The fast-running flies (Diptera, Hybotidae, Tachydromiinae) of Singapore and adjacent regions
Author
Grootaert, Patrick
Author
Shamshev, Igor V.
text
European Journal of Taxonomy
2012
2012-01-06
5
1
162
journal article
10.5852/ejt.2012.5
e809cd3a-36bb-413d-9f19-70837d7db34b
3715167
B69F002A-C1A0-439D-9477-62BFA87DEAD7
Genus
Stilpon
Loew, 1859
Agatachys
Meigen, 1830: 343
(as MS name '
Agatachys flavipes
' of Winthem).Type-species:
Tachydromia celeripes
Meigen, 1830
(=
T. graminum
Fallén, 1815
) [designation by
Coquillett, 1910: 504
], by monotypy. Suppressed by the I.C.Z.N. (1997: 200 [Opinion 1881]), see
Cumming & Evenhuis (1996)
.
Stilpon
Loew, 1859: 34
(as subgenus of
Drapetis
Meigen
). Type-species:
Tachydromia graminum
Fallén, 1815
, by subsequent designation
Loew, 1864: 5
).
Tetraneurella
Dahl, 1909: 362
. Type-species:
T. beckeri
Dahl, 1909
[=
Stilpon graminum
(Fallén, 1915)
], by monotypy.
Pseudostilpon
Séguy, 1950: 83
. Type-species:
Tachydromia paludosa
Perris, 1852
, by original designation.
Recognition
Stilpon
is recognized from other drapetine genera that occur in the Oriental Region by the following combination of features: eyes contiguous on face, frons with sides nearly parallel; antenna with dorsoapical arista-like stylus; wing with cell br much shorter than cell bm, A
1
very weak or absent; abdominal tergites lacking squamiform setae; male terminalia with single rod-shaped ejaculatory apodeme.
Diagnosis
Very small flies, usually 1.0-
1.5 mm
(rarely 2.0-
2.5 mm
). Eyes contiguous on face. Ommatidia slightly enlarged below antennae. Frons linear to sublinear, narrow to fairly wide. Face strongly convex. Gena barely extended below eye.Ocellar tubercle with 2pairs of bristles.One pair of prominent inclinate vertical bristles. Antennae with pedicel large and globose, bearing long ventral preapical seta; postpedicel small, ovate, with very prominent dorsoapical extension; stylus dorsoapical, long. Palpus elongate-ovate, with distinct apical seta. Thorax blackish brown to yellow in ground-colour. Scutum shiney or tomentose; anepisternum largely shiney. Thoracic bristles mostly only slightly prominent. Metaepimeron large. Halter with knob yellow to black, rarely absent. Wing normally developed or sometimes shortened; nearly hyaline or with distinct pattern; Rs originating halfway along R
1;
vein R
2+3
complete or incomplete; cell br short, distinctly less than length of cell bm; crossvein bm-cu nearly transverse; A
1
and crossvein CuA
2
absent. Legs short, often with distinct colour pattern; fore femur thickened; mid femur slender to barely thickened, usually armed with bristles and spinules or spines arranged in specific patterns; fore tibia more or less spindle-like; mid tibia often armed with ventral spinules; hind tibia slender, lacking prominent bristles, rarely with modified posterior apical comb. Abdomen with segments 1-7 lightly sclerotised, rarely segments 1-2 modified; squamiform setae absent. Gland-like intersegmental structures present or absent. Male terminalia asymmetrical, rotated 90° to right. Epandrium completely divided. Left epandrial lamella small and fused to hypandrium. Left surstylus divided into 3 (or 4) lobes; upper lobe with or without surstylar comb. Right epandrial lamella usually large, positioned ventrally. Right surstylus large to moderately large, undivided, sometimes with apical spines. Cerci, including subepandrial sclerite, fused together basally, rarely fused completely into one large lobe, sometimes greatly reduced and bearing apical spines. Phallus elongate, well sclerotised, hair-like or, rarely, straight or very short and rather weakly sclerotised; single rod-shaped ejaculatory apodeme present. Female similar to male except ordinary setation on mid legs and unmodified abdominal segments 1-2; abdomen always without gland-like structures; terminalia short to elongate; tergite 8 not fused laterally with sternite 8; sternite 8 entire, or with apex hinged and partly or completely separated from base. Cercus elongate-ovate or broadly ovate.
