Published January 4, 2019 | Version v1
Taxonomic treatment Open

Megaselia legrandi Henry & Bøggild 2019, sp. n.

Description

Megaselia legrandi sp. n.

(Figs 72–78)

Material examined. Holotype male, DENMARK, Dk SJ, Draved Skov, Højmose, 17.v–8.vi.2014, Esben Bøggild (UCMZ-8-184). Description. Male. Head as Fig. 72, the frons having dense but very fine microtrichia. Cheek with 4 bristles and jowl with 2 that are longer and more robust. Postpedicels, which lack SPS vesicles, and palps as Fig. 73. Thorax brown, with 3 notopleural bristles and no cleft in front of these. Mesopleuron with hairs and a bristle. Scutellum with an anterior pair of small hairs and a posterior pair of bristles. Abdominal tergites brown with moderate hairs only a little longer at rear of T6. Venter gray and with hairs on segments 3–6. Hypopygium as Figs 74–76. Legs brown but not dark, the front pair being paler. Fore tarsus (Fig. 77) with posterodorsal hair palisade on segments 1–5. Dorsal hair palisade of mid tibia extends about 0.7 times its length. Hind femur with hairs below basal half longer than those of the antero-ventral row of outer half. Hind tibia with a dozen moderately differentiated posterodorsal hairs, without anterodorsals, and spinules of apical combs simple. Wings (Fig. 78) 1.60 mm long. Costal index 0.45. Costal ratios 3.56: 1.80: 1. Costal cilia (of section 3) 0.10 mm long. No hair at base of vein 3. With 2 unequal axillary bristles, the outermost being 0.13 mm long. Sc not reaching R1. Haltere brown.

Recognition. In the keys of Lundbeck (1922) it runs to Group II couplet 6 lead 1, but it differs from the somewhat similar M. rudis (Wood) by its darker legs and very pale wings. In the key to British species (Disney, 1989) it runs to couplet 57 where the positions of the antial bristles on the left side directs one to couplet 58 lead 2 but those of the right side directs one to couplet 59 lead 2. In both cases the hypopygia are different. However, at couplet 59 lead 2 the hypopygium of M. spinata (Wood) is very similar apart from the hypandria, with the single lobe being on the right side in M. spinata but in the left side in M. legrandi. In addition the legs are paler in M. spinata with the hind femur being yellow with a brown tip. In the keys of Schmitz (1957) for Abteilung II it runs to couplet 13 lead 1 to M. rudis.

Etymology. Named after Edgar Allan Poe’s fabulous naturalist.

Notes

Published as part of Henry, R. & Bøggild, Esben, 2019, Fourteen new species of scuttle flies (Diptera, Phoridae) from Denmark, pp. 63-89 in Zootaxa 4543 (1) on page 72, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4543.1.4, http://zenodo.org/record/2617693

Files

Files (2.8 kB)

Name Size Download all
md5:090cfdc385c3c0772972dc3a52adaaa8
2.8 kB Download

System files (13.1 kB)

Name Size Download all
md5:4ac8891b6cec32d63b7a5a3221eeb473
13.1 kB Download

Linked records

Additional details

Biodiversity

Event date
2014-05-17
Family
Phoridae
Genus
Megaselia
Kingdom
Animalia
Order
Diptera
Phylum
Arthropoda
Scientific name authorship
Henry & Bøggild
Species
legrandi
Taxonomic status
sp. nov.
Taxon rank
species
Type status
holotype
Verbatim event date
2014-05-17/06-08
Taxonomic concept label
Megaselia legrandi Henry & Bøggild, 2019

References

  • Lundbeck, W. (1922) Diptera Danica. Part UI. Pipunculidae, Phoridae. Wesley, London, 455 pp.
  • Disney, R. H. L. (1989) Scuttle Flies-Diptera Phoridae Genus Megaselia. Handbooks for the Identification of British Insects, 10 (8), 1 - 155.
  • Schmitz, H. (1957.) Phoridae. In: Lindner, E. (Ed.), Die Fliegen der palaearktischen Region. 4 (33). Lieferung 196. E. Schweizerbart'sche Verlagsbuchhandlung, Stuttgart, pp. 417 - 464.