Diptera of the middle Eocene Kishenehn Formation. I. Documenting of diversity at the family level
Author
Dale E. Greenwalt
Author
Daniel J. Bickel
Author
Peter H. Kerr
Author
Gregory R. Curler
Author
Brian V. Brown
Author
Herman de Jong
Author
Scott J. Fitzgerald
Author
Torsten Dikow
F8869067-4618-4CCE-960C-E8A107F162FB
0000-0003-4816-2909
Author
Michal Tkoč
Author
Christian Kehlmaier
Author
Dalton De Souza Amorim
text
Paleontologia Electronica
2019
22
2
50
1
56
journal article
10.26879/891
3990295
A6C79E56-3CCC-484E-B6AF-EAEEE1695FF6
Agathomyia eocenica
Tkoč
,
sp. nov.
Figures 30
,
31
zoobank.org/
AD4A9FE2-B217-444B-84BA-770423E2F470
Etymology.
The specific epithet, a Latin adjective, refers to the geologic epoch (Eocene) in which this species lived.
Holotype
.
Agathomyia eocenica
Tkoč
, female; NMNH,
USNM
553697
.
Type horizon.
Middle Eocene Coal Creek
member,
Kishenehn Formation
.
Type locality.
Dakin site, Middle Fork of the Flathead
River
(Pinnacle,
Montana
).
Differential diagnosis.
This species has the typical wing shape and wing venation of
Agathomyia
, i.e., it has seven longitudinal veins (Sc, R
1
, R
2+3
, R
4+5
, M
1+2
, M
4
, CuA+CuP), two crossveins (r-m, dm-m) and three non-costal cells are present (rm, bm, cua). Body and legs are dark brown in color; head and abdomen are black to gray; wing with microtrichia, M
1+2
not forked; antenna with first flagellomere conical and several basal aristomeres; tarsomeres of hind leg broad, tarsomere I the longest, both tarsomere II and III wider than long.
FIGURE 30.
Agathomyia eocenica
sp. nov.
, USNM 553697.
1
, Habitus;
2
, Left wing;
3
, Wing of extant species
Agathomyia antennata
. Scale bars equal 2.0 mm (
1
) and 1.0 mm (
2
). Inset: Apical terminus of R
4+5
at costa (right wing).
FIGURE 31.
Agathomyia eocenica
sp. nov.
, USNM 553697.
1
, Terminal part of abdomen;
2
, Legs. Arrows point to three tarsi of the front and middle legs;
3
, Hind leg;
4
, Head. Long arrow denotes apical marginal setae of the pedicel, short arrow denotes several basal aristomeres – the terminal aristae are missing. Inset: Labellum with postero-ventral setae. Scale bars equal 0.5 mm (
1
), 1.0 mm (
2
) and 0.25 mm (
3
,
4
).
Description
Female (Figure 30.1), body dark brown, body length,
4.4 mm
, wing length
3.6 mm
.
Head.
Dark brown,
0.49 mm
long,
0.87 mm
high (Figure 31.4). Labellum
0.31 mm
long, setose with setae approximately 50 μm long; first flagellomere
0.15 mm
long, conical, with maximum width
0.10 mm
, narrowed apically with three basal aristomeres approximately 50 μm x 30 μm (L x W). Arista not preserved. Proboscis and palpus light brown.
Thorax.
Length,
1.51 mm
; 4 notopleural setae (two short, two long) visible, one long prescutellar dorsocentral seta and one supraalar seta.
Wing.
Length,
3.6 mm
, at the middle, width
1.3 mm
, with microtrichia (Figure 30.2). First longitudinal vein (R
1
) devoid of any spines. Costal cell (c) a little longer than portion of C on subcostal cell (sc), 1.26:
1.10 mm
. Length of discal cell (d)
1.55 mm
, cell cup,
0.89 mm
, bm,
0.57 mm
, and rm,
0.77 mm
. Plane of crossvein r-m intersects cell c at 59% of its
1.26 mm
length. Posterior crossvein (dm-m) almost twice as long (
0.34 mm
) as distal part of M
4
,
0.20 mm
. Cell cua elongated, its length about three times portion of vein (CuA+CuP) beyond it.
Legs.
Legs dark brown (Figure 31.2-3). Front coxa with long setae. Apex of front femur and basal parts of tibia (= “knees”) of lighter color. Setation of front and middle legs not visible. Visible hind tarsomeres slightly flattened, with dark bifurcated setae (an apomorphic character for family
Platypezidae
, see
Tkoč et al. [2017]
).
Abdomen and genitalia.
Length,
2.63 mm
long, maximum height
0.76 mm
; abdominal segments narrowed gradually towards apex, T6–T7 with a row of erect blackish setae at posterior margin (Figure 31.1), approximately
0.13 mm
in length (margins of the more anterior tergites not visible). Setae of two basal segments not visible. Cercus
0.16 mm
in length, 43 μm in height.
Allotype
.
Male unknown.
Syncompressions.
Diptera
(1).
Remarks
The family
Platypezidae
, with the other flies in Platypezoidea, is thought to be sister to all other Cyclorrhapha (
Wiegmann et al., 2011
). Within the Platypezoidea, the family is sister to the clade (
Opetiidae
+
Microsania
) (
Tkoč et al., 2017
). The family is relatively small, with more than 250 extant species in 17 extant genera (
Tkoč et al., 2017
). The Paleobiology Database reports 17 fossils of Platypezoidea, most of which from the early Cretaceous (
Mostovski, 1996
).
Evenhuis (1994)
listed 11 species of
Platypezidae
(including
Opetiidae
) in nine genera.
Amorim et al. (2018)
have recently updated the positions of the Cretaceous biota. Four platypezid fossils are Eocene in age: Two species have been described from the Green
River
Formation (
Callomyia hypolitha
Cockerell, 1909
and
C. torporata
Scudder, 1890
), one species from the Florissant (
Eucallimyia fortis
Cockerell, 1911
) and
Oppenheimiella baltica
Meunier, 1893
from Baltic amber.
FIGURE 32.
Lonchoptera eocenica
sp. nov.
USNM 625379. Scale bar equals 2.0 mm.
The specimen
Agathoymia eocenica
sp. nov.
from the Kishenehn Formation is the first described extinct species of
Agathomyia
. Its inclusion into any
Agathomyia
species group is, however, problematic. Some of the important characters required to establish its position within the genus (exact colouration, color of setae on tergites 1–2, setation on middle tibia) are not preserved in the fossil. Figure 30.3 provides a comparison with the recent species
Agathomyia antennata
(
Zetterstedt, 1819
)
. The venation is very similar to this species, but there are observable differences: 1) cell cua is more elongated in
A. eocenica
; 2) the anal lobe has a different shape; 3) the cell between M
4
and CuA+CuP is narrower and not lobate posteriorly in
A. eocenica
; 4) the costal cell (c) is slightly longer than the portion of costa on subcostal cell (sc) in
A. eocenica
.