The Palaearctic species of the Pegomya terminalis species group (Diptera: Anthomyiidae), with descriptions of two new species
Author
Michelsen, Verner
text
Zootaxa
2008
1781
31
46
journal article
10.5281/zenodo.274299
2c96ce04-c14f-4f7b-8714-885b380e97b1
1175-5326
274299
The
Pegomya terminalis
species group
Griffiths (1983)
defined a
Pegomya terminalis
superspecies in which he identified 5 Nearctic and 1 Holarctic species. The monophyly of this species group was strongly supported by a peculiar elongation of the distal part of the phallus (e.g.,
Fig. 21
). However, the
Pegomya terminalis
species group as defined in the present paper even includes a species,
P. granadensis
Ackland
, without the elongation of the distal phallus (
Fig. 13
). The argument for grouping
P. granadensis
together with
P. terminalis
and allied species is the obvious agreement in a number of apomorphic traits in the female abdomen and oviscapt (see
Figs. 14, 15
and
22, 23
): length of tergite V tends to exceed combined length of tergites III and IV; fully extended oviscapt with very long “intersegmental” membranes and 1.5–2.0x as long as remaining abdomen, portion distal to segment VI increasingly depressed; segment VI short, but abundantly setose at hind margins of weakly sclerotized tergite and sternite; segments VII and VIII very long, with numerous fine to very reduced setulae at hind margins; epiproct more or less reduced, with 0–3 apical setulae; hypoproct small, with scattered setulae and no cuticular pubescence; cerci depressed, only bearing short setulae and sensilla, towards apex forming a cutting edge (less evident in
P. granadensis
).
The
Pegomya terminalis
species group is presently known by five species endemic to the Nearctic (
Griffiths 1983
):
P. g l a b r a
(Stein, 1920),
P. d i s t i c h a
Griffiths, 1983
,
P. flaviventris
Griffiths, 1983
,
P. aldrichi
Griffiths, 1983
and
P. cedrica
Huckett, 1939
. A further species recorded from
Canada
as ‘
P. terminalis
(Rondani)
’ by
Griffiths (1983
,
1997
) appears to be new. From the West Palaearctic subregion are presently known five species, of which four are largely Mediterranean:
P. terminalis
(
Rondani, 1866
)
ranging from
Spain
and
Morocco
to
Uzbekistan
,
P. granadensis
Ackland, 1977
from
Spain
and
Morocco
,
P. s k u l e i
sp. nov.
from
Greece
, and an undescribed species known by a single female from
Turkey
(aff.
P. granadensis
). The fifth species,
P. glabroides
sp. nov.
, has a northern and montane distribution in Europe. Finally, the
P. terminalis
group is represented by an undescribed species in
South Africa
(D.M. Ackland
in litt.
).
Very little is known about the biology of the
Pegomya terminalis
species group except for the brief but significant note by
Huckett (1941: 61)
that two females of
P. glabra
from Washington state had emerged from horsetail (
Equisetum
sp.). On that background it may be inferred that all members of the
P. terminalis
species group have larvae that feed in stems of horsetails. The unusual association with horsetails is supported by the peculiar structure of the oviscapt having sharp-edged cerci in combination with the smooth and slender eggs. Both suggest that the females are capable of inserting their eggs through the tough, siliceous tissues of their host plants. It remains to be discovered whether the larvae live inside the aerial stems or the underground rhizomes. The distribution of the species of the
P. terminalis
species group in the West Palaearctic subregion is either northern and montane or Mediterranean, which suggests that only a few of the species of
Equisetum
occurring in the subregion are exploited as host plants, such as the southern
E. ramosissimum
(branched horsetail) and the boreal and montane
E. variegatum
(variegated horsetail).
Few phytophagous insects are specialized feeders on
Equisetum
, notably the larvae of some sawflies and weevils. Among
Diptera
, such association is known only for three species of
Liriomyza
Mik (Agromyzidae)
.