Taxonomic review of the major larval pests of bolete fungi (Boletaceae) in Europe: The Pegomya fulgens, furva and tabida species groups (Diptera: Anthomyiidae)
Author
Michelsen, Verner
text
Zootaxa
2015
4020
1
51
80
journal article
10.11646/zootaxa.4020.1.2
0d08947e-58cb-44b1-816f-116333e54d61
1175-5326
289621
DEC9A4D9-8A52-4AF0-B45B-076BC40730BA
7.
Pegomya notabilis
(
Zetterstedt, 1846
)
(
Figs 7
,
30
,
39
,
48
,
57
,
69
)
Anthomyza notabilis
Zetterstedt, 1846
: 1780
.
“
Pegomyia flavipes
(Fallén)
”.
Dely-Draskovits & Mihályi 1972
: 324
(in part), teste
Hennig 1976
: 955
.
“
Pegomya zonata
(Zetterstedt)
”.
Hennig 1973c
: 677
[male], text fig. 561 (mislabeled as
P. tabida
!), table figs 760, 905;
Hackman 1976
: 133
;
Hennig 1976
: 955
; Hackman 1979: 63;
Hackman & Meinander 1979
: 74
.
Pegomya
(
Phoraea
)
notabilis
(Zetterstedt)
.
Griffiths 1983
: 257
, figs 359, 360‒363.
Pegomya notabilis
(Zetterstedt)
.
Michelsen 1985
: 53
;
Suwa
et al.
2000
: 171
;
Suwa 2005
: 102
, figs 57‒62;
Michelsen 2006b
: 111
.
For further synonymy and references, see
Hennig (1973c)
and
Griffiths (1983)
.
Description.
Very similar to
P. zonata
but different as follows:
Size.
Slightly larger on average; wing length up to 6.4mm.
Male.
As a rule more dark-colored, especially on thorax, mid and hind femora and on dorsal parts of abdomen. Setation on postgena all black.
Hind
femur (
Fig. 7
) on basal two-thirds with a comb row of 7‒10 very short and spinulose
pv
setae. Terminalia (
Figs 30
,
39
,
48
,
57
): Good diagnostic characters are found in the profile shape of the surstyli and the structure of the pregonites.
Female.
Scape and pedicel fuscous ochre brown to black; postpedicel black. Palp darkened on distal third or more. Setation of postgena all black. Thoracic pleura predominantly dark-coloured. Oviscapt (
Fig. 69
): Sternite VIII pieces broader, with several sensilla on posterior part and some discal setulae; small hypoproct less desclerotized, with a few setulae in front of apical pair of setae; shape of cerci distinctive: slender, parallel-sided, ending in slightly projecting, obtusely rounded cutting edges.
Material examined.
[
FMNH
,
MZLU
,
NHMO
,
ZMUB
,
ZMUC
].
CZECH REPUBLIC
: Ústí nad Labem, South
Bohemia
, Moravia-Silesia.
DENMARK
: E Jutland, W Jutland, NW Jutland, NE Jutland, Lolland & Falster & Møn, NE Zealand.
FINLAND
: Regio aboensis, Nylandia, Karelia australis, Satakunta, Tavastia australis, Ostrobottnia australis, Karelia borealis, Ostrobottnia media, Lapponia inarensis, Lapponia enontekiensis.
ICELAND
: Northwest, Northeast and South.
SLOVAKIA
: Prešov.
SPAIN
: Lérida, Gerona.
NORWAY
: Østfold & Akershus, Hedmark, Oppland, Buskerud, Vestfold, Telemark, Vest-Agder, Rogaland, Hordaland, Møre & Romsdal, Sør- Trøndelag, Nordland, Troms, Finnmark.
RUSSIA
: Karelia, Murmansk, Kamchatka: Ozernaja, 1♀
30.vii.1917
(Y. Wuorentaus).
SWEDEN
: Skåne, Halland, Småland, Öland, Gotland, Östergötland, Närke, Södermanland, Uppland, Värmland, Dalarna, Jämtland, Ångermanland, Norrbotten, Lycksele Lappmark, Pite Lappmark, Lule Lappmark, Torne Lappmark.
Distribution.
PALEARCTIC. Widespread in northern and central Europe, ranging from
Iceland
and northern Fennoscandia to the Spanish Pyrenees. Outside Europe recorded from
Russia
: Kamchatka (
Suwa
et al.
2000
and above) and
Japan
(
Suwa 2005
). NEARCTIC. Common and widespread across boreal and low arctic North
America
(
Griffiths 1983
) and
Greenland
(
Griffiths 1983
;
Michelsen 2006b
).
Biology.
In
Hungary
(
Dely-Draskovits & Mihályi 1972
) and southern
Finland
(
Hackman 1976
,
Hackman & Meinander 1979
,
Ståhls
et al.
1989
) reared from larvae in sporocarps of the
Boletus edulis
,
Leccinum versipelle
and
L. scabrum
species groups (
Boletaceae
). Also reared from
Leccinum
spp. in Finnish Lapland (
Ståhls
et al.
1989
). According to
Hackman (1976)
, eggs deposited in clusters well beneath the cap surface belong probably to the present species. Also reared from
Leccinum
spp. in Yukon Territory and British
Columbia
(
Griffiths 1983
).
Bruns (1984)
reared it from species of the
Leccinum aurantiacum
group in Minnesota.