Tribe
Dacini
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To the four genera included by Drew and Hancock (1999) may be added
Dacimita David & Hancock
, described recently from India ( David et al. 2022). Although not yet reared from bamboo, its association with adjacent tiger grass (
Thysanolaena sp.
) and broad, dorsoventrally flattened aculeus suggest a bamboo or grass host. Since
Ichneumonopsis
does breed in bamboo ( Kovac et al. 2013; Freidberg et al. 2017) and both it and
Dacimita
have an enlarged proctiger, they are currently or frequently included within tribe
Gastrozonini
. However, they share several synapomorphies with other
Dacini
genera, suggesting further paraphyly of tribe
Gastrozonini
and homoplasious utilisation of non-bamboo host plants in both
Ceratitidini
and
Dacini
. Larvae of
Ichneumonopsis
also differ significantly from other
Gastrozonini ( Kovac et al. 2013)
, while those of
Dacimita
are currently unknown. An enlarged proctiger is possibly ancestral in both
Gastrozonini
and
Dacini
, as is the often coiled and convoluted spermathecae. The proctiger is greatly reduced in
Dacus
and
Bactrocera
(and in
Ceratitidini
) but much less so in
Monacrostichus
, resembling a moderately reduced version of that seen in
Dacimita
(cf. Hardy 1974 and David et al. 2022); it is also (homoplasiously) reduced in some
Gastrozonini
genera such as
Dietheria Hardy
and
Taeniostola Bezzi
( Hardy 1973) and its phylogenetic value is uncertain. Tables 1 and 2 list the character states in
Gastrozonini
and
Dacini
and their distribution, although scutellum shape (character 9) is a little variable in
Dacus
, with a shape similar to that of state 2 sometimes present. For comments on the secondary presence of Characters 3, 5, 7 & 8 see White (2006) and Hancock and Drew (2017, 2018a –c). In some
Gastrozonini
genera ocellar setae are vestigial or absent and male
Chaetellipsis Bezzi
lack frontal and orbital setae, but none shows the apomorphic states of the whole setal series 1–8. Apical scutellar setae are absent in
Dietheria
but always present in
Dacini
. Extreme setal reduction also occurs (slightly differently and homoplasiously) in Anastrepha Schiner species formerly included in its synonym
Toxotrypana Gerstaecker
, that also resemble wasps, but the uniformity of its expression in all five
Dacini
genera included here suggests a common ancestry. The presence of preapical spines on the ventral surface of the fore femora in
Ichneumonopsis
,
Monacrostichus
and the
Dacus conopsoides
group of Hancock and Drew (2006), also suggests a common ancestry.
Ichneumonopsis
was also grouped with
Dacini
in a morphological phylogeny by David and Ramani (2019). Generic relationships are clearly evident in Table 2 and computer analysis of the matrix is unnecessary.
Tribe
Dacini
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is believed to have originated on the Indian plate during its post-Gondwanan drifting phase ( Drew and Hancock 1999; Krosch et al. 2012), with all genera except
Monacrostichus
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originating there.
Ichneumonopsis
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and
Dacimita
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remain within India and Southeast Asia and, with their bamboo associations and enlarged proctiger, are regarded as ancestral sister-genera.
Dacus
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spread to and diversified in Africa and, following unification of India with the rest of Asia, it and
Bactrocera
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spread to and diversified in Southeast Asia and Australasia, with later minor spread of African
Dacus
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to India and Indian
Bactrocera
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to Africa ( Drew and Hancock 1999). The indication that the Madagascan
Dacus xanthaspis
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group utilises
Cucurbitaceae
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rather than
Asclepiadaceae ( Rasolofoarivao et al. 2022)
suggests that a relationship of its three included species ( White 2006) with subgenus
Neodacus Perkins
( Hancock and Drew 2006) is incorrect—reinvestigation suggests that they are closely related to (or belong in) the
Dacus (Mictodacus) sphaeristicus
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group of Hancock and Drew (2006); in both groups wing cells bc and c are fuscous and all or at least most of cell c (and often at least part of cell bc) is densely microtrichose. White (2006) also suggested a possible relationship between species in these two groups.
Tythocalama Munro
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is therefore removed from synonymy with
Neodacus
and placed as a new synonym of subgenus
Mictodacus Munro. Contrary
to Krosch et al. (2012), there is therefore no evidence of dispersal from Madagascar to mainland Africa, or from mainland Africa to India via Madagascar; the
Cucurbitaceae
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did not reach Madagascar prior to its first dispersal from the African mainland ca 50 Mya ( Schaefer et al. 2008), long after its separation from India. The only direct India-Madagascar link in the
Dacini
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appears to have resulted in the endemic Madagascan subgenus B. (
Aglaodacus
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) Munro in the
Zeugodacus
group of subgenera ( Hancock and Drew 2018c). The ca 40 million years since collision of India with Eurasia ( Bouilhol et al. 2013) would have provided ample time for an ancestor of the relatively uniform African
Dacus
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to reach there and proliferate. Subsequent dispersal to Madagascar likely occurred several times and consists of several lineages.
The similar absence of
Cucurbitaceae
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from India during the evolution of
Dacini
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genera ( Schaefer et al. 2008) rules that plant family out of consideration as an ancestral host plant in both
Dacus
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and
Bactrocera ( Hancock and Drew 2018b)
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. The same is true of
Citrus
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(
Rutaceae
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), a Southeast Asian genus that originated ca 8 Mya in Yunnan and radiated rapidly 6–8 Mya ( Wu et al. 2018), and is used as a host plant by both
Monacrostichus
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and some
Bactrocera (Tetradacus)
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species. The absence of
Monacrostichus
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from India and its utilisation of
Citrus
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excludes it as a direct Dacus-Bactrocera ancestor, leaving only
Ichneumonopsis
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and
Dacimita
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as potential ancestors of the tribe. These two genera are linked to the other three by the synapomorphies of extreme setal reduction and, in
Monacrostichus
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and (most)
Dacus
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[cf. Hancock 2003; Drew and Romig 2013], a short, broad, subtriangular scutellum. The plesiomorphic absence of basal scutellar and prescutellar acrostichal setae (frequently but irregularly present (secondarily) in all groups of
Bactrocera
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subgenera, including the
Zeugodacus
group) also unites these two genera with
Dacus
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and
Monacrostichus
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and it is likely that they represent the ancestral dacines as a sister-pair, with either
Ichneumonopsis
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or
Dacimita
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representing the ancestor of Dacus-Bactrocera, accompanied by a host plant shift from bamboo to
Asclepiadaceae
pods (
Dacus
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) or forest fruit (
Bactrocera
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).