Integrative taxonomy of Central European Planetella (Diptera: Cecidomyiidae) indicates high species diversity, intraspecific variation and low host specificity
Author
Ševčík, Jan
Department of Biology and Ecology, Faculty of Science, University of Ostrava, Chittussiho 10, CZ- 710 00 Ostrava, Czech Republic; e-mails: sevcikjan @ hotmail. com, burdikova @ seznam. cz, sopuch. krystof @ gmail. com & Silesian Museum, Nádražní okruh 31, CZ- 746 01 Opava, Czech Republic
Author
Hippa, Heikki
Zoological Museum, Biodiversity Unit, University of Turku, FI- 20014 Turku, Finland; e-mail: heikki. hippa @ gmail. com
Author
Burdíková, Nikola
Department of Biology and Ecology, Faculty of Science, University of Ostrava, Chittussiho 10, CZ- 710 00 Ostrava, Czech Republic; e-mails: sevcikjan @ hotmail. com, burdikova @ seznam. cz, sopuch. krystof @ gmail. com
Author
Sopuch, Kryštof
Department of Biology and Ecology, Faculty of Science, University of Ostrava, Chittussiho 10, CZ- 710 00 Ostrava, Czech Republic; e-mails: sevcikjan @ hotmail. com, burdikova @ seznam. cz, sopuch. krystof @ gmail. com
Author
Skuhravá, Marcela
Bítovská 1227 /
Author
Bruun, Hans Henrik
Department of Biology, University of Copenhagen, Universitetsparken 15, Copenhagen, Denmark; e-mail: hhbruun @ bio. ku. dk
text
Acta Entomologica Musei Nationalis Pragae
2023
2023-12-30
63
2
413
450
http://dx.doi.org/10.37520/aemnp.2023.026
journal article
10.37520/aemnp.2023.026
1804-6487
10621390
E961B014-4A0D-482B-A005-6D7B58D60B03
Planetella fasciata
(
Meigen, 1818
)
sp. restit.
Cecidomyia fasciata
Meigen, 1818: 94
.
Type
locality:
Germany
.
Type material.
HOLOTYPE
:
♀
, pinned, not studied, but photos available at the web page of
MNHN
Paris: https://science.mnhn.fr/taxon/species/ planetella/fasciata.
Additional material examined
(all in coll.
JSL-UOC
).
CZECH REPUBLIC
:
BOHEMIA
:
Doksy,
31.v.–18.vi.2020
,
1♀
(specimen after DNA extraction, No.
PLA
33), Malaise trap in
Carex
spp.
, M.Tkoč leg., Doksy,
15.v.–6.vi.2022
, Malaise trap in
Carex
spp.
,
1 ♀
(specimen after DNA extraction, No.
PLA
33b),M.Tkoč leg.; Jílové, Pod lesem Nature Reserve,
29.vii.–2.ix.2022
, Malaise trap,
1♀
(specimen after DNA extraction, No.
PLA
79), L. Blažej & J. Hejduk leg., Jílové, Pod lesem Nature Reserve,
2.ix.–4.xi.2022
, Malaise trap, 1 J (specimen after DNA extraction, No.
PLA
81), L. Blažej & J. Hejduk leg.
SLOVAKIA
:
Muránska planina National Park, Rosiarka Nature Reserve,
920 m
,
26.v.–21.vi.2022
, 3 JJ (specimens after DNA extraction, No.
PLA
52c,d,e, one of them figured),
1 ♀
(
PLA
52b), Malaise trap in
Carex rostrata
, all J. Roháček & J. Ševčík leg.; Tisovec, Trstie Nature Reserve,
14.vi.–12.vii.2023
, 1 J (
PLA
70), Malaise trap in
Carex rostrata
, J. Roháček & J. Ševčík
leg.
Diagnosis.
This species is well characterized by the broad pale anterior bands on the abdominal tergites, in combination with 12 binodose flagellomeres. It is also one of the few species of
Planetella
with the eyes completely separated in both sexes, without an eye-bridge. The following combination of characters on the male terminalia is also diagnostic (
Figs 4C,D
): narrow gonostylus, club-shaped and apically rounded hypoproct, almost as long as gonocoxite, aedeagus narrow throughout and slightly shorter than gonocoxite.
Comments.
This species has been considered as a junior synonym of
Planetella grandis
(
Meigen, 1804
)
. Although the identity of
P. grandis
has not been clarified yet and its terminalia remain unknown, the only male
syntype
of
P. grandis
clearly has a dark unbanded abdomen (the first three abdominal segments are still preserved, see https:// science.mnhn.fr/taxon/species/planetella/grandis), without distinct pale transverse bands, and thus definitely represents a different species than the other
three syntypes
. The male
syntype
currently lacks the head, but
EDWARDs (1938)
mentioned that the male type of
P. fasciata
has well separated eyes and 15 flagellomeres (14 + a small apical segment), although the figure of the dark specimen in
MORGE (1976)
shows just 12 binodose flagellomeres.
EDWARDs (1938)
possibly refers in this case to British males, which he considered as conspecific.
In any case,
P. fasciata
is herewith reinstated as a valid species and its male terminalia and flagellomeres are figured for the first time (
Figs 4C,D
,
14C
). We use the right of the first revising author to interpret this species in this way, although it may well be shown in the future that several closely related species with the eyes separated, 12 flagellomeres and banded abdomen exist.
The species figured by
KIEFFER (1913)
as
P. cornifex
(
Kieffer, 1898
)
may represent a junior synonym of
P. fasciata
, see below (under
P. cornifex
).