Taxonomic notes on Western Palaearctic Conopidae (Diptera)
Author
Stuke, Jens-Hermann
text
Zootaxa
2016
4178
4
521
534
journal article
10.11646/zootaxa.4178.4.4
91768d2f-3bdc-4512-bb6b-22f841103733
1175-5326
163589
0FC215B7-B640-42E5-9709-64CC15581D97
Key to the
Western
Palaearctic species of
Physocephala
Schiner, 1861
1 Anepimeron completely but lightly dusted, without hairs or bristles (except
biguttata
, which has obviously long hairs); frons often with distinct black or brown markings; gena brown to black and usually darker than rest of face (although
texana
can have a more or less light gena); basal aristomere is usually distinct and well developed (
biguttata
has a less well developed basal aristomere); basal flagellomere ventrally with a distinct demarcated membranous area; wing usually completely covered with microtrichia with the exception of cubital cell cup, which is more or less without microtrichia................... 2
- Anepimeron shining, and with black hairs or bristles (these may be broken off); frons usually unicolorous, at most with only obscure markings or sometimes more or less completely black in melanistic specimens; gena not usually darker than rest of face (
pusilla
can have a more or less dark face); basal aristomere usually hard to detect, if present at all; basal flagellomere ventrally has at most only an indistinctly demarcated membranous area; wing completely covered with microtrichia, or basal medial and basal radial cells without microtrichia........................................................... 5
2 Face with obvious black central keel; no broad stripe of grey dusting adjacent to posterior margin of eye; parafacia at most only very narrowly silver dusted; thorax usually completely black with the exception of the postpronotum, which can be reddish brown; no band of dense dusting reaching from mid coxa to notopleuron, side of thorax often more or less completely bare of dusting; anterior margin of radial cell r4+5 completely brown; calypters can be completely dark brown but at least with a dark brown margin....................................................................................... 3
- Face without black central keel; obvious stripe of grey to silver dusting adjacent to posterior margin of eye; parafacia may be broadly silver dusted; thorax variable reddish brown, and always with an orange-brown scutellum; dense, often silvery dusting at least on the katepisternum and often much more extensively on side of thorax; anterior margin of radial cell r4+5 at least partly hyaline (
texana
can have a complete brown anterior margin); calypter completely yellowish white to light brown... 4
3 Black facial stripe not forked ventrally, not extending ventrally downwards at sides of facial grooves; antenna at least partly black; proboscis uniformly blackish; cell cup usually completely without microtrichia; hind edges of tergites 3-5 with wide, indistinctly delimited dust bands which are clearly broader in the middle.....................
P. rufipes
(
Fabricius, 1781
)
- Black facial stripe deeply and broadly forked ventrally, extending downwards on both sides for almost the entire length of the facial grooves; antenna orange to orange-brown; proboscis becoming lighter brown to orange distally and ending in a blackish labellum; cell cup entirely or almost entirely covered with microtrichia; hind edges of tergites 3-5 with narrow, clearly delimited dust bands of even width.........................................................
P. nigra
(
De Geer, 1776
)
4 Mediotergite and anepimeron with distinct long hairs; long haired species, e. g. hairs on the mesoscutum about as long as scape; antenna black; fore margin of wing black to blackish brown tinged, r2+3 completely black; veins of the wing black to dark brown; proboscis completely black; endemic to the Canary Islands.......................
P. biguttata
Röder, 1883
- Mediotergite and anepimeron without hairs; short haired species, e. g. hairs on the mesoscutum less than ¼ as long as scape; antenna more or less orange-brown; fore margin of wing light brown, r2+3 with a more or less distinct hyaline spot apically; at least subcostal vein Sc yellow brown; proboscis more or less orange-brown; introduced Nearctic species, so far known only from
Ukraine
...................................................................
