Revision of world Sphecomyia Latreille (Diptera, Syrphidae)
Author
M. Moran, Kevin
Author
H. Skevington, Jeffrey
text
ZooKeys
2019
836
15
79
http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.836.30326
journal article
http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.836.30326
1313-2970-836-15
0A4087DD0AD44D9CB5DE0A38639153F4
0A4087DD0AD44D9CB5DE0A38639153F4
Sphecomyia
stat. rev.
Figs 1, 2
A-F
, 2J, 3B, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24, 25, 26, 27
Sphecomye
Latreille 1825
: 495.
Sphecomyia
Latreille in
Bory 1829
: 545 (also
Latreille 1829
: 495) -
Williston 1886
: 256;
Osburn 1908
: 14;
Shannon 1925
: 43;
Curran 1932
: 8; Stone 1965: 612;
Weisman 1965
: 265,
1966a
: 50,
1966b
: 189;
Vockeroth and Thompson 1987
: 736. Type species:
Chrysotoxum vittatum
Wiedemann 1830
by subsequent designation of
Macquart 1842
.
Epopter
Wiedemann 1830
: 91. Synonymy in
Evenhuis and Pont 2013
: 28. Type species:
Psarus ornatus
Wiedemann, 1830 [=
Sphecomyia vittata
(Wiedemann, 1830)], by monotypy.
Tyzenhausia
Gorski 1852
: 172. Synonymy in Wahlberg, 1854: 155. Type species:
Tyzenhausia vespiformis
Gorski 1852
, by original designation.
Eurhinomallota
Bigot 1882
: 78. Type species:
Eurhinomallota metallica
Bigot 1882
by original designation. Syn. n.
Eurhynomallota
Bigot 1883
: 225. Unjustified emendation of
Eurhinomallota
.
Eurinomallota
Kertesz
1910
: 62. Unjustified emendation of
Eurhinomallota
.
Brachymyia
Williston 1882a
: 77 -
Williston 1882b
: 330;
Shatalkin 1975
: 131. Type species:
Brachymyia lupina
Williston 1882, by original designation. Syn. n.
Diagnosis.
Male dichoptic. Both sexes with bare, medial vitta extending ventrally from oral margin, usually to base of antenna, except interrupted by pruinosity at facial tubercle in
S. interrupta
and only extending to facial tubercle in
S. metallica
. Gena bare. Katepimeron bare. Scutellum with at least anterior margin densely pruinose. Narrow intersection of vein R1 with vein C. Anterior ventral half of vein C before crossvein h without setae. Distance between apices of veins R1 and R2+3 longer than distance between apices of veins R2+3 and vein R4+5+M1. Abdominal pile erect. Phallapodeme banana-shaped.
Redescription.
Male. Body length: 9.2-17.1 mm. Wing length: 7.7-12.1 mm. Head. Face black, bare, concave beneath antenna, produced downwards and pruinose except with bare, medial vitta extending from oral margin, usually to base of antenna, except interrupted by pruinosity at facial tubercle in male
S. interrupta
Moran sp. n., and only extending to facial tubercle in male
S. metallica
(Bigot, 1882) or just beyond in the female; gena broad, as broad or broader than long, bare, shiny; anterior tentorial pit short, extending along ventral one-third of eye, pilose; frontal prominence distinct; frons broad, of variable size, at least partially pruinose; vertex variable in shape and pruinosity; ocellar triangle pilose, small; eye bare; male dichoptic; antenna length variable; kidney-shaped basoflagellomere, except sub-triangular in
S. brevicornis
,
S. vespiformis
and
S. vittata
, with bare arista dorsally placed.
Thorax. About as long as broad, short pilose except in
Sphecomyia metallica
; postpronotum pilose; proepimeron pilose; anterior anepisternum bare, posterior anepisternum pilose; scutum with or without pruinose vittae; scutellum with at least anterior margin densely pruinose, without apical sulcus and with ventral pile fringe; katepisternum bare anteriorly, discontinuously pilose posteriorly with broadly separated patches; anepimeron with anterior portion pilose, and dorsomedial and posterior bare; katepimeron bare; metathoracic pleuron bare; without hypopleural pile at the base of the posterior thoracic spiracle; meron bare, except variable pilose in
S. vespiformis
; metathoracic spiracle about same size as flagellum; metasternum pilose; postmetacoxal bridge incomplete; plumula simple, elongate, short, not reaching calypteral margin; calypter yellow.
