Drosophila (Sophophora) dominicana Ayala

Schiffer, Michele & Mcevey, Shane F., 2006, Drosophila bunnanda — a new species from northern Australia with notes on other Australian members of the montium subgroup (Diptera: Drosophilidae), Zootaxa 1333, pp. 1-23 : 8

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.174253

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6262711

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/D11687A2-0810-FFE8-FECE-B172FBFFB5FA

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Drosophila (Sophophora) dominicana Ayala
status

 

Drosophila (Sophophora) dominicana Ayala View in CoL

Drosophila dominicana Ayala 1965 , Pac. Insects 7, p. 620. Type locality: Madang, Papua New Guinea.

We dissected a D. dominicana paratype (AMNH, Reg. 21752) to determine its relationship to the species we describe as new in this paper. We found the novasternum to have a distinctive bicornute caudal margin. This notched form resembles the shape in species of the auraria complex, unlike the smooth convexity of the novasternum of the remaining two D. serrata complex species. Ayala’s drawing (1965a, fig. 2) does not show this but it is clear in an unpublished drawing of D. dominicana by I.R. Bock (dated 9 Feb 1987) that we have been able to view. We can confirm, however, that the secondary claspers are indeed noticeably circular in appearance as described and illustrated by Ayala (1965a, b); this is also reminiscent of auraria complex species. Drosophila dominicana has distinct spines along the ventral cercal margin and has three spines of unequal size (two large, one small) arising from the secondary clasper. The latter may be a variable condition because it is evident in Ayala’s (1965b) drawing and in our dissected specimen, but not in Bock’s unpublished sketch.

Three combinations of interspecific crosses involving D. dominicana and either D. serrata or D. birchii resulted in hybrids ( Ayala 1965a). Drosophila serrata Wau female × D. dominicana Madang male and D. dominicana Madang female × D. birchii Port Moresby male both produced offspring with some fertility, D. serrata Mataranka female × D. dominicana Madang male produced sterile offspring. It is possible, that the new montium species, when intercrossed in certain combinations with these latter species, will produce partially fertile hybrids. This would not be unusual among species of the same complex within the melanogaster species group ( Bock 1984a).

The Y chromosome of the D. dominicana metaphase karyotype has been compared to, and found to share similarities with, the Y chromosomes of D. jambulina and D. nikananu (Baimai 1980) . However, comparisons of the entire metaphase karyotypes revealed that D. dominicana , D. serrata , and D. birchii were all “quite distinct” (Baimai 1980).

Drosophila dominicana View in CoL is known only from a culture derived from a sample collected at Madang, Papua New Guinea ( Ayala 1965b); we can find no evidence that montium View in CoL subgroup flies have been sampled in that region since that time. However, many pinned drosophilid specimens from Papua New Guinea remain unsorted (specimens at the B.P. Bishop and Australian Museums). Reports of D. dominicana View in CoL from several locations in Sabah ( Mather 1968) cannot be confirmed by us because of the lack of voucher material.

Distribution ( Fig. 14 View FIGURES 14 – 20 ). Madang, Papua New Guinea and possibly Sabah ( Ayala 1965a; Ayala 1965; Baimai 1980; Mather 1968; also see Appendix).

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Diptera

Family

Drosophilidae

Genus

Drosophila

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