Six new species of the genus Empis (Diptera: Empididae) from the Altai Mountains of Russia
Author
Shamshev, I. V.
text
Zoosystematica Rossica
2019
Zoosyst. Rossica
2019-04-18
28
1
24
41
http://dx.doi.org/10.31610/zsr/2019.28.1.24
journal article
57159
10.31610/zsr/2019.28.1.24
2b690c17-f7fc-4c69-83d1-1d9047c876c9
2410-0226
10124208
urn:lsid:zoobank.org:pub:D82459C6-A090-4203-8D28-8BE062383D2B
Empis shebalinensis
sp. nov.
(
Figs 16–18
)
Holotype
.
Male
, “
RUSSIA
, Altai Rep. [=
Republic of Altai
], / Shebalino distr.,
5 km
SE
vill. /
Topuchaya
,
1325 m
, /
51°06'N
85°37'E
,
3–
4.07.2014
, leg.
I. Shamshev
”, “
Empis shebalinensis
Shamshev
,
sp. n.
[red label]” (
ZIN
,
INS_DIP_0000756
).
Paratypes
.
Russia
:
1 male
,
8 females
, same data as for holotype;
2 males
(
1 male
dissected)
,
5 females
,
Altai Terr.
,
Krasnoshchekovskiy Distr
., environs of
Tigirek Vill
.,
28–29.VI.2005
,
D. Kostrov
leg. (
ZIN
)
.
Diagnosis
. Mid-sized (body length about
4.5 mm
) blackish brown species with fairly slender legs lacking strong setae, and with black halters. Male: scutum and abdomen velvet-brown, wings brownish. Female: scutum with four brownish vittae, abdomen greyish pruinose, wings faintly infuscate.
Description
.
Male
(
Fig. 16
). Body length
4.5– 4.6 mm
(
holotype
,
4.6 mm
), wing length 3.9–4.0 mm (
holotype
, 4.0 mm).
Head black. Eyes holoptic, upper ommatidia considerably enlarged. Frons reduced to small subtriangular space above antennae, blackish brown, bare. Face broad, short, much shorter than virtual frons, greyish pruinose, bare. Occiput velvet blackish brown, covered with numerous long thin black setae. Ocellar tubercle concolorous with occiput, with two long thin setae and several hair-like setulae. Antenna black; scape and pedicel subequally short, both with scattered minute setulae; postpedicel moderately long, 2.5–3 times as long as wide, with straight margins; stylus short, postpedicel nearly 2.5 times as long as stylus. Proboscis rather short; labrum brown, thin, only slightly longer than head height; palpus long, black, slender, with scattered black setulae.
Thorax black, dull, brown pruinose, with black setation; scutum (in dorsal view) dark brown, without vittae. Prosternum bare. Proepisternum and antepronotum with subequally long thin setae. Postpronotal lobe with one long thin seta and several similar shorter setae. Mesonotal setation: one hardly differentiated presutural supra-alar (sometimes indistinguishable from numerous surrounding shorter setae), 3–4 notopleurals, one postsutural supra-alar (with several setulae anteriorly), one postalar and four scutellars (apical pair long, cruciate; lateral pair only slightly shorter); in addition, notopleuron with numerous setulae anteriorly; acrostichals 1–2-serial, scattered, short, thin, lacking on prescutellar depression; dorsocentrals multiserial and similar to acrostichals on presutural part, becoming less numerous and longer behind suture. Laterotergite with numerous setae. Anterior and posterior spiracles black.
Figs 16–18.
Empis shebalinensis
sp. nov.
, male.
16
, habitus, lateral view (holotype);
17
, postabdomen, lateral view;
18
, terminalia, lateral view. Abbreviations:
cerc
, cercus;
ej apod
, ejaculatory apodeme;
epand
, epandrium;
hypd
, hypandrium;
ph
, phallus. Scale bar: 0.1 mm.
