A taxonomic revision of the genus Asiobaccha Violovitsh (Diptera: Syrphidae)
Author
Mengual, Ximo
text
Journal of Natural History
2016
2016-07-31
50
2585
2645
journal article
21209
10.1080/00222933.2016.1206634
561159e3-982f-4eb4-8824-5459de071493
1464-5262
3994636
6B627B0F-9440-47F1-90F4-9AF4C7308A99
Asiobaccha nubilipennis
(
Austen, 1893
)
comb. nov.
(
Figures 8a, b, e
,
12c
,
13a, b
,
14a
)
Baccha nubilipennis
Austen, 1893: 136
.
Lectotype
:
♂
, BMNH, here designated. Type locality: Sri Lanka: Kandy.
Wulp 1896: 121
;
Brunetti 1910: 171
;
Kertész 1910: 157
;
Kertész 1913: 275
;
Brunetti 1915: 218
;
Sack 1922: 261
;
Brunetti 1923: 116
, 413;
Curran 1928: 247
;
Shiraki 1930: 414
, 416;
Sack 1932a: 216
, 218;
Cherian 1934: 698
;
Keiser 1958: 190
, 201;
Biswas et al. 1975: 24
;
Ahmad and Nasim 2009: 353
.
Baccha nubilipennis
Matsumura 1916: 225
.
Baccha
(
Asiobaccha
)
nubilipennis
of
Violovitsh 1976: 131
, 132.
Baccha
(
Allobaccha
)
nubilipennis
of
Knutson et al. 1975: 322
;
Kapoor et al. 1979: 60
;
Thapa 2000: 326
;
Mitra et al. 2008: 13
.
Allobaccha nubilipennis
of
Muraleedharan and Radhakrishnan 1986: 307
;
Peck 1988: 53
;
Radhakrishnan and Muraleedharan 1993:176
, 177;
Cheng and Huang 1997: 424
;
Cheng and Huang 1998: 120
;
Hazarika et al. 2001: 167
;
Dirickx 2010: 231
;
Huang and Cheng 2012: 72
.
Asiobaccha nubilipennis
of
Ghorpadé 1994: 4
.
Episyrphus
(
Asiobaccha
)
nubilipennis
of
Thompson and Rotheray 1998: 97
, fig. 5.76;
Rojo et al. 2003: 56
;
Mengual et al. 2008: 545
;
Ichige 2009: 10
–
12
.
Differential diagnosis
This taxon has a broad alula, mostly bare, with a yellow face and a pale scutellum (
Figures 8e
,
14a
), with a well-defined mesonotal collar, and the metatarsus bicolourous (
Figure 8a
). This species has an infuscated wing, bare basomedially (including basal part of cell R), and terga 1 and 4 black (
Figures 8a
,
12c
,
14a
), characteristics that differentiate
A. nubilipennis
from
A. virtuosa
.
Asiobaccha nubilipennis
belongs to a species group with mesonotal fringe, which includes
A. aea
,
A. virtuosa
,
A. doesburgi
,
A. notofasciata
,
A. aquila
and
A. bimaculata
. Morphologically, the most similar species to
A. nubilipennis
is
A. bimaculata
, also with terga 1 and 4 black and metatarsus bicolourous, but they can be identified using the characteristics in the key. Moreover,
A. nubilipennis
has tergum 3 black with a basomedial yellow fascia not reaching basal margin, a different abdominal pattern from
A. bimaculata
that has tergum 3 with two medial subtriangular yellow maculae pointing anteriorly.
Figure 8.
Asiobaccha nubilipennis
(Austen)
. a–b, e, lectotype ♂. (a) Dorsal view; (b) lateral view; (e) frontal view.
Asiobaccha praefica
(Bezzi)
. c–d, f, ♂. (c) Dorsal view; (d) lateral view; (f) frontal view. Scale bars: a–d = 2 mm; e, f = 1 mm.
Variation.
Species slightly variable, although its geographical distribution is the largest in this genus. Some specimens of
A. nubilipennis
from Sumatra have the cell R almost entirely microtrichose but with a basal, small bare area. The infuscation of the wing is very variable, from a medial, small brown area to a complete dark brown wing. The author has studied a female (
JAPAN
: Ryukyu, Iriomote Island,
1 July 1932
; USNM) that has the yellow fascia on abdominal tergum 3 divided medially into two maculae.
Length (N = 5).
