Wing polymorphism in European species of Sphaeroceridae (Diptera)
Author
Roháček, Jindřich
text
Acta Entomologica Musei Nationalis Pragae
2012
2012-12-17
52
2
535
558
journal article
10.5281/zenodo.5332511
0374-1036
5332511
5.
Pullimosina
(
Pullimosina
)
meijerei
(Duda, 1918)
(
Figs. 3, 4
,
23–27
)
Material examined.
About
550 specimens
(249 JJ
304 ♀♀
, with 139 JJ
182 ♀♀
brachypterous, others macropterous) from Denmark, Austria, Czech Republic, Slovakia – localities listed by
ROHÁČEK (1975a
,
1978
,
1980
, 1983, 1984, 1986, 1995, 1999, 2009a, 2011),
ROHÁČEK & BARTÁK (2001)
and ROHÁČEK et al. (2005). Additional localities:
CZECH REPUBLIC
:
BOHEMIA
:
Klášterec nr. Vimperk (J. Roháček leg.).
MORAVIA
:
Hrubý Jeseník Mts. – Velká kotlina valley, Karlova Pláň – Volárenský potok, Šilheřovice – Černý les res., Moravskoslezské Beskydy Mts.– Tanečnica Mt. (J. Roháček leg.).
SLOVAKIA
:
Velká Fatra Mts. – Rakša res., Malá Fatra Mts. – Šútovská dolina, Nízke Tatry Mts. – Donovaly
3 km
E, Korytnica kúpele, Muránska planina NP – Šarkanica res.; Muránská planina NP – Muránska Huta
1 km
NW, Bobačka cave,
48°46′ 49″N
,
20°06′16″E
,
780 m
a.s.l., sifting leaves in beech forest,
11.iv.2012
, 1 J with unevenly developed wings (J. Roháček leg.).
HUNGARY
:
Kiskunsági N. P., Kunfehértó lake (J. Roháček leg.).
NORWAY
:
SVALBARD
Is.
(= Spitzbergen), Colsbay, tundra,
15.vii.1983
, 1 J (f. brachyptera),
R
. I. Zlotin leg. (both in coll. J. Roháček, Opava). Note: The record from Svalbard Is. is the northernmost distribution limit of the species.
The species was originally described as brachypterous; the macropterous form was discovered only in 1975 but the species was confused (and synonymized) by
ROHÁČEK
(1975b)
with the closely allied
P. pullula
(Zetterstedt, 1847)
, and this mistake was disproved subsequently by
ROHÁČEK
(1978
, 1983). Both forms are clearly separated; no intermediate forms are known (
ROHÁČEK
1975b
, as
P. pullula
). The proportion of the brachypterous (
Figs. 24–27
) and macropterous (
Figs. 3
,
23
) forms somewhat varies in samples taken in different habitats (e.g. in woodland with high leaf-litter layer the brachypterous form strongly predominate) but generally the short-winged specimens are more abundant in the majority of populations. The brachypterous form has the wing not only abbreviated but also somewhat narrowed (this the only case among European
Limosininae
). Besides the most common
type
, there are several other forms with more reduced venation (see
Figs. 25, 27
); that with rounded external corners of dm cell is rather common.
Pullimosina meijerei
is a typically terricolous species living in leaf-litter and other decayed plant matter, often in deep layers of detritus (
ROHÁČEK
1983).
In spring 2012 a male specimen with unevenly developed wings, thus combining the macropterous and brachypterous form (see
Fig. 4
), was sifted from leaf-litter in the Muránska planina NP (
Slovakia
, see above). This is the first time that this peculiar phenomenon has been noted in
Sphaeroceridae
. Formerly, single specimens having one wing normal and the other shortened were only recorded in the wing polymorphic species
Stiphrosoma sabulosum
(Haliday, 1837) (Anthomyzidae)
, both in Europe (see
COLLIN 1944
;
STACKELBERG 1958
, 1970;
ROHÁČEK
1996b
) and
USA
:
Michigan
(
ROHÁČEK
& BARBER 2005
), and
one specimen
with ambiguous wings was also recorded in a Canadian population of
Conioscinella zetterstedti
Andersson, 1966 (Chloropidae)
(
WHEELER 1994
).