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A new species of the genus Eumerus Meigen, 1822 (Diptera: Syrphidae) from Turkmenistan PDF

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Preview A new species of the genus Eumerus Meigen, 1822 (Diptera: Syrphidae) from Turkmenistan

Far Eastern Entomologist Number 397: 9-12 ISSN 1026-051X December 2019 https://doi.org/10.25221/fee.397.2 http://zoobank.org/References/6F29AC4B-4238-48C9-B7E0-8752ABBACA3E A NEW SPECIES OF THE GENUS EUMERUS MEIGEN, 1822 (DIPTERA: SYRPHIDAE) FROM TURKMENISTAN V. A. Mutin Amur State University of Humanities and Pedagogy, Kirova str. 17/2, Komsomolsk-na- Amure, 681000, Russia. E-mail: [email protected] Summary. Eumerus badkhyziensis Mutin, sp. n. is described from Turkmenistan. The new species differs from its known congeners with red abdomen by unusual set of characteristics, including foremost the dichoptic bare eyes, wing without dark mark, lack of pollinose vittae on mesonotum and entirely pale pilose body. Key words: Syrphidae, taxonomy, new species, description, Central Asia. В. А. Мутин. Новый вид рода Eumerus Meigen, 1822 (Diptera: Syrphidae) из Туркмении // Дальневосточный энтомолог. 2019. N 397. С. 9-12. Резюме. Из Туркмении описан Eumerus badkhyziensis Mutin, sp. n. Новый вид отли- чается от известных видов рода с красным брюшком необычным сочетанием признаков, прежде всего дихоптическими голыми глазами, крыльями без темных пятен и отсутствием продольных полос пыльцы на среднеспинке. INTRODUCTION The genus Eumerus Meigen, 1822 unites nearly 300 species, which live mainly in arid and semiarid regions of Eurasia and Africa (Stackelberg, 1961; Peck, 1988; Speight, 2016; Smit et al., 2017; Pape & Evenhuis, 2019). The larvae of these hoverflies breed usually in bulbs and other succulent organs of the angiosperms, and some are known as pests of cul- tivated plants (Pérez-Bañón & Marcos-García, 1998; Ricarte et al., 2017; Piwowarczyk & Mielczarek, 2018). The species diversity of the genus is the main reason of increased attention from taxonomists (Grković et al., 2015, 2017; van Steenis et al., 2017; Chroni et al., 2018; Grković et al., 2019a, b). There are some distinct species-groups within the genus, but other members of the genus are distinguished by a unique combination of characters as the species described below. A single specimen of the new species was caught by A.S. Lelej in the depression of Ero- yulanduz Salt Lake, located in Bathyz Plateau within the nature reserve of the same name. MATERIAL AND METHODS The holotype of the new species is deposited in the Federal Scientific Center of East Asia Terrestrial Biodiversity, Vladivostok, Russia [FCBV] (formerly the Institute of Biology and Soil Science). The morphological terminology follows Thompson (1999). Photographs were taken with an Olympus SZX16 stereomicroscope and an Olympus DP74 digital camera and stacked using Helicon Focus software. The final illustrations were post- processed for contrast and brightness using Adobe® Photoshop® software. 9 DESCRIPTION OF NEW SPECIES Eumerus badkhyziensis Mutin, sp. n. http://zoobank.org/NomenclaturalActs/E251F7B6-2EB2-4879-A6EE-0BB055A3CABD Figs 1–5 TYPE MATERIAL. Holotype – ♂, Turkmenistan: Bathyz State Nature Reserve, Eroyu- landuz, 16.V 1990, leg. A. Lelej [FCBV]. DESCRIPTION. MALE. Body length (excluding antenna): 5,0 mm; wing length: 3,5 mm. Head. Eyes bare, distinctly dichoptic. The shortest distance between eyes more than width of basoflagellomere. Ratio minimal width of frons: width of head 1,2: 7; ratio width of ocellar triangle: width of head 1,5: 7. Face dull black, with white pile. Frons and vertex shinning black with a bluish tinge, covered white erect pile, which is shorter than width of flagellomere. Ocellar triangle isosceles-obtuse. Distance from anterior ocellus to level of posterior ocelli equal to distance from posterior ocellus to level of upper eye corners. Antenna mainly orange, weakly darkened dorsally, with scattered silvery pollinosity; basoflagellomere rather oval (ratio length: width 1,1: 1), with the distal part weakly pointed ventrally; arista orange and thickened basally, with