P. texana
(
Williston, 1882
)
5 Hind coxa not dusted at all or at least not more densely dusted than middle and fore coxae; pleura usually without dense dusting; if there is a dusting stripe, it begins dorsal to the katepisternum at a point clearly above the middle coxa, and becomes narrower before reaching the notopleuron; typically, mediotergite dorsally without dense dusting which connects the dense dusted spots on the katatergites; arista three-segmented; basal segment usually small but well developed and only occasional hard to detect when retracted into the basal flagellomere; wing characteristically with a distinct, dark foremarginal band; costal cell c and subcostal cell sc always hyaline, and obviously lighter than base of cell r2+3; subcostal vein Sc yellowish brown and obviously lighter than the dark brown radial vein R2+3; radial cell r2+3 usually hyaline distally, with an isolated spot around vein R4+5+M.........................................................................
P. vittata
(
Fabricius, 1794
)
- Hind coxa distinctly more densely dusted than middle and fore coxae; pleura always with an obvious dusting stripe running
from the middle coxa and usually reaching the notopleuron without becoming narrower (although in
vaginalis
it becomes distinctly narrower); typically, mediotergite dorsally with dense dusting which connects the dense dusted spots on the katatergites; arista two-segmented, basal aristomere not developed (except
variegata
, which has a three-segmented arista) wing usually with different colouration pattern......................................................................... 6
6 Dusting stripe on pleura becoming narrower dorsally; female: theca obviously elongated (
Stuke & Standfuss 2007: Fig 11
)................................................................................
P. vaginalis
(
Rondani, 1865
)
- Dusting stripe on pleura reaching the notopleuron broadly, not becoming narrower dorsally; female: theca not elongated... 7
7 Parafacia completely silver-white dusted; blackish foremarginal band on wing reduced, not reaching beyond radial vein R4+5, and radial cell r2+3 at most dark basally; basal medial cell bm and basal radial cell br almost without microtrichia, discal medial cell dm more or less without microtrichia; arista three-segmented, basal segment usually small but well developed and only occasionally hard to detect when retracted into the basal flagellomere......................
P. variegata
(
Meigen, 1824
)
- Parafacia at most very narrowly dusted at eye margin; blackish foremarginal band on wing usually broader (although
antiqua
can have a reduced blackish wing margin similar to
P. variegata
); wing cells completely covered with microtrichia (except
P. antiqua
, which has at least cell br without microtrichia); arista two-segmented, basal aristomere not developed.......... 8
8 Basal radial cell br completely without microtrichia, or in darker winged male specimens at least with a central stripe lacking microtrichia; subcostal cell sc usually distinctly lighter than radial cell r2+3; subcostal vein Sc usually as dark as R2+3; wing pattern very variable but usually more restricted; in less well marked specimens the dark pattern is restricted to a small black band between subcosta Sc and radial vein R4+5, and cell r2+3 is only basally darkened; if base of cubital cell cua1 is not hyaline then there is no distinct border between the dark base and the hyaline tip; if cell dm is dark brown then in most cases it is distinctly lighter than cell r2+3............................................................
P. antiqua
(
Wiedemann, 1830
)
- Basal radial cell br completely covered with microtrichia; either subcostal cell sc blackish like radial cell r2+3, and subcostal vein Sc dark like the radial vein R2+3,or subcostal cell sc hyaline and distinctly lighter than radial cell r2+3, and subcostal vein Sc distinctly lighter than the dark brown to black radial vein R2+3; wing pattern very variable, but never as restricted as
antiqua
can be; the base of cubital cell cua1 is uniformly blackish and almost always has a distinct border alongside the hyaline apical part; cell dm in most specimens is as brown to blackish as cell r2+3................................................... 9
9 Costal cell c and subcostal cell sc blackish like the adjacent cells; subcostal vein Sc black to dark brown like radius R2+3; radial cell r2+3 usually hyaline apically; base of cubital cell cua1 usually blackish; specimens with more or less black femora are frequent...........................................................................
P. pusilla
(
Meigen, 1804
)
- Costal cell and subcostal cell more or less hyaline, obvious lighter than the dark brown adjacent cells; subcostal vein Sc light yellow, obviously lighter than radius R2+3; radial cell r2+3 typically completely black; base of cubital cell cua1 hyaline in most specimens; legs usually completely orange-brown...................................
P. chrysorrhoea
(
Meigen, 1824
)