Phytomyza karnarensis, Černý & Barták & Kubík & Vála, 2022
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.5175.4.1 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:A07E329D-7805-4DEF-BFFB-86CFFE276644 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7010847 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03F087A4-FFD7-FF92-FF35-F7F9FC48F969 |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Phytomyza karnarensis |
status |
sp. nov. |
Phytomyza karnarensis sp. nov.
( Figs 31–39 View FIGURES 31–39 )
Type material. HOLOTYPE: ♂. BULGARIA: Plovdiv Province, 2km N of Karnare , 42°43’8.4”N, 24°37’58.8”E, 700m a.s.l., 23.–24.vi.2017, near stream, sweeping and Pan traps, M. Barták & Š. Kubík leg. ( CULSP). Head of the holotype is damaged, with exposed ptilinum ( Fig. 31 View FIGURES 31–39 ). GoogleMaps
Etymology. The name of the species, an adjectival toponym, is derived from the name of type locality, Karnare village.
Description. Male. Head ( Fig. 31 View FIGURES 31–39 ) blackish brown, ocellar plate black, matt, frontal vitta blackish brown. Hind margin black, both vt on dark area. Orbits, gena and cheek blackish brown, grey, matt. Antennae and arista blackish brown, palpus brown, antennal pits black, matt. Frons very broad (about 2.5 times the width of eye at level of anterior ocellus). Orbits broad (about 0.27 width of frons), distinctly projecting above eye in profile. Two reclinate and divergent ors present, 2 inclinate ori. Orbital setulae numerous, arranged in one row. Gena including cheek deeply extended posteriorly, almost 0.55 times height of eye, 1 vi and 6–7 pm setae present. Cheek forms wide ring below eye. First flagellomere small, oval, covered with short pubescence, scape with 1 setula. Arista with short pubescence. Lunula semicircular. Thorax. Scutum and scutellum black, slightly shiny. Notopleural and anepisternal sutures narrowly yellowish white. Scutum with 1+3 dc, acr in 2 regular rows, but sporadic. All usual setae present: 1 oc, 1 pvt, 1 vte, 1 vti, 1 ppl, 1 ppnt, 1+1 npl, 1 prs, 1 sa, 1 epa, 1 ipa, 1 anepst, 1 kepst, 1 bs, 1 as. Wing ( Fig. 38 View FIGURES 31–39 ) hyaline, wing base yellowish white, veins ochre brown, Wing ( Fig. 32 View FIGURES 31–39 ) length 1.65 mm, ratio of costal sections 2–4 = 1.45: 0.43: 1.00. Wing tip close to vein M 1+2. Squama grey, margin and fringe blackish brown. Legs brown, fore tibia and tarsi ochre brown. Abdomen black, matt. Male genitalia: epandrium ( Fig. 35 View FIGURES 31–39 ) sparsely covered with long setae; surstylus densely covered with thin setulae; cerci narrow and cylindrical, slightly curved, reaching almost 0.35 length of epandrium; phallus as in Figs 33–34 View FIGURES 31–39 : distiphallus complex suboval, distally branching into two curved and diverging tubes; mesophallus cylindrical and narrow, basally slightly expanding; basiphallus consists of two irregularly shaped sclerites, right sclerite merged at base with the phallophorus, the left sclerite has a long, curved and very narrow outgrowth, which reaches backwards to about the midpoint of the phallophorus; both hypophallus and paraphallus absent; hypandrium ( Figs 36–37 View FIGURES 31–39 ) broad, almost pentagonal; ejaculatory apodeme ( Figs 38–39 View FIGURES 31–39 ) small, with asymmetrical blade.
Female and biology unknown.
Comments. The species is very similar to Phytomyza scotina Hendel, 1920 with regards to the dark colouring of the head, thorax and legs, the distinct and conspicuously projecting orbits above the eye in profile, the deeply extended gena posteriorly, the broad cheeks, the peculiar length of the second costal section, and the two rows of acr. The new species mostly differs in the structure of genitalia. In Ph. scotina , the distiphallus has a peculiar shape with a typical shaped dorsal and ventral part and distal diverging tubes, the mesophallus is very long and narrow; the hypophallus is narrow and long, a triangular paraphallus is present, and the ejaculatory apodeme is large, with a short stalk and a very wide blade (see Papp & Černý 2020: Figs 188D–J).
No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.
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