Periscelididae Oldenberg, 1914

Mathis, Wayne N. & Freidberg, Amnon, 2012, Periscelis stuckenbergi sp. n., the first record of the genus from the Afrotropical Region (Diptera: Periscelididae: Periscelidinae), African Invertebrates 53 (1), pp. 231-231 : 232

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5733/afin.053.0115

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7917549

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03DE879F-DF4B-CF6E-4482-11EFFCFE4111

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Periscelididae Oldenberg, 1914
status

 

Family Periscelididae Oldenberg, 1914 View in CoL View at ENA

Diagnosis: Adult. Small flies, body length 2.5–5.0 mm, moderately broad to slender. Head: Width equal to that of thorax, distinctly wider than high; frons wider than long, becoming narrower toward anterior margin, bearing 1 or 2 fronto­orbital setae; postocellar setae present and divergent or absent. Pedicel cap­like and with a dorsal cleft, bearing 1 or more dorsoapical setae; flagellomere 1 frequently sharply deflexed, extended from ventral surface of pedicel; arista bipectinate. Face uniformly sclerotised and arched, setose laterally. Thorax: Dorsocentral setae usually 2 (0+2), sometimes 1 (0+1), none presutural; posterior intra­alar seta reduced; scutellum with 1 or 2 pairs of marginal setae; scutellar disc bare; anepisternal seta usually lacking (present in Planinasus Cresson, 1914 ). Wing: Hyaline or with infuscate markings. Subcosta rudimentary, not reaching costal margin, and not fused apically with R 1; no costal breaks (a weakness in the costa just apicad of the humeral crossvein in Planinasus ); costa extended to vein R 4+5 or M; cell dm with shallow fold running entire length; cell cup present, although CuA 2 either well developed or extremely reduced. Mid tibia bearing prominent, apicoventral seta. Classification: The concept of Periscelididae , as adopted here, follows McAlpine (1978, 1983) and includes a few genera previously assigned to Aulacigastridae Duda, 1924 ( Cyamops , Planinasus, Stenocyamops Papp, 2006 and Stenomicra ). McAlpine characterised Periscelididae primarily by the cap­like pedicel, which has a dorsal cleft, and its relationship to the first flagellomere. Although these characters are common to all Periscelididae , they also occur in Neurochaetidae McAlpine, 1978 ( Woodley 1982) and some other acalyptrate genera. In a recent phylogenetic study of the Opomyzoidea Fallén, 1820, using 28S ribosomal DNA and CAD (rudimentary) genes ( Winkler et al. 2010), Stenomicra, Cyamops and Planinasus grouped consistently with moderate support with the genus Aulacigaster Macquart, 1835 and not with Periscelidinae . Moreover, the same analysis failed to find any support for a sister­group relationship between Periscelididae and Neurochaetidae . Their results highlight the need to study the phylogeny of these groups in greater detail and using different suites of characters.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Diptera

Family

Periscelididae

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