Merodon splendens Hurkmans, 1993: 182

Vujić, Ante, Radenković, Snežana, Likov, Laura, Tubić, Nataša Kočiš, Popov, Grigory, Gilasian, Ebrahim, Djan, Mihajla, Milosavljević, Marina Janković & Ačanski, Jelena, 2024, Revisions of the clavipes and pruni species groups of the genus Merodon Meigen, 1803 (Diptera, Syrphidae), ZooKeys 1203, pp. 1-69 : 1-69

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.3897/zookeys.1203.118842

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:C1A2654B-7DC3-4451-91B7-49B29304FBED

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.11373352

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/538FDA8E-51ED-5321-8E28-4D936B8F7DC6

treatment provided by

ZooKeys by Pensoft

scientific name

Merodon splendens Hurkmans, 1993: 182
status

syn. nov.

Merodon splendens Hurkmans, 1993: 182 View in CoL syn. nov.

Type locality.

Italy, Sardinia. The original description was based on a male holotype ( Hurkmans 1993) from Lausanne Museum ( LAU). Holotype (designated by Hurkmans): male, Italy, Sardinia ( LAU), [specimen dry pinned]. Original labels: [Sardaigne St. Ussassai 16. v. 1977 P. Goeldlin], [Holotype of Merodon splendens Hurkmans ]. The holotype is conspecific with Merodon clavipes (examined).

Diagnosis.

Male: legs black (Fig. 4 A View Figure 4 ); antennae black (Fig. 2 A View Figure 2 ); metafemur extremely broad (~ 2–2.5 × longer than wide) and curved basally (Fig. 4 A View Figure 4 ); tergum 3 with a pair of rectangular pollinose fasciate maculae, ending close to lateral margins (Fig. 1 C View Figure 1 ). Female with a pair of reddish lateral maculae on tergum 2 (Fig. 6 C View Figure 6 ). Male genitalia in Fig. 8 View Figure 8 . Similar to M. latens sp. nov. from which differs by a broader metafemur, ~ 2–2.5 × longer than wide (Fig. 4 A View Figure 4 ) (~ 3–3.5 × in M. latens sp. nov.; Fig. 4 B View Figure 4 ), and the posterior surstylar lobe more straight ventrally (Fig. 8 A View Figure 8 : pl) (more arcuate ventrally in M. latens sp. nov.; Fig. 8 C View Figure 8 : pl).

Distribution and biology.

From northern France to the Mediterranean (including Corsica, Sardinia, Sicily and Crete); from Italy through central and southern Europe to Greece, countries of the former Yugoslavia, as well as Albania, Romania, Ukraine (Odesa region, Zakarpattia region), and southern areas of the European parts of Russia and Turkey. Speight (2020) also mentioned North Africa and the Iberian Peninsula as within the species range. Specimens from North Africa were unavailable to us for examination, so we could not confirm if they indeed belong to Merodon clavipes . In terms of the Iberian specimens, we assert that they belong to M. latens sp. nov. (Fig. 13 View Figure 13 ; Suppl. material 2). The preferred environment of Merodon clavipes in the Mediterranean is sparsely-vegetated open ground in semi-arid environments, typified by unimproved stony pasturage and open grassy areas within thermophilous Quercus forest ( Speight 2020). In the more temperate zone of Europe, the preferred environments are steppe grasslands and open areas near thermophilous forests. In Ukraine, at the northern edge of its range, this species occurs in rocky steppe on the margin of Quercus forest (locus typicus of Paramonov’s varieties). Hurkmans (1985) described the territorial behaviour of males and, in Hurkmans (1993), he also noted that females fly close to the soil and through the vegetation. Flowers visited: Umbellifers; Euphorbia , Leontodon and Solidago ( Speight 2020) . Flight period: March / August depending on climatic zone (in central Europe adults appear during shorter period in early summer, while in southern Europe there can be two generations, spring and summer ones). Developmental stages: undescribed ( Speight 2020).

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Diptera

Family

Syrphidae

Genus

Merodon

Loc

Merodon splendens Hurkmans, 1993: 182

Vujić, Ante, Radenković, Snežana, Likov, Laura, Tubić, Nataša Kočiš, Popov, Grigory, Gilasian, Ebrahim, Djan, Mihajla, Milosavljević, Marina Janković & Ačanski, Jelena 2024
2024
Loc

Merodon splendens

Hurkmans W 1993: 182
1993