brownish apical part (Fig. 5). Thorax mainly shinning black with a bluish tinge, except posterior and ventral plates of the mesothoracic pleuron brown, with white short pile. Mesonotum without pollinose vittae. Katepisternum with sparse short pile on upper half and some pile near ventral margin. Scutellum sub-rectangular, with rather broad rim. Legs pale pilose. Coxae and trochanter brownish. Pro- and mesofemur mainly brown, except apical 1/3 yellow. Metafemur moderately thickened, mainly brown except apical ¼ orange, with row of 5–6 spines on anterior ridge and row of 3 spines on posterior ridge. Tibiae orange; metatibia rather flattened baso-ventrally, with subapical darkish annulus-like mark. Tarsi entirely yellow; setae on mesotarsus brownish. Wing. Membrane hyaline, with microtrichia. Veins yellowish; pterostigma about same color as the wing. Vein R4+5 weakly curved. Halter white. Abdomen whole reddish, with short appressed pale pile; 1st tergum darkened with a bluish tinge; 2nd, 3rt and 4th terga with pairs of white pollinose transverse maculae. Genitalia (Figs 3, 4). The apex of posterior lobe of surstylus conically pointed. Hypandri- um strongly thickened in basal part, then smoothly tapering apically. FAMALE. Unknown. DIAGNOSIS. New species differs from other species of the genus with red abdomen by the following combination of external characters: bare dichoptic eyes, orange antennae, wing without dark spot, pale pilosity of whole body and legs mainly orange. Known Palaearctic species with distinctly dichoptic eyes and mainly red abdomen (Eumerus alajensis Peck, 1966, E. arkitensis Peck, 1969, E. binominatus Hervé-Bazin, 1923, E. falsus Becker, 1922, E. kirgisorum Peck, 1971, E. nigrifacies Becker, 1921, E. pamirorum Stackelberg, 1949, E. selevini Stackelberg, 1949, E. tadzhikorum Stackelberg, 1949) have more or less visible pilosity on eyes. Species with red or partly red abdomen, known only for females, have also pilose eyes (E. grisescens Becker, 1921, E. pavlovskii Stackelberg, 1964, E. palaestinensis Stackelberg, 1949, Eumerus rubescens Villeneuve, 1912), which allows us to distinguish them from a new species. Genitalia of new species is similar to one of E. sinuatus Loew, 1855 by posterior lobe of surstylus conically pointed and the form of the hypandrium in outline, but mostly external characters of these species are very different. The new species is very likely related to E. falsus Becker 1922. In the key to Palaearctic Eumerus species (Stackelberg 1961), the new species keys out to falsus. Both species share the following characters: dark wingspot absent, orange antennae, isosceles-obtuse ocellar triangle, mesonotum without vittae of white pollinosity, moderately thickened metafemur. The 10 male genitalia of E. falsus are not published, but from the description and photographs of specimens the two species can separated by the following characters (falsus characters in parenthesis): eyes bare (eyes covered with hairs), body size 5 mm (10-12 mm), ration vertex width at posterior ocelli: head-width 1: 3,5 (1: 4,5). Eumerus falsus is the replacement name for Eumerus rubriventris Becker, 1921 (= homonym of rubriventris Macquart, 1829) and Eumerus latifrons Sack 1932 and Eumerus zurudnyi Stackelberg 1949 are synonyms of it. The known distribution of E. falsus spans from Israel, Syria, Turkey, Iran to Turkmenistan and Tadjikistan (Stackelberg 1961), which would make the two species likely sympatric. DISTRIBUTION. Turkmenistan (Bathyz State Nature Reserve, Eroyulanduz Depression). ETHYMOLOGY. Species name is the Latin adjective from the Bathyz Plateau. Figs 1–5. Eumerus badkhyziensis Mutin, sp. n., holotype ♂. 1 – habitus, dorsal view; 2 – same, lateral view; 3 – epandrium, lateral view; 3 – hypandrium, lateral view; 5 – antennae, lateral view. Scale bar: 1, 2 = 1.0 mm; 3–5 = 0.1 mm. ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS The author thanks Arkady Lelej for provided collection materials from his Turkmen expe- ditions and Valery Loktionov (Vladivostok, Russia) for help with making of illustrations for the paper. I am indebted to Martin Hauser (Sacramento, California, USA) for checking our English and critically reviewing the manuscript. This work was conducted with the financial support of The Ministry of Education and Science of the Russian Federation (6.8601.2017/8.9), within the scope of the basic role of the state in the sphere of scientific activity). 