, and spinules of apical combs simple. Wings similar to female (
Fig.15
)
1.30 mm
long. Costal index 0.31. Costal ratios 5.1:1.0: 1. Costal cilia (of section 3)
0.05–0.06 mm
long. Hair at base of vein 3 small. With 2 unequal axillary bristles, the longer, outer, being
0.06 mm
long. Sc not reaching R1. Haltere knob. pale.
Female.
Frons as
Fig. 7
. Postpedicel and palp as
Fig. 8
. Proboscis as
Fig. 9
. Otherwise head similar to male. Thorax as male.Abdominal tergites as
Figs 10 & 11
. Venter gray, and with only a few isolated hairs below segments 3 and 4, a few on 5 a single row at the rear of 6. Sternite 7 and posterolateral lobes at rear of sternum 8 as
Fig. 12
. Cerci pale gray and almost 3 times as long as broad, with half a dozen hairs and a terminal bristle almost 1.5 times as long as cercus. Furca not evident. Dufour’s crop mechanism pale and bilobed behind, about
0.17 mm
long of which the lobes represent
0.06 mm
of this length. Legs similar to male, with front tarsus as
Fig. 13
and hind femur as
Fig. 14
. Wing as
Fig. 15
, being
1.1–1.3 mm
long. Costal index 0.31–0.32. Costal ratios 3.8–5.1: 1.00–1.15: 1. Costal cilia
0.05–0.06 mm
long. Outer axillary bristle
0.08 mm
long. Otherwise it and haltere as male.
FIGURES 1–6.
Megaselia falsum
n. sp.
male. 1. Postpedicels, palps and proboscis. 2. Left face of hypopygium. 3. Right face of tergite 6 and hypopygium. 4. Right face of tergite 6, epandrium and anal tube. 5. mid tibia. 6. hind femur.
Etymology
. Falsum means fraud, which refers to the male so closely resembling two other species whose females are readily distinguished.
Recognition.
In the keys to the males of the British
Megaselia
species (
Disney, 1989
) it runs to triplet 218, but its hypopygium excludes these species. In the keys to the species of Arabia (Disney, 2009) the male runs to couplet 74, where neither option fits. The female runs to couplet 59, lead 2 but abdominal tergites 4–8 are clearly different. A note suggests the unknown female of
M. savannae
Disney
is likely to run to this point. However not only does the male hypopygium of
M. savannae
differ from that of
M. falsum
, but it has much longer hairs at the rear of tergite 6. The hypopygium of
M. falsum
places it in complex of species from elsewhere which have very similar hypopygia but distinctive females. This complex was reviewed by
Disney (2006)
. In this key the male runs to couplet 7, to
M. oxybelorum
Schmitz
and
M. parvula
Schmitz. The
hypopygia (
Figs 16–19
) are extremely similar and likewise that of
M. falsum
(
Figs 2–4
). A consistent, but very small difference, is the shorter hairs at the rear of tergite 6. The female of
M. falsum
runs to couplet 11, lead 2 to
M. brevior
(Schmitz)
but its abdominal tergite 6 is not tapered like that of
M. falsum
.