Family groups of Diopsoidea and Nerioidea (Diptera: Schizophora) - Definition, history and relationships
Author
Lonsdale, Owen
text
Zootaxa
2020
2020-02-17
4735
1
1
177
journal article
24000
10.11646/zootaxa.4735.1.1
ffaf3b73-8bfe-499d-9073-0ce8c104e078
1175-5326
3670762
BD52DF91-3A7E-46FB-8975-38A67BFBBD61
Psilidae
Macquart, 1835
(
Figs 1–48
,
395–398
)
Type
genus:
Psila
Meigen 1803: 278
, by
Macquart (1835: 416)
[as Psilomydae after unjustifiable name change of
Psila
to
Psilomyia
by Latreille (1929); Loxoceridae proposed in same paper (p. 372)].
Type
species of genus:
Musca fimetaria
Linnaeus 1761: 458
, by subsequent designation [
Westwood 1840: 146
].
The
Psilidae
are a group of mostly north temperate flies with 335 described species in three subfamilies globally (
Shatalkin & Merz, 2010
). One common name applied to the family is “rust fly”, because the larva of
Psila hennigi
(known until recently as
Psila rosae
(Fabricius))
produced rust-like traces and decay in the root of its hosts, including carrot, parsnip and turnip. Adult
Psilidae
have a thick coat of long, dense setulae that emerge from pits, and the shape of the face (
Figs 3
,
18
) and the absence of the precoxal bridge are also quite characteristic, as is the shape of the wing and its venation, including the peculiar curvature of vein R
1
past the subcostal break (
Figs 395–398
), the latter of which is quite evident in the fossil
Electrochyliza
. Early family and genus-level treatments of this species-rich group include
Capelle (1953)
,
Frey (1925a
,
1955
),
Hennig (1941b)
,
Johnson (1920)
and
Melander (1920)
. More recently, the Old World fauna has been revised by
Iwasa (1989
,
1991
,
1994
),
Shatalkin (1983
,
1986
,
1989
,
1998
a
, 1998b) and Wang & Yang (1996); the New World fauna was treated by
Buck & Marshall (2006a
,
2006b
). Regional catalogues are provided in
Shewell (1965)
[Nearctic],
Soós (1984d)
[Palaearctic],
Cogan (1977
,
1980b
) [
Oriental
, Afrotropical],
Evenhuis (1989d)
[Australian] and
Prado (1975)
[Neotropical]. The fauna of all Regions requires revision.
The subfamily
Psilinae
(
Figs 6–9
,
17–18
) is mostly north temperate in distribution, and includes 216 species (
Shatalkin & Merz, 2010
). While it occurs in all biogeographic regions, the few known Neotropical species are restricted to Central America from
Mexico
to
Costa Rica
(Buck, 2010). The subfamily is split between
Psila
and
Loxocera
, which were redefined by
Buck & Marshall (2006a
,
2006b
) using adult external, adult genitalic and egg morphological characters. Buck (2010) mentions that six subgenera are recognized in
Psila
s.l.
, with the monophyly of some of these subordinate taxa still to be properly established—
Psila
Meigen
s.s.
,
Asiopsila
Shatalkin,
Psilosoma
Zetterstedt
,
Freyopsila
Shatalkin
,
Synaphopsila
Hendel
and
Xenopsila
Buck.
Afropsila
Shatalkin
,
Chamaepsila
Hendel
,
Oxypsila
Frey
and
Tetrapsila
Frey
should also be included among these. Three subgenera were included in
Loxocera
s.l.
—
Loxocera
Meigen
s.s.
,
Tropeopsila
Shatalkin
and
Imantimyia
Frey. Groups
requiring special consideration include the Afrotropical
Loxocerosoma
Verbeke
with three species, likely considered to be synonymous with
Loxocera
(
Buck & Marshall, 2006b
)
, and the monotypic
Loxochyliza
Verbeke from
Nepal
, which is presently unplaced (see Shatalkin (1998)). The east Palaearctic
Tropeopsila
Shatalkin
(two species) is presently treated as a subgenus of
Loxocera
, but
Buck & Marshall (2006b)
consider its position in need of verification.
