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Drosophila (Sophophora) vulcana Graber 1957

Authors :
Yassin, Amir
Suwalski, Arnaud
Raveloson Ravaomanarivo, Lala H.
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Zenodo, 2019.

Abstract

Drosophila (Sophophora) vulcana Graber, 1957 Figs 1���2, 8 A���B, 9A, C, E Drosophila (Sophophora) vulcana Graber, 1957: 309. Diagnosis Male abdominal tergites T5 with a contiguous diffuse dark brown stripe, T6 light with a very faint dark stripe (Fig. 8A); hypandrium narrow with an elongated anterior phragma; outer paraphyses posterior margin curved; aedeagus pilosity tapering at tip (Fig. 9A, C); female abdominal tergites T2���T4 without a diffuse pale region on the antero-distal margins, T5 with diffusely dark stripe (Fig. 8B); oviscapt fourth posterior peg-like outer ovisensillum on the same axis with the third and fifth ovisensilla, with anterior ovisensilla short and thick (Fig. 9E). Type material Holotype DEMOCRATIC REPUBLIC OF THE CONGO ��� ♂; Kivu Province, Mount Bugulumiza; 1954; ZMUZ. Description As in Graber (1957) for the type material and Bock & Wheeler (1972) for a strain from Mount Selinda (Zimbabwe). Distribution Democratic Republic of the Congo (type), Kenya, Tanzania and Zimbabwe. Remarks The type material of Graber (1957) consisted of six males and six females from Kivu Province (Democratic Republic of the Congo). Tsacas & Chassagnard (1992) examined this material and found five males and six females (probably the male used by Graber for dissection and genitalia illustration was lost). Of the five remaining males, only one belonged to a ��� D. montium species group��� that Tsacas (1984) considered D. ifestia. Of the six females, five belonged to the ��� D. montium species group���. Two females sojourned in alcohol and lost coloration, whereas the remaining three females were pinned and had dark wings, pleurae and legs in agreement with the original description of Graber (1957). For abdominal coloration, this description indicates ���uniform schwarzbraune gl��nzende Tergite��� (uniform black-brown shining tergite). Bock & Wheeler (1972) described a strain from Mount Selinda (Zimbabwe) attributed to D. vulcana by S. Paterson. They showed, however, the presence of two types of male genitalia in this strain. Tsacas & Chassagnard (1992) reanalyzed this strain and found that only one of the two types existed at the time of their examination. They concluded that the original strain consisted of two distinct species with one having subsequently gone extinct. They also suggested that male genitalia of the type of S��guy (1938) for D. seguyi corresponded to the genitalia of the surviving species in this strain. We dissected males from the strain of Mount Selinda and found that the illustration of Tsacas & Chassagnard (1992) of the holotype of D. seguyi lacks the partial fusion of the cercal ventral lobe (secondary clasper), characteristic of the strain of Mount Selinda. Moreover, the pale male abdominal pigmentation of the strain of Bock & Wheeler (1972) (Fig. 4G) clearly contrasts with the description of S��guy (1938) of D. seguyi: ���tergites largement bord��s de brun noir, dernier segment d���un noir luisant��� [tergites with large brownish black stripe, last segment shiny black]. On the contrary, abdominal pigmentation of the strain of Mount Selinda corresponded to the abovementioned original description of Graber (1957). Therefore, we concur with Bock & Wheeler (1972) for considering the strain of Mount Selinda to belong to D. vulcana. Okada et al. (1988) recorded this species from Tanzania, and Takada et al. (1990) indicated its presence in Kenya, suggesting its widespread distribution in East Africa. Females do not exhibit a sex-limited color dimorphism.<br />Published as part of Yassin, Amir, Suwalski, Arnaud & Raveloson Ravaomanarivo, Lala H., 2019, Resolving the synonymy and polyphyly of the ' Drosophila bakoue species complex' (Diptera: Drosophilidae: ' D. montium species group') with descriptions of two new species from Madagascar, pp. 1-26 in European Journal of Taxonomy 532 on page 20, DOI: 10.5852/ejt.2019.532, http://zenodo.org/record/3251569<br />{"references":["Graber H. 1957. Afrikanische Drosophiliden als Blutenbesucher. Zoologische Jahrbucher 85: 305 - 316.","Bock I. R. & Wheeler M. R. 1972. The Drosophila melanogaster species group. The University of Texas Publication 7213: 1 - 102.","Tsacas L. & Chassagnard M. - T. 1992. L'identite de Drosophila (Sophophora) vulcana Graber (Diptera, Drosophilidae). Bulletin de la Societe entomologique de France 96: 427 - 432.","Tsacas L. 1984. Nouvelles donnees sur la biogeographie et l'evolution du groupe Drosophila melanogaster en Afrique. Description de six nouvelles especes (Diptera, Drosophilidae). Annales de la Societe entomologique de France 20: 419 - 438.","Seguy E. 1938. Mission scientifique de l'Omo. Diptera. I. Nematocera et Brachycera. Memoires du Museum national d'Histoire naturelle, Paris 8: 319 - 380.","Okada T., Asada N. & Kawanaka K. 1988. A result of drosophilid survey in Tanzania. African Study Monographs 8: 159 - 163.","Takada H., Woodruff R. C. & Thompson J. N. 1990. Collections of Drosophilidae (Diptera) in Kenya, with description of a new species of Dettopsomyia. Entomological News 101: 246 - 255."]}

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....2364c70b22ba8a6e8ccba02911e315c4
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5696388