Legs. Coxae pilose anteriorly, bare posteriorly; hind coxa pruinose anteriorly; metafemur narrow, at most slightly swollen, without basoventral setose patch; metatibia transverse apically, rounded basoventrally.
Wing. Hyaline; stigmatic crossvein present; crossvein r-m at outer fourth of cell dm; anterior ventral half of vein C before crossvein h without setae (Fig. 3B); narrow intersection of vein R1 with vein C (Fig. 3B); distance between apices of veins R1 and R2+3 longer than distance between apices of veins R2+3 and R4+5+M1 (Fig. 3B); cell r2+3 open; vein R4+5 straight; vein R4+5+M1 no longer than crossvein h; vein M2 absent; vein CuP+CuA short, curved.
Abdomen. Oval, slightly longer than broad, often with pruinose bands; abdominal pile erect.
Male genitalia. Surstyli symmetric; aedeagus segmented, with phallapodeme separated from basiphallus and distiphallus; phallapodeme banana-shaped (Fig. 2
A-O
); well-developed ctenidion.
Female.
As in male, except for usual sexual dimorphism.
Distribution.
13 Nearctic (12 Western, 1 Eastern) and 3 Palaearctic species.
Remarks.
Latreille (1825)
first referenced the genus in French vernacular as
Sphecomye
based on specimens collected in Carolina by D. Bose. No description was included, nor was a specific epithet assigned to the specimens, thus the name is considered unavailable.
Stark (1828)
provided a translation from French vernacular as
Sphecomyia
, but as it referenced
Latreille (1825)
it still is not considered available.
Sphecomyia
is first made available in
Latreille (1829)
in which description of the genus is provided.
Macquart (1842)
designated
Chrysotoxum vittatum
Wiedemann as the type species by monotypy.
In this paper,
Sphecomyia
is redefined as the monophyletic unit of species within
Criorhinina
that possess the following characters: a bare, medial vitta extending ventrally from the oral margin in both sexes, a bare gena, a bare katepimeron, a scutellum with at least anterior margin densely pruinose, an anterior ventral half of vein C before crossvein h without setae and a narrow intersection of vein R1 with vein C. While the combination of characters used to define
Sphecomyia
is unique, the subtribe
Criorhinina
is rife with homoplasy and the presence of one or more of these character states without all the others should not be taken as an indication a species belongs in
Sphecomyia
.
Brachymyia
Williston, 1882 and
Eurhinomallota
Bigot, 1882 are newly synonymized with
Sphecomyia
as the type species of both genera fall within this definition and are combined with it as a result of this change. This decision is further supported
by
molecular evidence showing a close relationship with
Sphecomyia
, i.e., the present COI gene tree and a multi-gene molecular phylogeny of the
Criorhinina
which will be presented in an upcoming paper. It is the authors opinion that combination with
Sphecomyia
, as opposed to resurrecting the concept as a monotypic genus, serves to emphasize its relationship with the group.
There are three major, monophyletic lineages of
Sphecomyia
. The vittata group, composed of the species with pruinose vittae on the scutum, i.e., S.
brevicornis
,
S. interrupta
sp. n.,
S. sexfasciata
Moran sp. n.,
S. vespiforme
, and
S. vittata
. Secondly, the
pattonii
group comprised of species with broadened fore tarsi and without pruinose vittae on the scutum, i.e.,
S. aino
(Stackelberg, 1955),
S. cryptica
Moran sp. n.,
S. dyari
,
S. hoguei
Moran sp. n.,
S. oraria
Moran sp. n.,
S. pattonii
,
S. pseudosphecomima
Moran sp. n.,
S. tsherepanovi
(Violovitsh, 1973), and
S. weismani
Moran sp. n. The third group comprises only one species,
Sphecomyia metallica
, which has a completely pruinose scutum.
S. metallica
shares several characters with the vittata group. It has elongated surstyli, with a rounded baso-ventral lobe, reminiscent of the vittata group and it lacks the broadened fore tarsi of the
pattonii
group. Morphological characters of
Sphecomyia
are discussed in greater detail in the morphology section (see below).
Also of note,
Shatalkin (1975)
redefined
Brachymyia
as representing the species of
Criorhina
which lack a ventral scutellar fringe and possess hypopleural pile. The type of
Brachymyia
,
Sphecomyia metallica
, does not fit this generic definition as it has a ventral scutellar fringe and lacks hypopleural pile. Neither
Criorhina berberina
(Fabricius, 1805) nor the other species Shatalkin combined with
Brachymyia
are closely related to the type. Definitions of other criorhinine genera might change after this work.