Mesembrina Meigen, 1826

Nihei, Silvio Shigueo & Carvalho, Claudio José Barros De, 2009, The Muscini flies of the world (Diptera, Muscidae): identification key and generic diagnoses, Zootaxa 1976, pp. 1-24 : 12-13

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.185153

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5658493

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/E60987AB-2405-E160-9686-F8C4FDCBF5A8

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Mesembrina Meigen, 1826
status

 

Mesembrina Meigen, 1826 View in CoL

Mesembrina Meigen, 1826: 10 View in CoL . Type species: Musca meridiana Linnaeus, 1758 .

Diagnosis. Colouration metallic black; gena and parafacial with dense golden pruinosity; body with dense ground setulosity; basal third of wing and calypters notably yellow (or blackish in M. nigribasis from Costa Rica). Vibrissa developed, although sometimes confused with the developed subvibrissals. Female with proclinate fronto-orbital seta; parafrons densely setulose along its whole length; interfrontal seta absent; frontal vitta densely setulose on upper half or along its whole length. Presutural acrostichals developed or not; 3 postsutural setae. Dorsocentrals 1-3+4-5 (0+ 2 in M. nigribasis ). Postsutural intra-alars 2; intrapostalar absent. Notopleurals 2-3 (usually 2 notopleurals but some species with an additional seta posteriorly). Prosternum bare. Anterior katepisternal absent or present. Meron and katepimeron bare. Posterior spiracle bare on posterior margin. Suprasquamal ridge bare. Scutellum half-moon shaped. Wing with the veins bare; costal vein setulose ventrally until Sc; Rs node and R4+5 bare dorsally and ventrally; M bent forward towards R4+5. Lower calypter enlarged posteriorly, extending under base of scutellum. Subcostal sclerite bare. Mid tibia with an anterodorsal submedian seta. Calcar strong.

Comments. Recently, M. nigribasis Kuchta & Savage was described from Costa Rica (referred to as Mesembrina sp. 1 in the cladistic analysis of Nihei and de Carvalho 2007 a). The Holarctic Region was probably the ancestral area of this genus, and the Neotropical and Oriental occurrences are due to subsequent expansion of distribution range followed by local speciations.

Distribution (13 species). Nearctic, Neotropical, Oriental, Palaearctic.

References. Nearctic species: Huckett (1965), Kuchta & Savage (2008); Oriental: Emden (1965), Xue and Chao (1998), Kuchta & Savage (2008); Palaearctic: Hennig (1963b), Peris and Llorente (1963), Zimin and Elberg (1988), Xue and Chao (1998), Gregor et al. (2002), Shinonaga (2003), Kuchta & Savage (2008); Neotropical: Kuchta & Savage (2008).

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Diptera

Family

Muscidae

Loc

Mesembrina Meigen, 1826

Nihei, Silvio Shigueo & Carvalho, Claudio José Barros De 2009
2009
Loc

Mesembrina

Meigen 1826: 10
1826
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