Body, 11.6
–
17.0 (14.0) mm; wing, 10.0
–
14.0 (12.0) mm.
Biology
Muraleedharan and Radhakrishnan (1986)
and
Radhakrishnan and Muraleedharan (1993)
reported larvae of
A. nubilipennis
feeding on
Aphis
(
Toxoptera
)
aurantii
in tea plantations in Anamallai Hills,
Tamil Nadu
,
India
.
Geographical distribution
Species with the widest geographical range in the genus. It is known from
Sri Lanka
,
India
, and
Nepal
* through
China
* to
Japan
,
Myanmar
*,
Taiwan
,
Vietnam
,
Laos
,
Thailand
,
Malaysia
and south to
Indonesia
(
Sumatra
,
Java
,
Sulawesi
).
Knutson et al. (1975)
listed this species from
Nepal
for the first time in the literature based on citations in older literature. There is only one taxon from
Nepal
, listed as
Baccha
sp. near
maculata
Walker, which might refer to
A. nubilipennis
, but this single female has the thorax, scutellum and pleura shining black; thus, it cannot be
A. nubilipennis
. This author has checked all the literature used by
Knutson et al. (1975)
and additional works, and has not found any citation of
A. nubilipennis
from
Nepal
. Consequently, the presence of
A. nubilipennis
in this country is questionable.
Type
locality
Sri Lanka
:
Central Province
,
Kandy
,
07°17
ʹ
N
,
80°38
ʹ
E
.
Material examined
Type material.
Lectotype
,
male
, deposited in The Natural History Museum, formerly British Museum (Natural History) (London,
United Kingdom
) and labelled:
‘
Type
//
♂
’
[round, red margin]
‘
LECTO- //
TYPE
//
♂
’
[round, purple margin]
‘
Kandy
. //
Ceylon
. //
28. vi.92
. //
circa
1,700 ft
. //
Col. Yerbury
. // 92.
–
192.
’ ‘
Baccha
//
nubilipennis
//
Aust’
. //
Type
♂
’
[on the reverse of previous label, handwritten]
‘
LECTOTYPE
♂
//
Baccha
//
nubilipennis
AUSTEN’
[yellow]
‘
Asiobaccha
♂
//
nubilipennis
//
(
Austen
)
//
K. D. Ghorpade
det. 19
83’
,
‘
LECTOTYPE
//
Asiobaccha
//
nubilipennis
// de
s
.
X. Mengual
20
14’
[red] (
specimen
photographed).
Paralectotype
:
‘
PARA- // LECTO- //
TYPE
//
♂
’
[round, blue margin]
‘
Kandy
. //
Ceylon
. //
30.v.92
. //
circa
1,700 ft
. //
Col. Yerbury
. // 92.
–
192.
’ ‘
Baccha
//
nubilipennis
//
Aust’
.
’
[on the reverse of previous label, handwritten]
‘
PARALECTOTYPE
//
Asiobaccha
//
nubilipennis
// det.
X. Mengual
20
14’
[yellow] [
1♂
,
BMNH
].
Nontype material.
More
than
100 specimens
from
Sri Lanka
,
India
(
Kerala
,
Tamil Nadu
,
Karnataka
),
Japan
(
Ryukyu Islands
),
Taiwan
,
Vietnam
,
Laos
,
Thailand
,
Malaysia
and
Indonesia
(
Java
,
Sulawesi
,
Sumatra
).
Specimen
photographed:
TAIWAN
:
Koshun
,
25 April
–
25 May 1918
, J. Sonan, K. Miyake, M.
Yoshino
[
1♀
,
CNC
]
.
Male genitalia drawing from specimen:
INDIA
:
Tamil Nadu
,
Burliar
,
860 m
,
23 October 1975
, Viraktamath [
1♂
,
ZFMK
]
.
Remarks
Austen (1893)
described this species from several male and female specimens collected by L.C. Yerbury in
Sri Lanka
. He stated that the typical specimens are a male collected on
28 June 1892
and a female collected on
25 May 1892
. In the BMNH, there were two males, and the specimen collected on
28 June 1892
by Yerbury is designated here as the
lectotype
to fix and ensure the universal and consistent interpretation of the name.
At the BMNH there was another female specimen collected by E
.E
.
Green
from
Sri Lanka
with the
‘
paralectotype
’
label.
The
present author does not consider it a
paralectotype
because
Austen (1893)
did not list this specimen among the studied material.