5,873 research outputs found
Limnophora helenae Pont 1977
<i>Limnophora helenae</i> Pont, 1977: 132. <p>Holotype male in MRAC. A series of paratypes seen.</p> <p> <b>Diagnosis.</b> Arista almost bare; prosternum without setulae; mid femur with 2 preapical setae; mid tibia with one posterior seta and without an anterodorsal seta; lower katepisternal seta more or less equidistant from the other two; costal spine present and strong.</p> <p> <b>Notes.</b> Described from St. Helena Island. Terminalia of male and female illustrated in the original description (Pont 1977: Figs 113–117). It runs in Emden’s (1951) key to couplet 66 and can be differentiated from <i>L. parallelifrons</i> Emden by the characteristic colour pattern of the scutum and the presence of the anterior postsutural intralar seta.</p>Published as part of <i>Couri, Márcia & Pont, Adrian, 2017, Afrotropical Limnophora Robineau-Desvoidy (Diptera, Muscidae) with the description of four new species, pp. 501-536 in Zootaxa 4216 (6)</i> on page 512, DOI: <a href="http://zenodo.org/record/242395">10.5281/zenodo.242395</a>
Atherigona (Atherigona) bidens Hennig. Pont 1973
1. <i>Atherigona</i> (<i>Atherigona</i>) <i>bidens</i> Hennig, new record <p>(Figs 1–4)</p> <p> <i>Atherigona tridens</i> ssp. <i>bidens</i> Hennig, 1952: 67. Holotype male, Endeh, Flores Island, Indonesia, in DEI (type seen by Pont, 1986b: 37).</p> <p> <b>Diagnosis.</b> Frontal vitta dark. Palpus yellow. Male fore femur yellow or weakly darkened; fore tarsomeres 2–4 with short to moderately long anterior to anterodorsal hairs (Figs 148–149 in Pont, 1986b). Male hypopygial prominence and trifoliate process as in Figs 1–4 (see also Figs 150–159 in Pont, 1986b). Female tergite 8 and sternite 7 as in Pont (1986b: Figs 160–164); sternite 6 2.0–2.5 times as long as broad. See also Pont & Magpayo (1995).</p> <p> <b>Material examined:</b> BPBM: <b>New Caledonia</b>: Gomen: 23.i.1969, 2 ♂, N.L.H. Krauss. Nouméa: viiviii.1940, 1 ♂, no collector named; 7.iv.1945, 1 ♀, H.E. Milliron; 15.v.1945, 8 ♀, H.E. Milliron; beaten ex lantana, 21.vii.1940, 2 ♀, F.X. Williams; hills behind Nouméa, 17.vii.1940, 2 ♀, F.X.Williams.</p> <p> <b>Comments.</b> This is the first record of this species from New Caledonia. For a full description and illustrations, see Pont (1986b). See also Pont & Magpayo (1995) for further notes and illustrations.</p> <p> <b>Distribution.</b> Australia (ACT, NSW, NT, Qld, WA), Indonesia (Nusa Tenggara), Norfolk Island, PNG (PNG); Oriental Region.</p>Published as part of <i>Couri, Marcia S., Pont, Adrian C. & Daugeron, Christophe, 2010, The Muscidae (Diptera) of New Caledonia 2503, pp. 1-61 in Zootaxa 2503 (1)</i> on page 15, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.2503.1.1, <a href="http://zenodo.org/record/10094189">http://zenodo.org/record/10094189</a>
Hydrotaea himalayensis Pont 1975
Hydrotaea himalayensis Pont, 1975 Material: Kotayk: Tsаkhkаdzоr, hеаth, N40° 32 Е 44° 41, 2360 m, 21.vi.2010, 2♀. Remarks: Thеsе fеmаlеs аrе vеry similаr tо Hydrotaea pandellei Stеin аnd, likе thаt sресiеs, hаvе knоb оf hаltеrе blасk, mid tibiа withоut аntеrоdоrsаl оr роstеrоvеntrаl sеtае, рrеsuturаl асrоstiсhаls shоrt аnd sеtulоsе, nоtорlеurоn sеtulоsе аrоund bоth sеtае, рrеаlаr minutе, аnd frоntо-оrbitаl рlаtеs dustеd аlthоugh with sоmе wеаk shinе shоwing thrоugh frоm sоmе аnglеs. Hоwеvеr, thеy diffеr frоm H. pandellei by hаving thе sсutum muсh blасkеr, with brоwn dust соnfinеd tо thе роstрrоnоtаl lоbеs аnd with littlе grеy dust visiblе еxсерt in еxtrеmе роstеriоr viеw; аristа with thе hаirs shоrtеr, hаrdly аs lоng аs bаsаl diаmеtеr оf аristа; рlеurа shining; аnd mid fеmur in bаsаl hаlf with роstеrоvеntrаl sеtае аs lоng аs fеmur is dеер. Dr N.Е. Vikhrеv (реrs. соmm.) suggеstеd thаt thеsе fеmаlеs might bе H. himalayensis, аnd this hаs bееn соnfirmеd by соmраrisоn with thе fеmаlе раrаtyре оf H. himalayensis in thе BМNH. Armenian distribution: Kоtаyk рrоvinсе. Nеw fоr Armеniа. General distribution: Russiа (Krаsnоdаr), Kаzаkhstаn, Kyrgyzstаn, Tаjikistаn, аnd Kаshmir аnd Indiа; а mоuntаin sресiеs.Published as part of Pont, Adrian C., 2018, The Muscidae (Diptera) of Armenia, pp. 1-69 in Zootaxa 4465 (1) on pages 16-17, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4465.1.1, http://zenodo.org/record/144200
