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Meomyia Evenhuis 1983

Authors :
Li, Xuankun
Yeates, David K.
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Zenodo, 2020.

Abstract

Key to species of Meomyia Evenhuis 1. Body with yellowish and black hairs; wing membrane with distinct spots (Fig. 7d)....................................................................................................... Meomyia fasciculata (Macquart, 1840) - Body with white and black hairs; wing membrane without distinct spots (Figs 2d, 4d, 9d, 11d, 13d, 16d, 19d, 22d)........ 2 2. Male fore tibia with hair tuft, with or without enlarged setae (Figs 2e, 4e, 22e)..................................... 3 - Male fore tibia without hair tuft or enlarged setae............................................................ 5 3. Apical outer hair tuft on male fore tibia with only black hairs (Fig. 2e)............... Meomyia albiceps (Macquart, 1848) - Apical outer hair tuft on male fore tibia mostly black, but with a subapical white scale band (Figs 4e, 22e)............... 4 4. Male mid tibia without enlarged setae (Fig. 22f).................................... Meomyia vetusta (Walker, 1849) - Male mid tibia with enlarged black setae on inner and outer face (Fig. 4f)........ Meomyia callynthrophora (Schiner, 1868) 5. Posterior margin of scutum with a black band, consisting of black hairs (Figs 19 a–i); upper clypeal margin and dorsolateral area of face admixed with some black hairs (Figs 19 g–h); wing membrane slightly infuscated, darker towards wing base, with some unconspicuous markings on base of R 4 , apex of cell dm, base of crossvein m-cu, and apex of cell bm (Fig. 19d); male epiphallus short, not modified (Fig. 20c)................................................ Meomyia sericans (Macquart, 1850) - Posterior margin of scutum with or without black band, covered with yellowish hairs; face covered in white hairs, upper clypeal margin and dorsolateral area without black hairs; wing membrane hyaline, without markings (Figs 9d, 11d, 13d, 16d); male epiphallus bifid apically, branch slender and long (Figs 10c, 12c, 14c, 17c)........................................ 6 6. Posterior margin of abdominal tergite 3 with a narrow black band, consisting of scales, hairs and setae (Fig. 13b); posterior area of scutum with some black setae; fore tibia with subapical white scale band (Fig. 13e)....... Meomyia melanocincta sp. nov. - Posterior margin of abdominal tergite 3 without black band, tergite 3 covered in white or pale yellow hairs; posterior area of scutum without setae; fore tibia covered in black or brown scales, without subapical white scale band.................. 7 7. Antennal flagellum wide (Fig. 9c); posterior margin of scutellum with pale yellow setae; posterior margin of tergites 3–6 with pale yellow setae; antennal scape with long white hairs, admixed with a few long black hairs........................................................................................................ Meomyia hortorum sp. nov. - Antennal flagellum narrow (Figs 11c, 16c); posterior margin of scutellum with brownish yellow or black setae; posterior margin of tergites 3–6 with black setae; antennal scape with long black hairs on dorsal half, and long white hairs on ventral half 8 8. Legs mostly brown, except basal half of femora turning black; posterior margin of scutellum with black setae; lateral margin of male gonocoxite strongly curved subapically (Figs 17 a–b); male epiphallus with rounded dorsal branch (Fig. 17c).............................................................................. Meomyia penicillata (Macquart, 1850) - Legs mostly yellow, except tarsi dark brown; posterior margin of scutellum with brownish yellow setae; lateral margin of male gonocoxite nearly straight (Figs 12 a–b); male epiphallus with acute dorsal branch (Fig. 12c)....... Meomyia kochae sp. nov.<br />Published as part of Li, Xuankun & Yeates, David K., 2020, Revision of the Australian bee fly genus Meomyia Evenhuis, 1983, with description of three new species (Bombyliidae, Bombyliinae, Bombyliini), pp. 201-243 in Zootaxa 4810 (2) on page 203, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4810.2.1, http://zenodo.org/record/3938074<br />{"references":["Macquart, P. J. M. (1840) Tome Deuxieme. - 1 re Partie. In: Dipteres exotiques nouveaux ou peu connus. N. E. Roret, Paris, pp. 5 - 135.","Macquart, P. J. M. (1848) Dipteres exotiques nouveaux ou peu connus. Suite du 2 me supplement. Memoires de la Societe (Royale) des Science, de l'Agriculture et des Arts a Lille, 1847 (2), 161 - 237.","Walker, F. (1849) Parts II-IV. In: List of the specimens of dipterous insects in the collection of the British Museum. British Museum, London, pp. 231 - 1172.","Schiner, I. R. (1868) Diptera. In: Reise der osterreichischen Fregatte Novara um die Erde in den Jahren 1857, 1858, 1859, unter den Befehlen des Commodore B. von Wullerstof-Urbair. Zoologischer Theil. Zweiter Band. 1. Abtheilung. B. K. Gerold's Sohn, Wien (Vienna), pp. i-vi + 1 - 388. https: // doi. org / 10.5962 / bhl. title. 7913","Macquart, P. J. M. (1850) Dipteres exotiques nouveaux ou peu connus. 4 me supplement. Memoires de la Societe (Royale) des Science, de l'Agriculture et des Arts a Lille, 1849, 309 - 479."]}

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....2d42155ae31a2a9d884b7ac3975fea0d
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4331944