Additions to the British list of Megaselia Rondani (Diptera: Phoridae), including two new species, from the crowns of ancient pollarded trees
Author
Disney, R. H. L.
Department of Zoology, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UK;
Author
Russell-Smith, A.
Doddington, Sittingbourne, Kent, UK
text
Journal of Natural History
2014
2014-12-20
49
25
1599
1626
journal article
21058
10.1080/00222933.2014.974703
88042df7-dae6-4b66-93eb-9fcbe4706bdd
1464-5262
4006314
1CC46F9C-AB02-446C-BF83-4D9529508DFA
Megaselia crassipes
(Wood)
(
Figures 1–3
)
Phora crassipes
Wood 1909
, p. 24
Aphiochaeta dactylata
Lundbeck 1920
, p. 9
.
Schmitz, 1952
, p. 359
Aphiochaeta exclusa
Lundbeck 1921
, p. 134
.
Schmitz, 1952
, p. 361
Megaselia gargarans
Schmitz 1948
, p. 393
,
syn. n.
Megaselia basiturgida
Disney and Durska 2011
, p. 528
,
syn. n.
Megaselia crassipes
was not obtained in the present study but it needs to be distinguished from a new species (described below) that was obtained, and from the addition to the British List.
The recognition of
M. crassipes
has proved troublesome from the beginning.
Lundbeck (1922)
only included Wood’ s species in his key to the species of his Group IV. However, he included his
M. dactylata
and
M. exclusa
in both the key and the text. Subsequently,
Schmitz (1952)
synonymised both these species with
M. crassipes
.
The effect of this was to play havoc with Lundbeck’ s key to his Group IV. For example, his first couplet separates those species with long costal cilia from those in which they are short. It is evident, however, that these cilia vary across accepted conventions regarding the boundary between ‘short’ and ‘long’. The failure to appreciate this caused
Schmitz (1958)
to key out this species in his Abteilung IV, Erste Reuhe.
Schmitz and Beyer (1965)
then keyed out
M. gargarans
in Abteilung
IV, Zweite Reihe. To add to the confusion,
Borgmeier (1968)
cited the wrong paper of Schmitz for the synonymy of
M. dactylata
, but correctly observed that
Schmitz (1958)
had erroneously referred a photo of the wing of another species to
M. crassipes
.
Figure 1.
Megaselia crassipes
male. (A) Posterior face of front tarsus; (B) left face of hypopytgium. Scale bar: 0.1 mm.
Figure 2.
Megaselia crassipes
male (synonym of
M. basiturgida
). (A) Left face of hypopygium; (B) posterior face of front tibia and basitarsus. Scale bar: 0.1 mm.
The recognition of
M. gargarans
has also proved troublesome. In the keys to the males of the species of the British Isles (
Disney 1989
), it seemingly runs to couplet 81, lead 2, to
M. crassipes
. Schmitz did not provide a figure of the hypopygium but described the anal tube as being ‘kurz, kaum länger als hoch’, which would immediately exclude
M. crassipes
.
In the keys of
Schmitz and Beyer (1965)
, the males of
M. gargarans
run to couplet 52 on p. 523. Furthermore, in the text Beyer pointed out that Schmitz’ s description of the anal tube was incorrect, as he reported his measurement of its length-tobreadth ratio as being 8:4. Examination of Schmitz’ s slide mount of a
paratype
male of
M. gargarans
(in the Museum Koenig, Bonn) endorses this (
Figure 3
). Furthermore, it is evident that it is a specimen of
M. crassipes
at the larger and darker end of the spectrum of variation in this species. Therefore, the synonymy of
M. gargarans
with
M. crassipes
is herewith formally proposed.
M. basiturgida
was described from two similarly darker males, but which are not quite as large as the
paratype
of
M. gargarans
.
Furthermore, the left hypandrial lobes of these two males are paler than usual. However, in every other respect, they lie within the ranges of variation for
M. crassipes
.
Therefore, the synonymy of
M. basiturgida
with
M. crassipes
is also herewith formally proposed. Critical details of
M. crassipes
are given in
Figures 1–2
and its recognition clarified in the revised couplets 79–81 of the key to the males recorded from the British Isles (
Disney 1989
) (see below).