Type specimens of Limnophorini (Diptera: Muscidae) deposited in the Museum für Naturkunde, Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin (Berlin, Germany)
Author
Couri, Márcia
courimarcia@gmail.
Author
Pont, Adrian
Oxford University Museum of Natural History. Parks Road, Oxford OX 1 3 PW, United Kingdom. pont. muscidae @ btinternet. com
text
Zoologia
2020
e 46879
2020-08-28
37
1
57
http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zoologia.37.e46879
journal article
10.3897/zoologia.37.e46879
1984-4689
6995FEC3-00D4-48C4-97D9-93FB9435B912
Xenomyia osculata
Pont and Werner, 2003
Figs 217–220
Paratypes
.
1 male
,
1 female
.
South Africa
.
Diagnosis. Length of body. 4.0 mm (male),
4.5 mm
(female). Head. Both male and female have a very characteristic head, with fronto-orbital plates enlarged and touching for almost their entire length and covered with small dense setulae. Frons broad, about one-third of head-width. Ocellar setae absent. Eyes small, with sparse hairs. Antenna dark brown, with postpedicel broad and long, reaching oral margin. Arista short, short pubescent. Palpus long, yellow on basal two-thirds and brown on apical third. Gena deep, about 2 times the width of the broad postpedicel. Thorax. Scutum shiny brown with two white dusted presutural lateral areas between the 2 rows of dorsocentral setae. Prosternum bare. Dorsocentrals 2+3. Haltere with knob white. Calypters white. Legs. Brown. Fore tibia without median setae. Mid tibia with 1 submedian posterior seta. Hind tibia with 1 anterodorsal and 1 posterodorsal setae. Arolium and pulvillus not enlarged. Wing. With a dark cloud formed by dense, elongated microtrichia (
Pont and Werner 2003
, fig. 5). Costal spine indistinct. Veins bare. Abdomen. Sternite 1 bare.
Remarks. Flies of the genus
Xenomyia
Malloch, 1921
have many characters that are abnormal for muscids and are restricted to the Afrotropical region. Of the 16 described species, 7 are from
South Africa
and were keyed by
Pont and Werner (2003)
, where
X. osculata
can be identified. The male aedeagus and female ovipositor were first illustrated for
Xenomyia
by
Pont and Werner (2003
, figs 7–11).