Remarks
The species of the genus
Stilpon
are distributed in the Afrotropical (2 species), Nearctic (13 species), Oriental (26 species) and Palaearctic (12 species) regions, with 54 currently known species (including 5 new species recognised herein from
Singapore
).
Smith (1965)
described the first Oriental species
Stilpon divergens
.
Shamshev & Grootaert (2004b)
published 15 new species of
Stilpon
found in northeastern
Thailand
above
500 m
altitude. Two short papers followed: first with two new species from
Cambodia
(
Shamshev & Grootaert 2006
) and second with two new species from southern
China
(
Shamshev
et al.
2005
).
Cumming & Cooper (1992)
recognised three informal species groups of
Stilpon
(
S. varipes
group,
S. graminum
group, and
S. divergens
group), and
Shamshev & Grootaert (2004b)
added the
S. seeluang
group.
Species of
Stilpon
are quite rare at low altitudes in the tropics as is demonstrated here too. On the other hand they are quite common at higher altitudes as is shown by the material collected during the TIGER project in
Thailand
. In the latter survey project,
Stilpon
is as common and diverse as
Platypalpus
and
Elaphropeza
and many new species await description.
Species of this genus inhabit different biotopes but usually occurring in the low-lying vegetation zones (
Collin 1961
;
Chvála 1975
;
Cumming & Cooper 1992
;
Przhiboro & Shamshev 2007
).
The key given below is limited to
Stilpon
from low altitudes including only
S. laawae
of the 15 species known from northern
Thailand
(
Shamshev & Grootaert 2004b
).
Key to species of
Stilpon
from
Singapore
1. Thorax entirely black.............................................................................................................................2
– Thorax at least with yellow pleura........................................................................................................5
2. Wing lacking R
2+3
. Palpus brown...................................................................
S. nigripennis
sp. nov.
– Wing with R
2+3
. Palpus yellow..............................................................................................................3
3. R
4+5
strongly curved toward costa in apical part; distance between apices of R
2+3
and R
4+5
about 1.5 times shorter than distance between apices of R
1
and R
2+3
. Hind femur (except narrow basal portion) brownish. Male: abdominal tergite 1 produced laterally into small corner-like projection bearing 3 short bristles................................................................................
S. singaporensis
sp. nov.
–R
4+5
evenly arcuate; distance between apices of R
2+3
and R
4+5
at least subequal to distance between apices of R
1
and R
2+3.
Hind femur wholly yellow. Abdominal tergite 1 unmodified........................4
4. Only tarsomere 5 of all legs black. Male: mid femur with 3 moderately long, ventral, brownish bristles in basal 1/3 (
Fig. 203
). (
Cambodia
)...............................
S. goesi
Shamshev & Grootaert, 2006
– Tarsomere 5 of all legs and tarsomere 1 of hind leg brownish. Male: mid femur with 1 black, posteroventral spine beyond middle and row of 7 spine-like bristles in basal part (
Fig. 199
). (
Cambodia
)....................................................................
S. angkorensis
Shamshev & Grootaert, 2006
5. Hind tibia strongly curved. Halter yellow..........................................................
S. arcuatum
sp. nov.
– Hind tibia unmodified. Halter brownish or black.................................................................................6
6. Scutum entirely brown. Hind femur largely brownish......
S. malayensis
Shamshev & Grootaert, 2004
– Scutum largely yellow, with brownish patch above wing base. Hind femur at most somewhat brownish in apical part.........................................................................................................................................7
7. Wing finely infuscate; R
4+5
slightly arcuate in apical part. Male: upper lobe of left surstylus lacking surstylar comb (
Fig. 211
). (
Thailand
;
Singapore
)...................
S. laawae
Shamshev & Grootaert, 2004
– Wing maculate or darker along some veins........................................................................................8
8. Wing maculate; vein R
4+5
strongly curved toward costa in apical part. Male: upper lobe of left surstylus with markedly developed surstylar comb (
Fig. 223
) (
Singapore
)..................
S. neesoonensis
sp. nov.
– Wing broadly brownish infuscate along R
2+3
and CuA
1
(except subapical part). R
4+5
evenly curved toward costa in apical part. Male: upper lobe of left surstylus lacking surstylar comb (
Fig. 233
) (
Singapore
)...........................................................................................................
S. weilingae
sp. nov.