Review of the genus Cyrtosia Perris (Diptera: Mythicomyiidae: Platypyginae) in Iran, with description of three new species
Author
Gharali, Babak
Author
Evenhuis, Neal
text
Zootaxa
2017
4269
2
230
244
journal article
32999
10.11646/zootaxa.4269.2.3
38f686ec-d435-40e6-8d43-58d7e7b8ae70
1175-5326
582011
01E8B213-8F9D-45E4-86CD-893716D3A295
Cyrtosia meridionalis
Rondani
Cyrtosia meridionalis
Rondani, 1863
: 73
.
Material examined.
No material was available for study. Apparently, the type specimen is lost (type depository is unknown) so the original description was checked and used for comparison.
Description.
Color of frons, lower face and oral margin completely yellow; proboscis slightly shorter than head; antennae black. Thorax. Mesonotum with three stripes coalescent as a large black pattern, middle stripes extend from anterior margin of mesonotum to scutellum; postpronotal lobe, lateral margin of mesonotum from postpronotal lobe to postalar callus almost yellow; scutellum all yellow except small spot of black basomedially; halter yellow. Legs. Yellow except base of coxae and tarsal segments blackish; femora gray dusted. Wing. Hyaline, with yellow veins; stalk of vein M1+2 slightly longer than preceding section. Abdomen. Tergites anteriorly black, posteriorly yellow, with short whitish hairs, some with bluish sheen. Genitalia. Hypopygium black.
Remarks.
This species was originally described based on an unspecified number of specimens collected in
Italy
. The original description by
Rondani (1863)
was very short, in Latin and included few characters: body yellow; antennae and proboscis black; occiput glossy black; thorax dorsally with three wide stripes, with black spot in front of wing base, pleura blackened; scutellum completely yellow.
Later,
Becker & Stein (1912)
extended the distribution of
C. meridionalis
to south of
Iran
by recording
4 male
and female specimens collected by
Zarudny
in
1898 in
two provinces of southeast of
Iran
,
Sistan-Baluchistan
and
Kerman
.
Engel
(1933)
redescribed this species in more detail based on specimens collected from
Askhabad
, Turkmenistan and provided two illustrations of the lateral and dorsal view of the mesonotum. Engel’s description includes some diagnostic characters allowing for easy separation of
C. meridionalis
from closely related species known from Iran. Based on Engel’s (1933) redescription, we here provide a diagnostic description of the species.