Tephritis campana, Korneyev & Namin, 2019

Korneyev, S. V. & Namin, S. Mohamadzade, 2019, A New Species Of The Genus Tephritis (Diptera, Tephritidae) From Iran, Vestnik Zoologii (Vestn. Zool.) 53 (2), pp. 123-130 : 124-128

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.2478/vzoo-2019-0012

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6462052

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03A38799-B620-3042-DAC9-A0508DE9FD51

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Tephritis campana
status

sp. nov.

Tephritis campana View in CoL sp. n. ( figs 1–2 View Fig View Fig )

urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act:F7AFFAC7-3DD8-458D-8EC9-E54121602890

Type material: Holotype ♀: Iran: Iran: Qazvin Province, Khoznan , 36.1222 N, 50.5575 E, h = 1670, 5.06.2014 (S. & V. Korneyev) ( SIZK). GoogleMaps

Paratypes: 2 Ơ, 3 ♀, same label as for the holotype ( SIZK); Qazvin Province, Khoznan, Ebrahimabad , 36°11' N, 50°65' E, 1650 m, swept from Cirsium sp. , 3.06.2014 , 2 Ơ, 2 ♀ ( JAZM, SMNC); same collection data, 7.07.2014 , 1 Ơ; same collection data, 4.06.2015 , 1 ♀ ( Mohamadzade ) ( JAZM) .

Diagnosis. Tephritis campana sp. n. can be easily differentiated from other known Tephritis species by the combination of the “stellar” wing pattern with widely hyaline wing base, narrow and separated dark rays at wing apex, only two hyaline spots in cell r 1 and evenly pointed aculeus ( fig. 2, 1–2 View Fig View Fig ) in addition to the hyaline spot distal to the apex of vein R 1 forming an connected, wide oblique band with the trapezoidal spot in r 2+3 cell (as marked by blue arrow in fig. 1 View Fig , 5), itself often touching or confluent with an 8-shaped hyaline spot at the base of cell r 4+5 and a ventrally setulose vein R 2+3.

Tephritis campana View in CoL sp. n. has a wing pattern similar to several species from the Western Palearctic Region with a basal hyaline area and narrow apical rays and can be differentiated from these species using the identification key below, and as follows: T. campana View in CoL has two hyaline spots in cell r 1 as opposed to the three hyaline spots in the T. cometa (Loew, 1840) View in CoL species group (including T. acanthiophilopsis Hering, 1938 View in CoL and T. erdemlii Kütük, 2008 ) and T. oedipus Hendel, 1927 View in CoL , the latter of which can also be recognized by the numerous tiny yellow or hyaline dots on the dark regions of the apical wing pattern ( fig. 3 View Fig , 12). Tephritis campana View in CoL sp. n. is also similar to species which often or always have two hyaline spots in cell r 1: T. separata Rondani, 1871 View in CoL and T. divisa Rondani, 1871 ( fig. 3 View Fig , 7) can both be differentiated by the presence of a dark spot in cell c, and cell dm with dark bars in the basal half. Species in the T. hurvitzi View in CoL species group ( fig. 3 View Fig , 2 View Fig ) ( T. crinita Hering, 1961 View in CoL , T. hurvitzi Freidberg, 1981 View in CoL , T. recurrens Loew, 1869 View in CoL and T. merzi Freidberg and Kütük, 2002 View in CoL ) differ from T. campana View in CoL sp. n. by having a taillike, complete dark band through cells dm and cu running towards the anal cell (some specimens of T. hurvitzi View in CoL in addition differ by having three hyaline spots in r 1). Tephritis santolinae Hering, 1934 View in CoL and T. maccus Hering, 1937 View in CoL can be easily differentiated from Tephritis campana View in CoL sp. n. by their entirely dark medial portion of cell r 2+3, which never features a hyaline spot connecting the hyaline regions of cells r 1 and r 4+5 ( figs 3 View Fig , 5, 9), in addition to the shape and form of the distal aculeus ( figs 3 View Fig , 6, 10). The evenly pointed apex of the aculeus of Tephritis campana View in CoL sp. n. ( fig. 2, 2 View Fig ) also clearly differs from all species of the T. hurvitzi View in CoL group ( fig. 3 View Fig , 4), T. separata View in CoL , and T. divisa ( fig. 3 View Fig , 8), which each have either steps or incisions in the apex of the aculeus.

Description. Medium-sized grey flies with two hyaline spots in cell r 1 and oblique band formed with hyaline spots from cell r 1 through r 2+3 to r 4+5. Hyaline spot at base of r 4+5 variable. Oviscape black, as long as the rest of abdomen; basal part of oviscape covered with white setulae, distal part with black setulae.

Head: shape in profile as in most other Tephritis species ( fig. 1 View Fig , 2 View Fig ). Length: height: width ratio = 1: 1.1: 1.4. Gena 0.55 times as high as length of flagellomere 1. Frons matte yellow, with grey dorsal and lateral margins, ocellar tubercle black, grey microtrichose. Occiput triangle black, white microtrichose. Ocellar, medial vertical, anterior orbital and frontal setae dark brown and acuminate; genal seta pale brown, acuminate; other setae including posterior orbital seta lanceolate, whitish or yellowish. Postocular row with longer white setae, setulae among them black. Genal setulae whitish yellow, brownish on anterior part. Setulae on distal part of palp and on pedicel black. Antenna yellow; flagellomere 1 rounded apically; arista black.