Chylizinae
(
Figs 1–5
) includes the single genus
Chyliza
, with 118 described species (
Shatalkin, 2014
). The genus is global in distribution, and the only psilid known from South America (Buck, 2010), but it is best represented in the Australian and Afrotropical Regions (
Shatalkin, 1998a
). Subgenera have been proposed for the genus, but Shatalkin (1998) is followed here in considering these as likely synonyms because they are based on few and likely homoplastic characters that likely do not reflect natural groupings. As an alternative to the existing subgenus system, Shatalkin (1998) provided a preliminary three-group subdivision of the genus based on colour. Future considerations of genus subdivision should be based on the results of a more thorough phylogenetic analysis.
Belobackenbardiinae
(
Figs 10–18
) contains three species in the South African genus
Belobackenbardia
Shatalkin.
Shatalkin (2002)
considered the most ancestral lineage of
Psilidae
, and defined it in part by a brush of short white hair on the postgena (not close to eye margin as similar hairs in
Chyliza
; also found in some
Loxocera
), a basally bushier arista, and a relatively large epandrium fused to large, apically bilobed surstyli; one pair of large dorsal epandrial processes occur in most species. An additional synapomorphy proposed by
Shatalkin (2002)
is a long, curved phallus, but this is here interpreted as the pregonite, with the actual phallus ventromedial to these structures, being small and mostly membranous. There are likely additional synapomorphies of the male genitalia, but only a single species was examined for this study and the genitalia of the other species are not figured in the literature.
The only accepted fossil
Psilidae
is
Electrochyliza
Hennig
, which contains the single species
E. succini
Hennig
(Eocene/Oligocene Baltic amber), although at least one other species of
Electrochyliza
is present in the Hoffeins collection. The visible external male genitalia bear a resemblance to those of
Psilinae
, but not much more can be inferred at present. The monotypic
Psilites
Heer
(Miocene compression fossil,
Croatia
) [not examined] was excluded from the family by
Gentilini
et al.
(2006)
, who suggested that it might actually be a tephritoid. An unidentified
Psila
species was mentioned by Schöberlin (1888) (Miocene compression fossil,
Switzerland
), and unidentified
Psilidae
in amber are mentioned in
Tschirnhaus & Hoffeins (2009)
.
Biology.
Adults of Nearctic
Psilidae
are often found on foliage and sometimes fallen wood in closed woods, and Old World species are found in dense vegetation in regions that experience high rainfall, including areas of high elevation (
Cogan, 1977
). An unidentified
Loxocera
has been observed feeding on insects, likely scavenging (S.A. Marshall, pers. comm.).
Larvae are known to be primary feeders on living plants in stems, roots, bulbs and under the bark of thin twigs on trees (
Shatalkin & Merz, 2010
).
Psila
s.l.
species develop in the stems and roots of a variety of grasses and other herbaceous plants, including the carrot rust fly (
Psila hennigi
(Thompson & Pont)
;
Figs 17–18
,
47
), which can be a significant pest of umbelliferous crops such as carrot and celery (
Degen
et al.,
1999
;
John
et al.
2001
;
Collier & Finch, 2009
). Originally Palaearctic in distribution, the carrot rust fly is now known in
Canada
, the
United States
,
Cuba
,
South Africa
and
New Zealand
(
CABI, 1992
;
Botha
et al.,
2001
).
Psila fimentaria
(L.) is known from
Carex
. Monocots serve as hosts for the larvae of the less commonly encountered
Loxocera
, including
Carex
(
Valley
et al.,
1969
)
,
Juncus
(
Chandler, 1975b
;
Ferrar, 1987
),
Digitaria
(
Capelle, 1953
)
and possibly
Luzula
(
Chandler, 1975b
)
, which may have driven the development of the laterally compressed ovipositor characteristic of that genus (Buck, 2010).
Larvae of north temperate
Chyliza
are known to feed on living trees and herbs (
Chandler, 1975b
;
Ferrar, 1987
) in at least 10 plant families (
Sueyoshi, 2013
), and
Capelle (1953)
found larvae in rotting wood.
Chyliza notata
has been observed ovipositing on fresh tree wounds where the larvae tunnel into the living tissue; pupation occurs just under the bark (
Ferrar, 1987
).
Chyliza leptogaster
(Panzer)
has been recovered from deciduous trees and is known to cause phloem necroses;
C. annulipes
Macquart
is found in conifers and are associated with wounds.
Chyliza
have also been found under the bark of trees housing buprestids (
Gates
et al.,
2006
), with initial introduction in trees apparently occurring through existing wounds in the plant (
Lyneborg, 1987
).
Sugiura & Yamazaki (2006)
found larvae of
Chyliza
in galls induced by
Cecidomyiidae
species,
Yamazaki & Sugiura (2008)
found
C. splendida
in
Wisteria
galls induced by bacteria, and in some cases the psilid larvae appear to have induced the gall itself (
Chandler, 1975b
;
Ferrar, 1987
). Precopulatory, copulatory and oviposition behaviour of
Chyliza vittata
on a leafless orchid (
Gastroda elata
) was described by
Sugiura (2016)
, but other orchids are also known to serve as hosts where the larva feeds internally on leaves, stems and underground tissue (
Suetsugu, 2016
).
Immature stages.
Psiline larval morphology was described for two
Loxocera
in
Meijere (1941
,
1945
), and the eggs of
Loxocera
and
Psila
species were thoroughly described in
Buck & Marshall (2006a
,
2006b
). Illustrations and descriptions of immature stages of
Chylizinae
and
Psilinae
are also available in
Ferrar (1987)
, who provides references to original sources in the literature.
Adult Diagnosis.
Medium-sized, often narrow-bodied; dorsum with shallow to deep pits at base of setae and setulae, at least on notum. Orange to yellow with brown to black pattern, or predominantly dark. Antenna elbowed; pedicel with dorsal seam; first flagellomere slightly to very elongate. Face usually with angled ventromedial plate with transverse striations; sometimes strongly receding ventrally (very broadly so in some
Psilinae
); ocelli slightly shifted anteriorly, distant from postocellar; ocellar tubercle and space anterior to postocellars with patch of setulae. Vibrissa absent; ocellar seta usually very long when present. Anterior spiracle in ovate depression with grooves sometimes forming a pit (
Fig. 17
); thorax covered with long, dense setulae (also
Somatia
,
Megamerinidae
), at least dorsally but sometimes also laterally and ventrally. Cell br narrowed on distal section (
Figs 395–398
); costa with subcostal break; subcosta continuing to costa at near right angle as hyaline weakening in membrane; similar to
Opomyzidae
, vein R
1
distal to subcostal insertion usually long and slightly to more broadly arched (exaggerated in Chylzinae (
Fig. 396
), narrow and straight in Belobackenbardiinae).
Adult Definition
. Medium-sized, often narrow-bodied flies (
Figs 1–18
,
47–48
); body length 3.0–12.0mm. Surface well-sclerotized with shallow to deep pits (sometimes forming transverse striations) dorsally at base of setae and setulae, at least on notum. Orange to yellow with brown to black pattern, or predominantly dark with halter often pale (knob rarely dark); arista black to white.
Chaetotaxy
: 1 inner vertical; 1–2 outer verticals; 0–2 fronto-orbitals; 0–1 ocellar (often very long when present, potentially extending to eye margin); 0–1 postocellar (divergent); vibrissa absent. Pedicel often densely setulose, sometimes with longer marginal seta(e) dorsally and ventrally. Frontal vitta with numerous scattered rows of setulae, often inclinate and/or proclinate medially and anteriorly, continuing posteriorly onto occiput and postgena, dense in
Chylizinae
(
Fig. 4
); vitta sometimes velvety; ocellar tubercle setulose, separated from postovertical by similarly setulose patch; parafacial and/or sides of face microtomentose; venter of gena and parafacial with row of setulae. 0 presutural intra-alar; 0–1 postpronotal; 0 anterior notopleural; 0–1 posterior notopleural; 2 posterior supra-alar; 0 posterior intra-alar; 1–4 dorsocentrals; 0–1 acrostichals; 2–3 scutellars (uncommonly 1 or 4); 0 proepisternal; 0 anepisternal; 0 katepisternal. Body largely covered with dense, short setulae; proepisternum with patch of white microtrichia (restricted to ventral margin or extending to encompass ventral half of sclerite, and sometimes extending to spiracle; absent in Belobackenbardiinae); setulae on scutum with partings and crowns that are distinct as in
Megamerinidae
(
Chylizinae
(
Fig. 1
)) or inconspicuous to absent; pleuron sparsely setulose posterior to wing base, mostly densely setulose anterior to wing base with bare patches, sometimes with conspicuously downturned patch of setulae along venter of anepisternum. Scutellum bare to sparsely setulose or microtomentose; remainder of metanotum microtomentose to setulose, with katatergite most conspicuously and densely haired and mediotergite sometimes bare. Mid tibia with one distinct ventroapical seta, sometimes accompanied by additional smaller seta; hind tibia sometimes with ventroapical seta.
Head
. Antenna elbowed (
Fig. 5
); pedicel with dorsal seam; arista pubescent to short plumose, rarely flattened, inserted subbasally to medially; first flagellomere slightly (
Fig. 5
) to considerably elongate (
Fig. 6
), length rarely less than 1.5 times width but sometimes exceeding seven times width; scape and pedicel sometimes also slightly elongate. Frons setulose with ocellar triangle bare and elongate (sometimes attaining anterior margin); ocelli slightly shifted anteriorly, divided from postocellar by setulose patch. Face usually with angled ventral plate impressed with slight to deep transverse striations; facial plate most distinct and projecting in
Chylizinae
(
Fig. 3
), sometimes short to absent in
Psila
(
Fig. 18
) and absent in
Loxocera
(
Fig. 8
), but transverse striations still faintly evident; face gradually or abruptly receding ventrally in
Psilinae
, making head subtriangular in lateral view (
Fig. 17
). Clypeus well-developed, nearly flat and plate like with anterior margin truncated or with medial emargination; palpus varying from small and subcylindrical to large and laterally compressed; labium with short setulae densely to sparsely arranged or restricted to ventral margin.
Thorax
. Katatergite slightly (
Psilinae
;
Fig. 17
), modestly (
Electrochyliza
, Belobackenbardiinae
;
Fig. 12
) or strongly (
Chylizinae
;
Fig. 5
) bulging. Precoxal bridge absent; postmetacoxal bridge absent or present (
Chylizinae
). Prosternum small, weakly sclerotized and bilobed, with narrow, lightly sclerotized strip running anterior to sclerites; posterior surface raised. Spiracles subcircular, setulose; posterior spiracle angled dorsally; one or two grooves extending ventrally from anterior spiracle, sometimes ending in a pit. Metanotum with small, laterally directed dorsolateral lobes meeting abdomen.
Wing
. (
Figs 395–398
) Clear to lightly infuscated or with slight patterning, often along veins. Anal lobe and alula well-developed, sometimes slightly reduced. Cell br narrowed on distal section; costa with subcostal break; subcosta usually continuing to costa at near right angle as hyaline weakening in membrane, and sc cell past this break elongate and usually at least faintly arched, but strongly bulging in
Chylizinae
(less pronounced than state seen in
Opomyzidae
); in
Belobackenbardia
(
Fig. 395
), cell sc straight and sharply narrowing apically, and subcostal vein abutting vein R
1
on distal half (perhaps fused), indistinct apically where it is only distinct as hyaline weakening cutting across much shallower sc cell. Veins R
4+5
and M
1
subparallel; M
1
strongly arched in some
Psilinae
(
Figs 7
,
398
). Cells bm and cu
p
reaching, or nearly reaching, level of apex of R
s
, with cell
cu
a slightly (
Psilinae
) to substantially (
Chylizinae
) shorter. Vein CuA straight. M
4
and CuA+CuP not reaching wing margin. Upper calypter with hairs long to moderate in length.
Legs
. Hind femur of
Loxocera
usually with patch of ventral subapical pile,
Chylizinae
usually with small, microtrichose ovate pit.
Abdomen
. Tergites and sternites separate, sternites not narrowed. Setae pronounced posterolaterally on tergites. Sternite 1 bare or nearly so. Spiracles
1–7 in
membrane, 7
th
embedded in tergite in Belobackenbardiinae; 7
th
spiracle sometimes absent in male.
Male genitalia
. (
Figs 19
–39) S6 separate, symmetrical, sometimes with posteromedial emargination that may nearly divide sclerite. S8 dorsal, sometimes bare, reduced (
Psilinae
) to absent (Belobackenbardiinae,
Chylizinae
); sometimes fused to T6; sometimes with additional vestiges laterally that (in part) may represent S7 (posi- tioned left laterally in other families). Epandrium and surstylus largely immobile, strongly secured to membrane laterally. Epandrium broad, shallow. Cerci simple, sometimes fused. Surstylus present or absent (
Psilinae
). Subepandrial sclerite absent (
Chylizinae
, some
Psilinae
) or composed of two flat, separate lobes (large and basally confluent in Belobackenbardiinae). Hypandrium well-developed, with several medial setae (except Belobackenbardiinae); sometimes with posterolateral apodeme (
Chylizinae
); arms usually fused posterodorsally. Some
Psilidae
with medial portion of hypandrium removed as floating ventral plate (
Figs 33
–34), with phallapodeme assuming its original position to form “phallapodemic plate” (see Figs 38–39); phallapodeme otherwise rod-like, sometimes folded longitudinally (Belobackenbardiinae;
Fig. 24
), sometimes widened near base (
Chylizinae
;
Fig. 31
), sometimes fused to remainder of hypandrium to form broad, flat plate that may be flat, folded, curved, Tshaped or bifurcate (
Psilinae
; Fig. 38). Pregonite thin and band-like (
Chylizinae
;
Fig. 31
) to large and lobe-like (Belobackenbardiinae (
Fig. 25
),
Psilinae
(Fig. 38)); sometimes absent. Postgonite absent. Epiphallus absent. Phallus composed of fused basiphallus and distiphallus; shape flat and linear, bifid, pouch-like or globose; sometimes fused to base of phallapodeme. Ejaculatory apodeme very small with duct sometimes extremely widened.
Female genitalia
. (
Figs 40–46
) Membrane between segments 7 and 8 long, narrow, only short and unmodified in Belobackenbardiinae (
Figs 41–43
). Except for Belobackenbardiinae, segments 8 and 10 narrow, telescoped within segment 7 at rest, with minute longitudinal grooves; these segments usually distinct from each other, with segment 8 longer and sclerites sometimes divided longitudinally; S8 and T8 mostly undifferentiated; Belobackenbardiinae with S8 narrow and T8 high, laterally compressed.
Loxocera
abdomen variably modified apically, including lateral compression past segment 6. Cerci short, separate to mostly fused, subcylindrical to compressed; sometimes fused to T10; lateral peg-like sensillae absent in
Electrochyliza,
Belobackenbardiinae
and some
Psilinae
. Internal components weakly sclerotized and unpigmented (base partially so in Belobackenbardiinae on spermatheca (duct?) and accessory glands); Belobackenbardiinae (
Fig. 44
) with spermathecae and ducts represented by short narrow, basally pigmented tubules, ventral receptacle perhaps represented by cluster of subspherical swellings apically;
Chylizinae
(
Fig. 46
) with spermathecae sac-like, distal section of duct wider with basal grooves, and ventral receptacle (or accessory gland?) flagellar with filamentous apical tubule;
Psilinae
(
Fig. 45
) genitalia of uncertain homology, with spermathecae perhaps reduced to apical swellings on widened genital chamber, and ventral receptacle not evident.
Variation—Electrochyliza
(fossil). Differs from other
Psilidae
as follows: frons with minute longitudinal wrinkles following angle of ocellar triangle, which does not attain anterior margin; ventral facial plate, semicircular, height ¼ medial width, with two transverse striations; M
1
shallowly arched; longitudinal grooves on ovipositor apparently absent.The following structures could not be observed: thoracic sternites, postabdominal spiracles, surstylus and male and female internal genitalia.