A new species of Ischiodon Sack (Diptera, Syrphidae) from Madagascar
Author
Mengual, Ximo
text
African Invertebrates
2018
59
1
55
73
http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/afrinvertebr.59.24461
journal article
http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/afrinvertebr.59.24461
2305-2562-1-55
BCA6F985BE5347C5B64D005DA0DD69BE
Ischiodon aegyptius (Wiedemann, 1830)
Figure 1
Musca nigra
Forsskal
, 1775: xxiv. Type-locality: Egypt, Arabia. Type material most likely lost (not found in the digitised type collection of the ZMUC).
Syrphus aegyptius
Wiedemann, 1830: 133. Type-locality: Eritrea and Ethiopia, as Abyssinia, here restricted. Lectotype ♂, SMF, here designated.
Syrphus senegalensis
Guerin-Meneville
, 1832: pl. 99. [Description in 1844: 545]. Type-locality: Senegal.
Sphaerophoria annulipes
Macquart, 1842: 103. Type-locality: Egypt.
Syrphus longicornis
Macquart, 1842: 154. Type-locality: South Africa.
Syrphus natalensis
Macquart, 1846: 262 (134). Type-locality: South Africa, 'Port
Natal'
.
Syrphus felix
Walker, 1852: 229. Type-locality: Canary Is.
Syrphus brachypterus
Thomson, 1869: 496. Type-locality: Madeira.
Sphaerophoria pyrrura
Bigot, 1884: 99. Type-locality: Senegal.
Sphaerophoria borbonica
Bigot, 1884: 100. Type-locality:
Reunion
Is.
Xanthogramma catalonicum
Andreu, 1926: 110. Type-locality: Spain: Prov. Barcelona, Moya.
Differential diagnosis.
Very common species in the Afrotropical region with yellow markings on abdomen reaching the lateral margins (Fig. 1A, C). Males of
I. aegyptius
have metatrochanters with a long calcar (Fig. 1E) (short calcar in
I. scutellaris
) and the claws of the fore leg are asymmetrical (as in Fig. 5F) (males of
I. feae
also have asymmetrical claws but they do not have a calcar on the metatrochanters). The male genitalia are quite unique with a trilobed surstyli (Fig. 1F). Females are very difficult to distinguish from females of
I. scutellaris
as the pattern of tergite 2, very often used to distinguish them (
Sack 1932
,
Huang and Cheng 2012
,
Speight and Sarthou 2017
), is variable. At this moment, conspecific males, DNA barcodes and/or collecting locality may help to distinguish them.
Figure 1.
Ischiodon aegyptius
(Wiedemann), male ZFMK-DIP-00012424: A Habitus, lateral view B Frontal view C Habitus, dorsal view D Labels E Metacoxa, metatrochanter and metafemur, lateral view F Male genitalia, lateral view (from
Claussen and Barkemeyer 1987
). Scale bars: 1 mm.
Geographical distribution.
African continent and archipelagos, southern Europe, Israel and Arabian Peninsula.
Type-locality.
Wiedemann (1830)
studied an unknown number of specimens from Egypt and Nubia (currently divided into Egypt and Sudan). All the syntypes present in the ZMF collection, collected by
Rueppell
with original handwritten labels, were collected from Abyssinia, a historical region in northern Ethiopia and southern Eritrea, although sometimes east Sudan is also considered part of this kingdom. Thus, the type-locality is here restricted to Eritrea and Ethiopia based on the lectotype designation.
Material examined.
More than 300 specimens from UAE, Israel, Cyprus, Morocco, Canary Islands, Madagascar, Kenya, The Gambia, Central African Republic, Zimbabwe and South Africa.
Remarks.
Amongst the syntypes, deposited at the Senckenberg Forschungsinstitut und Naturmuseum (SMF, Frankfurt am Main, Germany), there is a pinned male labelled "Abyssinia // Dr..
Rueppell."
"289"
[green] "Ischiodon // aegyptius Wd" "Lecto- // Typus" [red] "Dipt. // 300" [reverse] "LECTOTYPE // Ischiodon // aegyptius // det. X. Mengual 2017" [red, second and third lines handwritten]. This specimen is here designated lectotype to fix and ensure the universal and consistent interpretation of the name. The other syntypes, a male and a female without head, have been labelled as paralectotypes: "Abyssinia // Dr..
Rueppell."
"Ischiodon // aegyptius Wd" "Para- // typoid" [red] "Dipt. // 300" [reverse] "PARALECTOTYPE // Ischiodon // aegyptius // det. X. Mengual 2017" [yellow].
Some authors (
Huang et al. 1996
,
Huang and Cheng 2012
) reported specimens identified as I. aegyptius from China, with a complete overlapping distribution inside this country with I. scutellaris (see
Huang and Cheng 2012
). In the
author's
opinion, only I. scutellaris occurs in China and these specimens are misidentifications when the pattern of the tergite 2 is used in females for identification. These works (
Huang et al. 1996
,
Huang and Cheng 2012
) do not specify if there are males of I. aegyptius amongst the studied material, which could be used to corroborate the
author's
opinion.