Thorax: ground color predominantly black, white microtrichose; postpronotal lobe, dorsal part of anepisternum and scutellum laterally dark yellow; mesonotum back, densely white microtrichose; mediotergite entirely black and sparsely white microtrichose without shining areas. Setae dark brown (posterior anepisternal and anepimeral setae brown); posterior notopleural seta white; apical scutellar seta half as long as basal scutellar seta. Setulae white; scutellum with five to six white marginal setulae on each side. Calypteres white. Halter yellow.

Legs: dark yellow; fore femur with two rows of white posterodorsal and one row of brown posteroventral setae; mid and hind legs with brown setae and setulae.

W i n g ( fig. 1 View Fig , 5): basal cells bc, bm and bcu hyaline; cell c entirely hyaline. Pterostigma dark brown with tiny hyaline anteroapical area. Cell r 1 hyaline at base, posterior to pterostigma brown, at middle with two trapeziform hyaline spots separated by narrow brown bar; the apical spot half as long as basal. Cell r 2+3 hyaline at base, with dark area posterior to pterostigma; two hyaline spots posterior to spots of r 1 separated by dark bars, the proximal spot as wide as cell and merged with spot in r 1, the distal spot small, rarely connecting to hyaline spot anterior of it in r 1; preapical brown area with only one isolated hyaline spot posterior to vein R 2+3 apex. Cell br hyaline in basal half and entirely dark in apical half, without hyaline dots at crossvein r-m. Cell r 4+5 brown at base, without dots aligned to r-m, at dm-cu level with hyaline spot of variable shape, from oval or 8-shaped to subrectangular. Rest of dark area with only one tiny round hyaline spot. Wing apex with three subtriangular hyaline spots separated by two narrow brown rays forming the “apical fork” connected with wide dark area. Cell dm with basal one-third to one-half hyaline, apically dark brown, with four to six large hyaline spots, posteriorly almost entirely hyaline. Cell m with three large hyaline spots, as wide as cell, separated by two narrow dark rays. Cell cu hyaline with three thin dark bars, not reaching the posterior part of cell. Anal cell and lobe hyaline. Alula hyaline.

Abdomen ( fig. 1 View Fig , 4): black, entirely white microtrichose, white setulose. Oviscape as long as rest of abdomen, shiny black, white setulose in basal half, black setulose in apical half.

Terminalia. Male. Epandrium similar to that of other Tephritis species. Glans of phallus as in fig. 2 View Fig , 7. Ejaculatory apodeme as in other species of the genus.

Female. Eversible membrane with two pairs of taeniae 0.25× as long as membrane itself; ventral side of membrane with blunt dentate scales, moderately large in anteromedial portion ( figs 2 View Fig , 3 View Fig –4). Aculeus 6× as long as wide, pointed to apex, with slightly rounded top ( figs 2, 1–2 View Fig View Fig ). Two papillose short spermathecae 4.5× as long as wide ( fig. 2 View Fig , 5).

Eggs short spindle-like ( fig. 2 View Fig , 6).

M e a s u r e m e n t s. WL = 4.2–4.3 (Ơ, n=2), 4.2–4.5 (♀, n=4); AL = 1.3–1.4 mm (n = 2); BL = 5.2–5.5 mm (♀, n = 4); 4.0–4.5 mm (Ơ, n = 2).

H o s t p l a n t s: Specimens were swept from Cirsium sp. , which possibly is its host plant.

D i s t r i b u t i o n. Iran.

Etymology. The species name is derived from Latin campana (“bell”), reflecting the pattern of hyaline spots at anteromedial part of the wing resembling a bell with handle.

SIZK

Schmaulhausen Institute of Zoology

R

Departamento de Geologia, Universidad de Chile

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Diptera

Family

Tephritidae

Genus

Tephritis

Loc

Tephritis campana

Korneyev, S. V. & Namin, S. Mohamadzade 2019
2019
Loc

Tephritis campana

Korneyev & Namin 2019
2019
Loc

T. campana

Korneyev & Namin 2019
2019
Loc

Tephritis campana

Korneyev & Namin 2019
2019
Loc

T. campana

Korneyev & Namin 2019
2019
Loc

Tephritis campana

Korneyev & Namin 2019
2019
Loc

Tephritis campana

Korneyev & Namin 2019
2019
Loc

T. erdemlii Kütük, 2008

Kutuk 2008
2008
Loc

T. merzi Freidberg and Kütük, 2002

Freidberg and Kutuk 2002
2002
Loc

T. hurvitzi

Freidberg 1981
1981
Loc

T. hurvitzi

Freidberg 1981
1981
Loc

T. hurvitzi

Freidberg 1981
1981
Loc

T. hurvitzi

Freidberg 1981
1981
Loc

T. crinita

Hering 1961
1961
Loc

T. acanthiophilopsis

Hering 1938
1938
Loc

T. maccus

Hering 1937
1937
Loc

Tephritis santolinae

Hering 1934
1934
Loc

T. oedipus

Hendel 1927
1927
Loc

T. separata

Rondani 1871
1871
Loc

T. divisa

Rondani 1871
1871
Loc

T. separata

Rondani 1871
1871
Loc

T. divisa

Rondani 1871
1871
Loc

T. recurrens

Loew 1869
1869
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