Three new species of Megaselia Rondani, 1856 (Diptera, Phoridae) from Switzerland
Author
R. Henry L. Disney
Author
Sabine Prescher
text
Mitteilungen der Schweizerischen Entomologischen Gesellschaft
2015
88
295
306
journal article
10.5281/zenodo.33993
Megaselia differens
Schmitz,
1948
Megaselia differens
Schmitz,
1948
:
394
(male).
Megaselia beyeri
Schmitz
in Schmitz & Beyer,
1965
:
606
,
syn. n
.
Aphiochaeta beckeri
Dampf,
1924
:
36
.
Not Wood,
1909
.
In the keys to Abteilung IV, Zweite Reihe of Palaearctic species of
Megaselia
(Schmitz &Beyer
1965
)
M. beyeri
and
M. differens
are keyed out in the poorly constructed section of couplets
83 to 97
. Couplet
83
initiates problems by dividing species with acostal index exceeding
0.49
from those with the CI less than
0.48
. This causes
M. beyeri
to key out at couplet
86
but
M. differens
to run out at couplet
295
Figs 1–9.
Megaselia limpachensis
sp. n.
male. — 1. frons; — 2. postpedicel and palp; — 3. proboscis; — 4. left face of hypopygium; — 5. right face of hypopygium; — 6. front tibia and tarsus; — 7. mid tibia; —8. hind femur; —9. wing.
96
. In the keys to the males of species from the British Isles (Disney
1989
) these two species both run out at couplet
114
, with the distinction between the two being very fine. Namely the slight difference in the costal indexes and the number of bristles on the epandrium. With the examination of further material of this complex, suspicion that
M. beyeri
was merely avariant of
M. differens
arose. This was reinforced by the description of
M. beyeri
noting that the atypically robust hairs below the base of the male’s hind femur are not crowded as in
M. beckeri
,but without mentioning that they are indistinguishable from those of
M. differens
.
Asubset of this complex of species is characterized by the labella of the proboscis being enlarged and with numerous small spinules on their lower faces. These can then be subdivided on the basis of the details of the hypopygia, whether the hairs below the male’s hind femora are unusually robust or at most only moderately robust, as in the common
M. altifrons
(Wood,
1909
)
, and whether the haltere knob is yellow or brown. With regard to the hypopygia the tip of the posteroventral lobe of the epandriun is convex in some but concave in others.
M. beyeri
and
M. differens
belong to the concave group, with brown haltere knobs and identical hind femora. The supposed difference in the number of epandrial bristles merely represents two ends of acontinuous range of variation. It is concluded that
M. beyeri
is asynonym of
M. differens
.The brief (three and ahalf lines) description of the female of
M. beyeri
did not allow its recognition. However, the female of
M. differens
has since been described (Disney
2015
). As
M. beyeri
this species has previously been reported from Switzerland.
We report two males from Ticino after aforest fire (Prescher
et al.
2002
) Waldbrand,
10
June
1997
, Moretti (Bek
19.1
&
142
,
ETHZ
,
19- 175
,
CUMZ
,
19-176
).