The Carpomyini Fruit Flies Diptera: Tephritidae Of Europe Caucasus And Middle East: New Records Of Pests With Improved Keys
Author
Korneyev, V. A.
Author
Mishustin, R. I.
Author
Korneyev, S. V.
text
Vestnik Zoologii
2017
2017-12-01
51
6
453
470
http://dx.doi.org/10.2478/vzoo-2017-0056
journal article
10.2478/vzoo-2017-0056
2073-2333
6454431
Rhagoletis
Loew, 1862
Rhagoletis
Loew, 1862b: 44
Type
species:
Rhagoletis cerasi
(
Linnaeus, 1758
)
(by monotypy).
Zonosema
Loew 1862b: 43
Type
species:
Tephritis alternata
Fallén
, by subsequent designation of
Rondani, 1870: 6
.
Microrrhagoletis
Rohdendorf, 1961: 187
Type
species:
Microrrhagoletis samojlovitshae
Rohdendorf
(by original designation).
Megarrhagoletis
Rohdendorf, 1961: 196
.
Type
species:
Megarrhagoletis magniterebra
Rohdendorf
(by original designation).
Diagnosis. Medium-sized (3.0–8.0 mm) fruit flies with 3 frontal and 2 orbital setae, pale or dark postocellar seta, short head, pointed apex of flagellomere 1 (except in
R. kurentsovi
(
Rohdendorf, 1961
)
from Far East
Russia
and some Neotropical species); either pale yellow to orange, or mostly black with creamy white or yellow scutellum except base and postpronotal lobes, long and variously acute posterior lobe of surstylus of male, oviscape with T-shaped desclerotized posteromedial area ventrally, and aculeus uniformly tapered apically. Third instar larva with variable number (from 3 to 20) of oral ridges and stomal sensory organ with or without preoral teeth.
Fig. 5.
Rhagoletis
spp.
mesonotums (
1–8
), dorsal view, and head (
2
), lateral view:
1 —
R
.
completa
;
2 —
R
.
bagheera
;
3 —
R
.
berberidis
;
4 —
R
.
cerasi
;
5 —
R
.
flavicincta
;
6 —
R
.
flavigenualis
;
7 —
R
.
obsoleta
, Myhiia
;
8 — R
. sp. near
obsoleta
, Mt. Hermon.
Remarks.
Rhagoletis
is a heterogeneous genus with five to seven groups of species associated with different host plant families (
Rhamnaceae, Berberidacea
,
Solanaceae
, etc.) in the Palaearctic, Nearctic, and Neotropical
Regions
(and a few species in montane areas in the northern
Oriental Region
), with the relationships among them and the other genera of the tribe
Carpomyini
(e. g.,
Carpomya
and
Zonosemata
) still poorly resolved and understood.
In the case
Carpomya
is found to be an in-group within
Rhagoletis
, the latter either would incorporate its species and become a junior synonym of the latter, or should be split into several monophyletic genera (
V
. Korneyev, unpublished data; J. Jenkins, unpublished data; J. Smith et al., in prep.). Here, we abstain from any taxonomic changes until phylogenetic relationships in
Rhagoletis
are better understood.