Biogeography, Speciation and Taxonomy within the genus Bactrocera Macquart with application to the Bactrocera dorsalis (Hendel) complex of fruit flies (Diptera Tephritidae: Dacinae)
Author
Drew, R. A. I.
Environmental Futures Research Institute, International Centre for Management of Pest Fruit Flies, Griffith University, Nathan Campus, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia
Author
Hancock, D. L.
60 South Street, Carlisle, Cumbria CA 1 2 EP, United Kingdom.
text
Zootaxa
2022
2022-09-29
5190
3
333
360
journal article
156941
10.11646/zootaxa.5190.3.2
d9bfc4ad-ca1f-40aa-a23a-8189507a249e
1175-5326
7138151
FFD4A08E-404D-49BB-88C8-E89B497B54A0
Bactrocera (Bactrocera) pyrifoliae
Drew & Hancock
Bactrocera (Bactrocera) pyrifoliae
Drew & Hancock, 1994: 55
;
Norrbom
et al
., 1998: 94
;
Drew & Romig, 2013: 164
.
Holotype
in BMNH.
Common Name:
Oriental
Pear Fly.
Definition: Face fulvous with a pair of medium-sized circular black spots; postpronotal lobes and notopleura yellow; scutum black with dark brown lateral margins; narrow lateral postsutural yellow vittae tapering posteriorly to end before
ia.
seta; medial postsutural yellow vitta absent; anepisternal stripe equal in width to notopleuron dorsally; scutellum yellow with a narrow black basal band; legs fulvous with a small subapical black spot on outer surfaces of fore femora and dark fuscous around apices of mid and hind femora, fore and mid tibiae dark fuscous and hind tibiae black; wings with cells bc and c colourless, microtrichia in outer corner of cell c only, a narrow fuscous costal band confluent with R
2+3
and with a slight swelling around apex of R
4+5
, a narrow fuscous anal streak, supernumerary lobe of medium development; abdominal terga III-V orange-brown and with each tergum with a dark fuscous to black âTâ pattern and dark fuscous to black lateral margins, ceromata on tergum V dark fuscous, abdominal sterna dark fuscous to black.
Distribution: Northern
Thailand
and northern
Vietnam
.
Hosts: Reared from five host families with a preference for peach and pear in the family
Rosaceae
.
Attractant: A possible weak response to cue lure (
Drew & Romig, 2013
).
Comments:
Bactrocera pyrifoliae
is morphologically unique within the group in possessing terga III, IV and V each with a separate dark fuscous to black âTâ pattern. In having lateral postsutural yellow vittae narrowing posteriorly, all femora with apical dark markings and an extensively dark abdomen with fuscous ceromata, it most resembles the Elaeocarpaceae-feeding
B. thailandica
(which also has a dark basal band on abdominal terga III and IV) and the Melastomataceae-feeding species
B. melastomatos
and
B. osbeckiae
and is possibly related to them.