Megaselia farshbafi, Khameneh & Khaghaninia & Disney & Maleki-Ravasan, 2019

Khameneh, Roya Namaki, Khaghaninia, Samad, Disney, R. Henry L. & Maleki-Ravasan, Naseh, 2019, Twenty one new species of Megaselia Rondani (Diptera: Phoridae) from Iran, Zootaxa 4711 (1), pp. 1-50 : 19

publication ID

https://doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.4711.1.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:604227AA-58EB-408C-8794-6E30192C3F74

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5933502

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/B056F818-FF8D-255A-FF1B-A964AD1DC921

treatment provided by

Plazi (2019-12-13 07:01:42, last updated 2024-11-26 06:22:59)

scientific name

Megaselia farshbafi
status

sp. nov.

Megaselia farshbafi View in CoL n. sp.

( Figs 110–121 View FIGURES 110–117 View FIGURES 118–121 )

Material examined. Holotype male, West Azerbaijan province, Khoy city, Pere region, 38°41.719’N, 44°54.041’E, 1405 m, montane grassland, 22.V.2012, S. Khaghaninia (65, CUMZ—13-90). GoogleMaps

Description. Male. Whole fly as Fig. 110 View FIGURES 110–117 . Frons as Fig. 111 View FIGURES 110–117 , with without microtrichia ( Fig. 112 View FIGURES 110–117 ). Cheek with 4 bristles and jowl with 2 that are longer and more robust. Postpedicels, palps and proboscis as Fig. 113 View FIGURES 110–117 , the labella lacking small spinules below. Thorax brown, with 3 notopleural bristles and no cleft in front of these. Mesopleuron bare. Scutellum with an anterior pair of small hairs and a posterior pair of bristles. Abdominal tergites brown with small hairs that are longer at rear of T6 ( Figs 114–117 View FIGURES 110–117 ). Legs with brown to yellowish brown femora and tibiae and yellowish tarsi. Fore tarsus ( Fig. 118 View FIGURES 118–121 ) with posterodorsal hair palisade on segments 1–4 and 5 about as long as 4. Dorsal hair palisade of mid tibia extends about 0.69 times its length. Hairs below basal half of hind femur clearly longer than those of anteroventral row of outer half ( Fig. 119 View FIGURES 118–121 ). Hind tibia with almost 2 dozen moderately differentiated posterodorsal hairs, without anterodorsals, and spinules of apical combs simple. Wings ( Figs 120 & 121 View FIGURES 118–121 ) 1.50 mm long. Costal index 0.35. Costal ratios 4.65: 1.19: 1. Costal cilia (of section 3) 0.08 mm long. Vein 3 hair 0.03 mm long. Two unequal axillary bristles, the outermost being 0.11 mm long. Sc not reaching R1. Haltere knob bristles, the outermost being 0.11 mm long. Sc not reaching R1. Haltere knob yellow.

Recognition. In the key to the Megaselia males of the British Isles ( Disney 1989) it runs to couplet 252 lead 1 M. tarsalis (Wood), from which it is immediately distinguished by its slender front tarsus lacking rows of spinules on the basitarsus. In Borgmeier’s (1966) key to Nearctic Group VIII it runs to couplet 10 lead 1 M. bovista (Gimmerthal), a Palaearctic species with which he incorrectly synonymised the Nearctic M. agarici (Lintner) , which it closely resembles ( Robinson 1977). The latter’s hypopygium most obviously differs from M. bovista by its distinctive left postero-ventral process of the epandrium ( Fig. 122 View FIGURE 122 ). Our species more closely resembles M. agarici than other members of this complex. However it has a shorter more tapered left postero-ventral epandrial lobe ( Fig. 115 View FIGURES 110–117 ). In M. agarici ‘s the palps and anal tube are somewhat dusky rather than clear yellow. Two subsequently described species run to the same point in Borgmeier’s key. M. sandhui Disney (1981) , which is known from Iran, is immediately recognized by the more robust hairs bordering a curious ‘pocket’ on segments 4 and 5 of the abdominal venter. M. wongae Hartop, Brown & Disney (2016) has hypandrial lobes each side instead of only on the left side.

Etymology. Named after Professor Reza Farshbaf Pourabad. (Professor of Department of Plant Protection, Tabriz, Iran).

Borgmeier, T. (1966) Revision of the North American Phorid flies. Part III. The species of the genus Megaselia, subgenus Megaselia (Diptera, Phoridae). Studia Entomologica, Petropolis, 8, 1 - 160. [1965]

Disney, R. H. L. (1981) Megaselia sandhui sp. n. (Diptera: Phoridae), a pest of cultivated mushrooms in India. Bulletin of Entomological Research, 71, 509 - 512. https: // doi. org / 10.1017 / S 0007485300008518

Disney, R. H. L. (1989) Scuttle Flies-Diptera Phoridae Genus Megaselia. Handbooks for the Identification of British Insects, 10 (8), 1 - 155.

Robinson, W. H. (1977) Phoridae (Diptera) associated with cultivated mushrooms in Eastern North America. Proceedings of the Entomological Society of Washington, 79, 452 - 462.

Gallery Image

FIGURE 122. Megaselia agarici (Lintner) male. left face of hypopygium. Scale bars 20 μm.

Gallery Image

FIGURES 110–117. Megaselia farshbafi n. sp. male. 110, whole fly; 111, frons; 112, detail of frons; 113, postpedicels to proboscis; 114, tergite 5 to tip of abdomen; 115, left face of epandrium; 116, left face of hypandrium and penis complex; 117, right face of hypopygium. Scale bars 20 μm.

Gallery Image

FIGURES 118–121. Megaselia farshbafi n. sp. male. 118, front tarsus; 119, hind femur; 120, wing; 121, detail of wing base. Scale bars 20 μm.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Diptera

Family

Phoridae

Genus

Megaselia