Legs fairly slender, entirely black, with black setation. Coxae and trochanters with simple setae. Fore femur with anteroventral and posteroventral setae mostly minute, somewhat longer toward base of femur; fore femur clothed in moderately long setae posteriorly, without spinules anteriorly. Fore tibia without strong setae (besides circlet of short subapicals), pubescent ventrally. Fore basitarsus slender, with a short anterior seta closer to base; tarsomeres 1–4 pubescent ventrally, with circlet of short subapicals. Mid femur covered only with short setulae. Mid tibia with a short anteroventral seta near middle. Hind femur fairly slender in basal half, somewhat broader in apical half, with some short thin anterodorsal and dorsal setae toward base and minute anteroventral setae (except several somewhat longer subapicals). Hind tibia slightly evenly thickened toward apex, with some short to moderately long (closer to apex) thin anterodorsal and posterodorsal setae; posteroapical comb with one very short seta. Hind basitarsus somewhat thickened but slightly narrower than hind tibia at apex, covered with short setulae (except as noted); tarsomeres 1–4 with anteroventral and posteroventral spinule-like setae. Claws long.
Wing membrane almost uniformly brownish, somewhat paler near base; veins brownish. Pterostigma brownish, broad. Basal costal seta short, black. Veins
R
5
and
M
1
parallel near wing margin; radial fork acute; anal vein complete, well-sclerotised throughout. Cell
dm
short, with elongate apex. Anal angle almost right, subsequently anal lobe well-developed. Calypter brown, brownish fringed. Halter brown.
Abdomen with tergites blackish brown, sternites somewhat greyer, with black hair-like setation. Tergites covered with very short setae dorsally and longer setae laterally (setae on tergites 1–3 the longest); sternites with numerous long setae. Sclerites of segment 8 separated; tergite 8 narrow, entire, with scattered setulae; sternite 8 narrow (
Fig. 17
). Terminalia (
Fig. 18
) small, black. Cerci separated from each other and from epandrium; cercus rather large, at base nearly as broad as epandrial lamella, with deep excision posteriorly, covered with scattered moderately long brownish setae along upper margin; upper lobe digitiform, pointed, spine-like at tip; lower lobe subtriangular, narrow, slightly extending beyond apex of epandrial lamella. Epandrial lamella subrectangular (in lateral view), with moderately long setae scattered over subapical part. Hypandrium entirely sclerotised, rather subtriangular (in ventral view), with two short setae. Phallus almost entirely hidden, thin, evenly arcuate.
Female
. Body length
4.8–5.2 mm
; wing length
4.1–4.3 mm
. Similar to male but thorax and abdomen more greyish. Frons moderately broad, in upper part nearly as broad as distance between inner margins of posterior ocelli, almost parallel-sided, slightly widened just above antennae, densely brownish grey pruinose, with marginal setulae. Thorax with somewhat stronger setae; scutum (in dorsal view) with four indistinct brownish vittae. Fore femur with shorter setae posteriorly; fore tibia and fore tarsomeres 1–4 covered with simple setulae ventrally. Mid tibia with two anterodorsal, two posterodorsal, 1–2 anteroventral, and 1–2 posteroventral setae (besides circlet of subapicals). Hind femur usually with a moderately long strong anteroventral seta in about apical fourth; hind tibia with stronger setae; hind basitarsus slender. Wing membrane only faintly infuscate. Abdomen with shorter setation; cercus long, slender, with scattered minute setulae.
Comparison
. The new species resembles
Empis bazini
Collin, 1926
(known from
Czech Republic
, the French Alps and southern
Germany
), which is a single species of the subgenus
Rhadinempis
Collin, 1926
. However,
E. bazini
differs from the new species primarily in the absence of acrostichal setae, very short postpedicel (scarcely twice as long as broad) and very long stylus (three times as long as postpedicel). At the same time, these characters are used currently to distinguish
Rhadinempis
from other subgenera of
Empis
. Thus, the new species cannot be included in
Rhadinempis
or the current concept of this group requires a revision. Additionally,
E. bazini
and
E. shebalinensis
sp. nov.
are very similar to species of the subgenus
Holoclera
Schiner, 1860
of the genus
Rhamphomyia
Meigen, 1822
(
Barták & Kubík, 2012
).
Etymology
. The epithet refers to the
type
locality of the new species.
Distribution
. Palaearctic:
Russia
(Republic of
Altai
and
Altai
Territory).
Habitat and seasonal occurrence
. The species was collected by sweeping on a montane meadow (
1325 m
); collecting dates refer to June.