A new species of the flower fly genus Criorhina Meigen (Diptera: Syrphidae) from mainland China
Author
Li, Hu
College of Life Sciences, Northwest University, Xi’an, Shaanxi, 710069 P. R. China & Shaanxi Key Laboratory of Bio-resources; School of Biological Science & Engineering, Shaanxi University of Technology, Hanzhong, Shaanxi, 723000 P. R. China. & lihu @ snut. edu. cn; https: // orcid. org / 0000 - 0002 - 5453 - 6084
Author
Huo, Ke-Ke
Author
Li, Bao-Guo
text
Zootaxa
2020
2020-06-25
4803
1
169
176
journal article
10.11646/zootaxa.4803.1.9
1175-5326
3908100
5AB3D885-9DB9-42F2-AE78-657BFC333F90
Criorhina rostrata
Li, Huo & Li
sp. nov.
(
Figs 1–17
)
Examined material.
HOLOTYPE
.
♂
,
CHINA
:
Henan Province
,
Luoyang City
,
Luanchuan County
,
Laojunshan
,
10–15.vi.2016
, collected by
Pu Cheng.
PARATYPES
.
18 ♂
5 ♀
, same data as the holotype
.
Body length
. Males, 13.5–15.5 mm (n=19); females, 14.0–16.0 mm (n=5).
Description. MALE.
Head
(
Figs 1–5
,
9–10, 14
). Face (
Fig. 4
) silver pollinose, except black on distal part in frontal view and lateral parts in side view, with ventral part strongly produced downwards; occiput with long, dense, yellowish setae around margin; vertex dark, dark pollinose, with sparse, long, yellowish to dark setae; ocelli brown; eyes (
Figs 3–4
) black, bare; frontal triangle pale-yellowish pollinose (
Fig. 10
), except shiny black on central region; antenna (
Figs 4–5
) with brown scape and pedicel, each with fine setae on distal half and several stout setae on dorso-apical margins, basoflagellomere (
Figs 5
,
9
) yellowish, short, slightly wider than long, with dense, fine setae on surface, and small basomedial sensory pit on inner side, arista yellow on basal half and black on apical half, bare; gena black and bare; proboscis (
Figs 2
,
14
) remarkably elongate, of equal length as body, darker brown.
Thorax
(
Figs 1–2, 7
,
11–13
). Ground color black; with dense long yellow pile on surfaces of humeri and mesonotum; pleuron (
Fig. 2
) black, slightly gray pollinose, sulci sometimes orange. Scutum (
Fig. 1
) with a narrow medial and a pair of two broad pale longitudinal pollinose vittae before transverse suture; posterior anepisternum strongly convex and densely covered by long yellowish setae; anepimeron with slightly shorter and more-slender yellowish gray setae; katepimeron with long yellowish setae; katepisternum sparsely pale yellowish pilose. Scutellum (
Fig. 1
) slightly dark brown pollinose.
Legs
. Coxae, trochanters, femora, fourth and fifth tarsomeres of all legs black, tibiae dark yellowish but dark brown medially, claws yellow with dark brown apical halves (
Fig. 11
) on ventral surface, pulvillus (
Fig. 12
) with specialized setae with inflated apices; coxae and femora (
Fig. 7
) with long yellowish-white pile at ventral margins, metafemur (
Fig. 7
) clearly enlarged centrally and strongly arc-shaped, metatibia (
Fig. 7
) somewhat twisty and flattened.
Wings
(
Figs 1–2
). Hyaline, with slight brown tinge and dark brown transverse band at frontal half of midline, venation prominent and dark brown; intersection of vein R
1
with vein C (
Fig. 25
) narrow, and setae on the antero-ventral half of vein C before crossvein h absent (
Fig. 26
), distance between apices of veins R
1
and R
2+3
slightly longer than that of R
2+3
and R
4+5
+M
1
; wing surface generally covered with tightly placed microtrichia (
Fig. 13
) except basal halves of 1
st
and
2
nd
basal cells (cells R and M) where they are sparse or absent.
Abdomen
(
Fig. 6
). Tapered to round apex, black, covered in long yellow setae. 1
st
tergum
slightly gray pollinose, with yellow anterolateral corners; 2
nd
tergum (
Fig. 6
) with two large, widely separated, gray pollinose maculae, 3
rd
and 4
th
terga (
Fig. 6
) with similar but smaller pollinose regions.
Male terminalia
(
Figs 15–17
). Cercus (
Fig. 16
) weakly developed, slender and oblong, surface covered in pili-like setae; surstylus (
Figs 15–16
) large, with clearly triangular process pointed medially and long setae on dorsal margins. Hypandrium (
Figs 16–17
) with well sclerotized and tubular hypandrial theca, with frontal margin truncate, basal half clearly bulbous, inflated and round in ventral aspect, medial area with a pair of triangular prominences, and sheet processes, apex elongate, bilobate, each produced into a stout process twisted ventrally. Aedeagus (
Fig. 17
) clearly short, stout, and bent ventrally, aedeagal apodeme long, posterior end slightly inflated.
FIGURES 1–8.
Criorhina rostrata
sp. nov.
1–7. Male; 8. Female. 1. Habitus, dorsal view; 2. Habitus, lateral view; 3. Head, lateral view; 4, 8. Head, frontal view; 5. Antenna, dorso-frontal view; 6. Abdomen, dorsal view; 7. Metafemur and metatibia, antero-lateral view. Scale bars=5.0 mm (1–2), 2.0 mm (3–4, 6–8), 1.0 mm (5).
FIGURES 9–14.
SEM photographs of
Criorhina rostrata
sp. nov.
9. Microsetae on surface of basoflagellomere; 10. Pollinosity on frontal triangle; 11. Microsetae on ventral surface of claw; 12. Specialized setae on pulvillus; 13. Microtrichia on surface of wing; 14. Middle part of proboscis.
FEMALE
. Body coloration pattern and appearance similar to male except the wholly black and bare face (
Fig. 8
), metafemur less inflated compared to that of male, and slightly larger in body size.
Etymology.
The specific epithet of the new species name,
rostrata
, is derived from the Latin word “
rostratus
”, meaning the species has a conspicuously long proboscis nearly as long as the entire body.
Differential diagnosis.
The body appearance and color pattern of the new species is somewhat similar to
Criorhina brevipila
Loew, 1871
, but it is distinguishable from the latter and other members of
Criorhina
by the follow- ing features: bumblebee mimic; a long proboscis; an silver pollinose face with black apex in front view in male but shiny black and bare in female; long yellow pile on thorax and abdomen; strongly developed, arc-shaped metafemur and twisted metatibia; the hypandrium medially with a pair of triangular prominences and lamellar processes, and also the stout aedeagus.