11 REFERENCES Chroni, A., Grković, A., Ačanski, J., Vujić, A., Radenković, S., Veličković, N., Đan, M. & Petanidou, T. 2018. Disentangling a cryptic species complex and defining new species within the Eumerus minotaurus group (Diptera: Syrphidae), based on integrative taxonomy and Aegean palaeogeography. Contributions to Zoology, 87(4): 197–225. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1163/18759866-08704001 Grković, A., Vujić, A., Radenković, S., Chroni, A. & Petanidou, T. 2015. Diversity of the genus Eumerus Meigen (Diptera, Syrphidae) on the eastern Mediterranean islands with description of three new species. Annales de la Société entomologique de France (N.S.), 51(4), 361–373. DOI: 10.1080/00379271.2016.1144483 Grković, A., Vujić, A., Chroni, A., van Steenis, J., Ðan, M. & Radenković, S. 2017. Taxo- nomy and systematics of three species of the genus Eumerus Meigen, 1822 (Diptera: Syrphidae) new to southeastern Europe. Zoologischer Anzeiger, 270: 176–192. Grković, A., Smit, J., Radenković, S., Vujić, A. & van Steenis, J. 2019a. Two new European long-legged hoverfly species of the Eumerus binominatus species subgroup (Diptera, Syrphidae). ZooKeys, 858: 91–108. DOI: https://doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.858.34663 Grković, A., van Steenis, J., Tubić, N. K., Nedeljković, Z., Hauser, M., Hayat, R., Demırözer, O., Đan, M., Vujić A. & Radenković, S. 2019b. Revision of the bactrianus subgroup of the genus Eumerus Meigen (Diptera: Syrphidae) in Europe, inferred from morphological and molecular data with descriptions of three new species. Arthropod Systematics and Phylogeny, 77(1): 21–37. DOI: https://doi.org/10.26049/ASP77-1-2019-02 Pape, T. & Evenhuis, N. (Eds). 2019. Systema Dipterorum, version 2.5 Available from: http://sd.zoobank.org [accessed 28.10. 2019]. Peck, L.V. 1988. Family Syrphidae. P. 11–230. In: Soos, A. & Papp, L. (Eds). Catalogue of Palaearctic Diptera. Vol. 8. Syrphidae – Conopidae. Akademiai Kiado, Budapest. 363 pp. Pérez-Bañón, C. & Marcos-García, A. 1998. Life history and description of the immature stages of Eumerus purpurariae (Díptera: Syrphidae) developing in Opuntia maxima. European Journal of Entomology, 95: 373–382. Piwowarczyk, R. & Mielczarek, Ł. 2018. First report of Eumerus mucidus (Diptera: Syrphidae) on Cistanche armena (Orobanchaceae) and from Armenia. Florida Entomologist, 101(3): 519–521. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1653/024.101.0314 Ricarte, A., Souba-Dols, G.J., Hauser, M. & Marcos-García, M.-Á. 2017. A review of the early stages and host plants of the genera Eumerus and Merodon (Diptera: Syrphidae), with new data on four species. PLoS ONE, 12 (12): e0189852 1–22. DOI: https:// doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0189852 Smit, J.T., van Harten, A., & Ketelaar, R. 2017. Order Diptera, Family Syrphidae. The hoverflies of the Arabian Peninsula. In: Harten A van (Ed), Arthropod fauna of the UAE, 6: 572–612. Speight, M.C.D. 2016. Species accounts of European Syrphidae. In: Speight, M.C.D., Castella, E., Sarthou, J.-P. & Vanappelghem, C. (Eds.). Syrph the Net, the database of European Syrphidae (Diptera), vol. 93. Syrph the Net publications, Dublin. 288 pp. Stackelberg, A.A. 1961. Palaearctic species of the genus Eumerus Mg. (Diptera, Syrphidae). Horae Societatis Entomologicae Unionis Soveticae, 48: 181–229. [In Russian] van Steenis, J., Hauser, M. & van Zuijen, M. P. 2017. Review of the Eumerus barbarus species group (Diptera: Syrphidae) from the western Mediterranean Basin. Bonn zoological Bulletin, 66 (2): 145–165. Thompson, C.F. 1999. A key to the genera of the flower flies (Diptera: Syrphidae) of the Neotropical Region including descriptions of new genera and species and a glossary of taxonomic terms. Contributions on Entomology International, 3: 319–378. 12

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