FIGURES 6–12. Head, lateral view. 6. Female, Brachygasterina andina. 7. Female, B. major. 8. Female, B. stuebeli. 9. Female, B. valdiviensis. 10. Female, B. violaceiventris. 11. Male, B. major. 12. Male, B in Taxonomy, cladistics and biogeography of the South American genus Brachygasterina Macquart (Diptera: Muscidae)
FIGURES 6–12. Head, lateral view. 6. Female, Brachygasterina andina. 7. Female, B. major. 8. Female, B. stuebeli. 9. Female, B. valdiviensis. 10. Female, B. violaceiventris. 11. Male, B. major. 12. Male, B. violaceiventris. Scale bar: 1 mm.Published as part of De Carvalho, C. J. B. & Pont, A. C., 2006, Taxonomy, cladistics and biogeography of the South American genus Brachygasterina Macquart (Diptera: Muscidae), pp. 1-26 in Zootaxa 1151 on page 7, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.17215
Limnophora femoriseta Pont, Vikhrev & Werner 2011
Limnophora femoriseta Pont, Vikhrev & Werner, 2011 New material: Kotayk: Azаt Rivеr саnyоn, Gаrni N.P., N40° 07 Е44 ° 44, 1270 m, 26.v.2012, 2♂, аnd 28.vii.2015, оn ореnеd wаtеr mеlоn, 3♂ 2♀. Yerevan: Jrvеzh, еаst оf Yеrеvаn Сity, N40° 11 Е44 ° 36, 1390 m, 4.vi.2005, 1♀. Armenian distribution: Arаgаtsоtn, Kоtаyk, Syunik, Vаyоts Dzоr аnd Yеdrеvаn рrоvinсеs (Pоnt, Vikhrеv & Wеrnеr 2011: 100; Pоnt et al. 2012b: 128). General distribution: Armеniа, Turkеy аnd Lеbаnоn (nеw rесоrd).Published as part of Pont, Adrian C., 2018, The Muscidae (Diptera) of Armenia, pp. 1-69 in Zootaxa 4465 (1) on page 43, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4465.1.1, http://zenodo.org/record/144200
Neorypellia Pont
Genus Neorypellia Pont Neopyrellia Townsend, 1939: 446 (preocc. Enderlein, 1935). Type species, neglecta Townsend (orig. des.). Neorypellia Pont, 1972: 10, for Neopyrellia Townsend, 1939. Type species, neglecta Townsend (aut.). Refs.: de Carvalho & Couri 2002 a: 49 (key to species); de Carvalho et al., 2005: 27 (cat.); Nihei & de Carvalho, 2009: 18.Published as part of Pérez, Sandra & De Carvalho, Claudio J. B., 2016, FAMILY MUSCIDAE, pp. 814-853 in Zootaxa 4122 (1) on page 821, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4122.1.70, http://zenodo.org/record/25648
Musca hugonis Pont 1980
Musca hugonis Pont, 1980 Diagnosis: Eye bare; postalar ridge without setulae; proepisternal depression bare; scutum brown with grey pollinosity and 4 dark brown vittae; fore tibia with 1 posterior seta in apical ½; mid tibia with anteroventral setae in apical half. Material examined: NAMIBIA: Caprivi: 8ƃ. DWLPD 0 XOLOR 'LVW., 6DODPEDOD SDQ, ƚ7°ƽo‵oo̎6 ƻ4° ƽ‵ƽ8̎(, ƚ±4.LLL.ƻooƚ, .+..LUN―6 SULJJV, 0 DODLVH WUDS (ƚƃ 015-, ƚƃ '=83, RWKHU 101:); ƽƃ. DWLPD 0 XOLOR 'LVW., 6DODPEDOD FDPSVLWH, ƚ7°ƽo‵oƚ̎6 ƻ4° Ϭ‵o9̎(, ƚ±4.LLL.ƻooƚ, .+..LUN―6 SULJJV, 0 DODLVH WUDS. Hardap: ƻƃ 0DULHQWDO 'LVW.,9LOMRHQVNURRQ ƽo7, ƻϬ°o8‵ 9̎6 ƚ9°ƽ7‵ƚƚ̎(, 7±9.LL.ƚ998, (. 0 DUDLV &.+..LUN―6 SULJJV. Kunene: 4ƃ. KRUL [DV 'LVW., /HHXNRS ϬϬ4, ƚ9°ƽ ‵ƚƽ̎6 ƚ4°ƻƚ‵44̎(, ƻϬ± o.[.ƻooƚ, .+..LUN―6 SULJJV & E. Marais, Malaise trap, riverbed. Omaheke: ƚƃ *REDELV 'LVW., 6RPHUNRPV ƽƻƚ, ƻƻ°oƚ‵ƽ9̎6 ƚ9°ƽ7‵ƻƻ̎(, 6–8.ii.2001, A.H. Kirk-Spriggs & E. Marais, Malaise trap (all NMNW). Distribution: Botswana, Namibia and South Africa.Published as part of Couri, Márcia Souto, de Carvalho, Claudio J. B. & Pont, Adrian C., 2012, Taxonomy of the Muscidae (Diptera) of Namibia: a key to genera, diagnoses, new records and description of a new species, pp. 47 in African Invertebrates 53 (1) on page 60, DOI: 10.5733/afin.053.0103, http://zenodo.org/record/791826
Brachygasterina andina Carvalho & Pont, sp. nov.
Brachygasterina andina Carvalho & Pont, sp. nov. (Figs 1, 6, 15) Diagnosis This species is similar in its generally dark metallic violetblue body colour to most species of Brachygasterina but can be distinguished by the narrow parafacial, in lateral view at narrowest point 0.2 of the width of first flagellomere (male not known) (Fig. 6); from B. violaceiventris and B. valdiviensis, which also have a narrow parafacial, it differs by the absence of setulae on the facial ridge. Description Female. