Revision of the West-Palaearctic species of the tribe Cerioidini (Diptera, Syrphidae)
Author
Steenis, Jeroen Van
Author
Ricarte, Antonio
Author
Vujić, Ante
Author
Birtele, Daniele
Author
Speight, Martin C. D.
text
Zootaxa
2016
4196
2
151
209
journal article
10.11646/zootaxa.4196.2.1
791720e1-fd69-4485-b49c-5b377412ecf1
1175-5326
167924
68A88A77-E760-4293-BE95-AA2785DE3C0C
Sphiximorpha subsessilis
(Illiger
in
Rossi, 1807)
Figs 52, 55
,
120, 121
,
128, 129
,
136, 137
,
140
,
147
,
155, 156
,
161–165
,
172
Ceria subsessilis
Illiger
in
Rossi, 1807: 446
.
Type
locality:
Italy
[ST
♂
ZMHB
].
Ceria subsessilis
:
Latreille (1809)
,
Schiner (1857
,
1862
),
Bezzi (1894
,
1900
),
Strobl (1900)
.
Cerioides subsenilis
, misspelling:
Becker (1921)
, comb. nov.
Cerioides subsessilis
:
Shannon (1925)
,
Sack (1932)
,
Şuster (1959)
,
Bańkowska (1963)
, van
Doesburg (1953)
,
Drensky (1934)
,
Glumac (1972)
.
Sphiximorpha subsessilis
:
Rondani (1857)
comb. nov.
,
Speight (1984)
,
Peck (1988)
,
Brădescu (1986
,
1989
,
1991
), van der
Goot (1981)
,
De Buck (1990)
,
Röder (1990)
,
Verlinden (1991)
,
Maibach
et al
. (1992)
,
Schmid (1993
,
1994
),
Stuke (1993)
,
Dirickx (1994)
,
Speight (1994)
,
Belcari
et al
. (1995)
, van
Aartsen (1997)
,
Dussaix (1997
,
2007
),
Sarthou & Speight (1997)
,
Malec
et al
. (1999)
,
Ssymank
et al
. (1999)
,
Jessat & Dziock (2000)
,
Bartsch (2001b)
,
Kehlmaier (2001)
,
Dunk
et al
. (2003)
, Dziock
et al
. (2004), Kehlmaier & Martínes de
Murguía (2004)
,
Stuke
et al
. (2004)
, van
Veen
(2004)
,
Speight
et al
. (2005)
,
Stănescu & Pârvu (2005)
,
Mason
et al
. (2006)
,
Rotheray
et al
. (2006)
,
Haarto & Kerppola (2007)
,
Reemer & Smit (2007)
,
Sommaggio (2007)
,
Whitmore
et al
. (2008)
,
Bartsch
et al
. (2009)
,
Reemer
et al
. (2009)
, Vujić
et al
. (2009),
Ricarte & Marcos-García (2010)
,
Withers & Goy (2012)
,
Radenković
et al
. (2013)
,
Sarıbıyık (2014)
,
Speight & Kime (2014)
,
Burgio
et al
. (2015)
,
Pétremand & Speight (2015)
.
Redescription
.
MALE
(
Figs 120
,
128
). Body length:
11.1–15.2 mm
; wing length:
9.1–11.3 mm
.
Head
(
Fig. 136
). Face protruding antero-ventrally with weakly demarcated tubercle and strongly concave below antennae. Head 1.9–2.1 times wider than face just below the antennae; length of eye contiguity 0.56–0.67 times as long as length of frons; angle of eyes at eye contiguity 140–155o. Face with yellow and black colour pattern; genae, mouth edge and hypostomal bridge black; broad rhombic formed medial black vitta; a broad black fascia at frontal prominence black. Frons yellow, sometimes with medial black vitta from frontal prominence to eye suture. Vertical triangle black to yellow. Ocellar triangle black. Dorsal surface of head capsule broadly yellow posterior of ocellar triangle, laterally yellow along eye margin and black posteriorly. Frontal prominence 0.69–0.76 times longer than wide; relative length of pedicel is as 1.1–1.2: 1: 1.0–1.1. Antennae dark-brown to black coloured; arista white pilose.
Thorax
. Scutum black with yellow macula on postpronotum and notopleuron, and sometimes with oval vittae posterolaterally anterior of scutellum. Pleuron black with two yellow maculae, one each on posterior part of posterior anepisternum, on dorsal part of katepisternum. Pile long and white, ventral half of anterior anepisternum with pile 1/2–1/3 as long as pile on adjacent part of dorsal surface of head capsule. Basisternum higher than wide with nearly straight dorsal margin and two triangular lobes on ventral margin (
Fig. 55
). Scutellum black with anterior 1/3–1/2 yellow.
Legs
. Coxae and trochanter black; pro- and mesofemur predominantly black, only some yellow basally and apically; basal 1/4–1/3 of metafemur yellow; apical 1/2–3/4 of tibiae black; pro- and mesotarsi dark-yellow to dark-brown; metatarsus dark-brown to black. Femora with black setulae apicodorsally; metatrochanter with black setulae. Procoxa broad, about as wide as long, with demarcated groove confined to the lateral half on dorsal part (
Fig. 52
); mesofemur with long flattened area antero-basally (
Fig. 147
); metatrochanter with deep sulcus and broad rim laterally (
Fig. 140
). Metafemur slightly incrassate and metatibia without appendix on apico-ventral part, elongate (
Fig. 155
).
Wing
. Hyaline except for anterior 1/2 to spurious vein and along vein CuA. Vein R4+5 straight with short appendix into cell r4+5. Cross-vein r-m slightly curved. Membrane covered in microtrichia, except anterobasal 1/3 of cell cup with very scattered microtrichia; a narrow area on basal 1/4–1/3 of anal lobe and entire alula bare; alula relatively broad, 2.6–3.0 times longer than wide.
Abdomen
. Black and yellow coloured. Length of tergite I: II: III: IV is as 1: 2.6–3.1: 3.2–3.5: 3.5–3.9. Width of yellow fascia medially: length of tergite of respectively tergite II, III and IV as 1: 3.7–5.2, 1: 3.7–3.9 and 1: 4.1–4.7. Tergite II about as wide as long, anteromedial part most narrow; length of tergite II: width of tergite II at respectively anterior: narrowest: posterior as 1: 0.81–0.91: 0.69–0.86: 1.1–1.3. Tergite II with triangular maculae on antero-lateral corner, very broadly separated, ratio of black between maculae and width of tergite anteriorly 1: 1.6–2.0; fascia on tergite II and III nearly straight throughout, hardly narrowed towards lateral margin; fascia on tergite IV gradually narrowed towards lateral margin. Tergite IV weakly emarginated. Tergite IV with bow formed grey-white pollinosity mediolaterally, often hardly visible. Sternites I–III with posterior straight yellow fascia. Tergite VIII black pilose.
Genitalia
. Epandrium with very narrow ventral rim (
Figs 161, 163
); in dorsal view, cerci narrowly elongate semicircular shaped, with apico-medial sharp pointed projection (
Fig. 163
), pile about twice as long as width of cerci; surstylus bi-lobed, dorsal lobe broadly elongate apically slightly narrowed and basally with broadened dorsal corner, ventral lobe rhombic-shaped with small membranous basal part (
Fig. 161
); surstylar apodeme triangular shaped, separated in two elongate trapezoid sclerotized parts (
Fig. 164
); hypandrium (
Figs 161, 165
) very broad, rounded and narrowed towards apex; with short ventral lobe and several short sub-ventral projections; superior lobe irregular triangular shaped, articulating with hypandrium; aedeagus with complex structures as in
Fig. 162
.
FEMALE
(
Figs 121
,
129
). Body length:
11.5–14.7 mm
; wing length:
9.8–11.7 mm
. Similar to male, except for normal sexual dimorphism and the following characters.
Head
(
Fig. 137
). Head 1.8–2.0 times wider than face just below the antennae. Frontal prominence 0.53–0.65 times longer than wide; relative length of pedicel is as 1.1–1.3: 1: 1.1–1.2. Frons black with lateral yellow maculae along eye margin connected with medially interrupted fascia on anterior part of frons. Dorsal surface of head capsule with large round yellow maculae posterolateral of ocellar triangle and yellow fascia on anterior margin along eyes.
Legs
. Metafemur and tibia (
Fig. 156
).
Wing
. Alula 2.4– 2.8 times longer than wide.
Abdomen
. Length of tergite I: II: III: IV: V is as 1: 3.1–3.5: 3.5–4.2: 3.3–3.8: 1.5–1.7. Width of yellow fascia medially: length of tergite of respectively tergite II, III and IV as 1: 3.8–4.1, 1: 4.0–5.3 and 1: 4.3–5.2. Tergite II about as wide as long, anteromedial part most narrow; length of tergite II: width of tergite II at respectively anterior: narrowest: posterior as 1:0.84–0.94: 0.74–0.87: 1.4–1.6. Ratio of black between maculae on tergite II and width of tergite II anteriorly 1: 1.9–2.5.
FIGURES 161–165
. Male genitalia of
Sphiximorpha subsessilis
161
Epandrium and hypandrium, lateral view
162
Aedeagus, lateral view
163
Epandrium, dorsal view
164
Epandrium, ventral view
165
Hypandrium, ventral view. Scale line = 0.5 mm.
FIGURES 166–168
. Distribution maps of the West-Palaearctic
Cerioidini
.
166
Ceriana brunettii
(yellow circle),
Ceriana caesarea
(blue square) and
Ceriana media
(red triangle)
167
Ceriana naja
(blue circle),
Ceriana sartorum
(yellow triangle) and
Ceriana skevingtoni
(red square)
168
Ceriana conopsoides
(purple circle).
Material examined
. 83 Ƌ,
44 ♀
, 1 larva (
CDFA
,
CEUA
,
CNBF
,
DBV
,
ENSATS
,
GPA
,
IRSNB
,
JSA
,
MNHN
,
MRL
,
MSD
,
MSNF
,
MSNM
,
MZLCH
,
NBC
,
NHM
,
NHMT
,
PCV
,
WSB
,
ZIN
,
ZMHB
).
Distribution
(
Fig. 172
).
Andorra
,
Austria
,
Belgium
,
Finland
,
France
,
Germany
,
Greece
,
Italy
,
Morocco
,
the Netherlands
,
Poland
,
Romania
,
Russia
,
Serbia
,
Slovakia
,
Spain
,
Sweden
,
Switzerland
,
Turkey
.
FIGURES 169–172
. Distribution maps of the West-Palaearctic
Cerioidini
.
169
Ceriana glaebosa
(red square),
Sphiximorpha euprosopa
(green circle) and
Sphiximorpha petronillae
(blue triangle)
170
Ceriana vespiformis
(red circle)
171
Primocerioides regale
(red circle) and
Sphiximorpha garibaldii
(blue triangle)
172
Sphiximorpha subsessilis
(yellow circle).
Biology
. Adults are found in alluvial soft- and hardwood forests with
Populus nigra
, riverine gallery forest with
Alnus
/
Salix
, Mediterranean
Fraxinus angustifolia
/
Quercus faginea
forest or other mature
Fagus
/
Quercus
and Mediterranean wet
Liquidamber orientalis
forest and
Quercus suber
/
Q. pubescens
/
Pinus nigra
forest and also in parks and avenues with old trees like
Populus
sp. and
Aesculus hippocastanum
. Males often sit, sometimes during several days, on tree trunks of
Aesculus hippocastanum
and
Populus nigra
where also copulation takes place. Females have been caught in an emergency trap placed over a trunk cavity of
Fraxinus angustifolia
place (
Reemer & Smit 2007
;
Ricarte & Marcos-García 2010
;
Speight & Castella 2011
;
Speight 2013
). Egg laying behaviour has been observed on
Aesculus hippocastanum
,
Ulmus laevis
(
Schmid 1994
;
Speight 2013
),
Quercus petrea
(
Radenković
et al
. 2013
)
and
Quercus cerris
. Larvae are found in exuding tree sap on
Abies alba
and
Populus nigra
, (
Rotheray
et al
. 2006
;
Dussaix 2007
;
Reemer
et al
. 2009
as
Ceriana conopsoides
;
Ricarte & Marcos-García 2010
). Adults are found to feed on flowers of
Crataegus
sp. and
Sorbus
sp. (
Speight 2013
) and the following flowers;
Acer
sp,
Euonymus europeus
and white
Apiaceae
. It has a flight period from mid April to late July, with a peak during May.
Discussion
. The
type
of
Ceria subsessilis
was not studied as it was not found in ZMHB. The original description of
S. subsessilis
is clear enough to assign the here studied specimens to this species. It is unclear whether the
type
of
S. subsessilis
is really lost and we see no need in designating a
neotype
at the moment.