Megaselia kaleybarensis, Khameneh & Khaghaninia & Disney & Maleki-Ravasan, 2019
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4711.1.1 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:604227AA-58EB-408C-8794-6E30192C3F74 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5933488 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/89AE9B13-F2FA-40CE-8349-71971C367F2E |
taxon LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:act:89AE9B13-F2FA-40CE-8349-71971C367F2E |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Megaselia kaleybarensis |
status |
sp. nov. |
Megaselia kaleybarensis View in CoL n. sp.
( Figs 39–54 View FIGURES 39–48 View FIGURES 49–54 )
Material examined. Holotype male, East Azerbaijan province, Arasbaran forests, Kaleybar region, 38°51.548’N 46°59.007’E, 1783 m, open forest, 1.vii.2017, S. Khaghaninia (17, UCMZ—13-91) GoogleMaps . Paratypes: 46 males, locality data as the holotype (2 UCZM, 44 ICHMM) .
Description. Male. Whole fly as Fig. 39 View FIGURES 39–48 . Frons as Fig. 40 View FIGURES 39–48 , with microtrichia restricted to edges ( Fig. 41 View FIGURES 39–48 ). Cheek with 4 bristles and jowl with 2 that are longer and more robust. Postpedicels, palps and proboscis as Fig. 42 View FIGURES 39–48 , with postpedicels lacking SPS vesicles ( Fig. 43 View FIGURES 39–48 ). Labella with numerous small bristles on ventral faces ( Fig. 44 View FIGURES 39–48 ). Notopleuron with 3 bristles, with no cleft in front of these, and mesopleuron with hairs ( Fig. 45 View FIGURES 39–48 ). Scutellum ( Fig. 46 View FIGURES 39–48 ) with an anterior pair of hairs and a posterior pair of bristles. Abdomen as Fig. 47 View FIGURES 39–48 , with hairs on segments 3–6 of venter 6. Tergites 2 to 4 as Fig. 48 View FIGURES 39–48 . Hypopygium as Figs 49–51 View FIGURES 49–54 . Legs yellowish brown with a darker tip to hind femur. Fore tarsus with posterodorsal hair palisade on segments 1–4 and 5 a little longer than 4 ( Fig. 52 View FIGURES 49–54 ). Dorsal hair palisade of mid tibia extends about 0.9 times its length. Hairs below basal half of hind femur longer than those of anteroventral row of outer half ( Fig. 53 View FIGURES 49–54 ), being 0.08 mm long. Hind tibia with 14–15 moderately differentiated posterodorsal hairs, without anterodorsals, and spinules of apical combs simple. Wings ( Fig. 54 View FIGURES 49–54 ) 1.70–1.75 mm long. Costal index 0.43–0.44. Costal ratios 3.7–3.8: 2.20: 1. Costal cilia (of section 3) 0.13 mm long. Hair at base of vein 3 only 0.03 mm long. With 4 axillary bristles, the outermost being 0.13 mm long. Sc not reaching R1. Haltere knob pale.
Recognition. In the key to the males of British species ( Disney 1989) it runs to triplet 104; but this is in part revised by Disney & Häggqvist (2018), in which it runs to M. subnitida (Lundbeck) . However, it differs in a number of details considered below. For the rest of the world the Nearctic species M. cribella Borgmeier (1964) is similar, but its longer costal index, position of the anterolateral frontal bristles and the tapered hypandrial lobe of the hypopygium exclude this species. With regard to the differences of our species from M. subnitida the dorsal hair palisade of mid tibia extends 0.76–0.90 times its length contrasting with 0.61–0.62 times in M. subnitida . The hairs below the basal half of the hind femur are longer ( Fig. 53 View FIGURES 49–54 ) than in M. subnitida ( Fig. 56 View FIGURES 55–56 ) and the longer hairs on the lateral fifths of abdominal tergite 2 are more numerous and extend almost to the lateral margins ( Fig. 48 View FIGURES 39–48 ), but in M. subnitida they are fewer and end well before the lateral edges and the posterolateral hairs are longer ( Fig. 55 View FIGURES 55–56 ). The hypopygia seem very similar.
Etymology. Named after the Kaleybar region.
No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.