Morphometrics in the genus Amenia and revisionary notes on the Australian Ameniinae (Diptera: Calliphoridae), with the description of eight new species
Author
Colless, D. H.
text
Records of the Australian Museum
1998
1998-05-13
50
1
85
123
https://journals.australian.museum/colless-1998-rec-aust-mus-501-85123/
journal article
10.3853/j.0067-1975.50.1998.1275
bff05bfd-3c82-4fdb-b873-50f234f60d30
0067-1975
4652889
Amenia nigromaculata
Malloch
Formosiomima nigromaculata
Crosskey, 1965: 124
.
The species has a largely coastal distribution in southwestern
Australia
, from Exmouth Gulf in the north and eastwards along the Great Australian Bight as far as Yalata in
South Australia
(
Fig. 10
). Although overlapping broadly with
A. longicornis
,
it occurs alone along the westernandsouthwesterncoastsofWesternAustralia. This is no doubt correlated in some fashion with the biology of the host-snails, which are species of
Bothriembryon
(
Orthalicidae
):
B. balteolus
Iredale
,
B. bulla
Menke
and
B. glauerti
Iredale (
Ferrar, 1976
)
.
The phylogenetic evidence in Part 3 (
Figs 20-22
) suggests that
A. nigromaculata
is the sister species of
A. chrysame
.
This is consistent with their complementary distributions in areas that differ markedly in rainfall. Separate generic status for the former species would therefore be quite inappropriate, despite its conspicuously different colour pattern. This is not accompanied by any significant structural differences, and is presumably due to a long period of isolation in southwestern
Australia
in a different host snail (I am indebted to a referee for the information that
A. chrysame
lives largely (?entirely) outside the range of
Bothriembryon
).
Tribe
Parameniini
I am including in this tribe the mainly Oriental genus
Catapicephala
,
which was added to the subfamily by
Kurahashi (1989)
, but placed in its own, monotypic tribe (he also adds West Irian to the range of C.
splendens).
I do this on good phenetic grounds. Examination of a specimen of each sex of C.
splendens
Macquart and a female of the
type
species, C.
ingens
(Walker), shows that they closely resemble
Paramenia
spp. in the relatively large size, the rather distinctive coloration, the absence of the facial carina and apical
pv
spine on the hind tibia, and the presence of a posthumeral bristle set in front of or a little externally to the presutural bristle. These attributes are probably all plesiomorphic, and the tribe may well be paraphyletic; but that is a small price to pay for a more balanced classification. (A referee has pointed out that, in any case,
Catapicephalini
Kurahashi, 1989
is a
nomen nudum).
Genus
Paramenia
Brauer & Bergenstamm
The genus, which is confined to
Australia
and New
Guinea
, is very distinct: principally in lacking the facial carina, which is well developed in other genera (differences from the non-Australian
Catapicephala
are given in the key to genera). Unlike other ameniines, the prosternal setae may also be reduced or absent, an attribute that was regarded by
Crosskey (1965)
as of little or no taxonomic use within
Paramenia
.
Per contra, I find that there are always at least 2-3 fine hairs present in
P. semiauriceps
(
63 specimens
) whereas they are almost always lacking (6/7
cS cS,
9/109 9) in
Paramenia angustifrons
.
I have added this feature to the key below, as well as the difference in relative width of the gena. Crosskey noted the latter feature, but I have used my own system of measurement (see Part 1). I might add that PCA of a set of head dimensions (not shown) clearly separates the two species.
I can add nothing else to Crosskey's detailed descriptions, beyond noting that both species have a small tuft of setulae on the suprasquamal ridge, as in all the large species of
Amenia
(i.e., excluding
chrysame
and
longicornis
).