Elaphromyia pterocallaeformis (Bezzi)

David, K. J., Hancock, D. L., Sachin, K., Ramya, R. S. & Ramani, S., 2021, Taxonomic notes on the genus Elaphromyia Bigot (Diptera: Tephritidae: Tephritinae: Pliomelaenini) in India, with description of a new species, Zootaxa 5023 (2), pp. 251-262 : 258-259

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.5023.2.5

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:A009B165-485B-43E2-BA6A-9CE8B34CA14E

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5225908

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03CB5C6E-FFBD-7C58-FF00-AE86FECD6A63

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Elaphromyia pterocallaeformis (Bezzi)
status

 

Elaphromyia pterocallaeformis (Bezzi) View in CoL

Paralleloptera pterocallaeformis Bezzi, 1913: 155 View in CoL : Type localities: Dharampur , Himachal Pradesh and Kumaon, Bhowali, Uttarakhand, India .

Material examined: 1♀, INDIA: Himachal Pradesh: Manali, Naggar , 06. viii.2014, Veena Kumari, K .; 1♂ 1♀, Shimla , IARI Substation, Totu , 18.viii.2019, David, K.J. ( NBAIR) .

Diagnosis ( Figs 25, 26 View FIGURES 25–26 ): This species was originally described by Bezzi (1913) from northern India. Hardy (1973, 1974) illustrated the female postabdominal structures. It is characterised by having the round to elongate subhyaline markings in the wing arranged in transverse rows similar to E. juncta but with 6–7 marginal spots in cell r 1, unlike the four spots normally seen in E. juncta and E. siva . The abdomen of E. pterocallaeformis has four black spots/markings on the last two tergites.

Male genitalia: Epandrium broad with no demarcation between surstylus and epandrium; apex of lateral surstylus with a medial teat-like projection (in profile view) ( Fig. 27 View FIGURES 27–34 ); proctiger short, much smaller than epandrium; medial surstylus shorter than lateral surstylus and with well-developed prensisetae ( Fig. 28 View FIGURES 27–34 ). Phallus relatively longer than in the other two species (1.70 mm); glans of phallus sclerotised with acrophallus patterned and broadly bifid apically ( Fig. 29 View FIGURES 27–34 ).

Female genitalia:Oviscape (0.84 mm) conical, orange-yellow with black basal rim ( Fig. 30 View FIGURES 27–34 ); eversible membrane (0.69 mm) with elongate taeniae; spicules on distal end conical ( Figs 31, 32 View FIGURES 27–34 ); aculeus (0.64 mm) curved, flattened in sagittal plane, pointed with reduced preapical setae ( Fig. 33 View FIGURES 27–34 ); spermathecae dark brown to black, elongate-oval with numerous hair-like projections all over ( Fig. 34 View FIGURES 27–34 ).

Distribution: Widespread in SE Asia but in India only known with certainty from Himachal Pradesh and Uttaranchal ( Bezzi, 1913) and, presumably, from other northern States of Assam, Madhya Pradesh, Meghalaya and West Bengal as listed by Agarwal & Sueyoshi (2005). Records of E. pterocallaeformis from western Karnataka (Kemmangundi, Mudigere area and Jog Falls, Gersoppa) by Hancock & McGuire (2001) have not been re-examined but are almost certainly misidentifications of E. juncta , while those of David & Ramani (2011) are misidentifications of E. siva .

IARI

Indian Agricultural Research Institute

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Diptera

Family

Tephritidae

Genus

Elaphromyia

Loc

Elaphromyia pterocallaeformis (Bezzi)

David, K. J., Hancock, D. L., Sachin, K., Ramya, R. S. & Ramani, S. 2021
2021
Loc

Paralleloptera pterocallaeformis

Bezzi, M. 1913: 155
1913
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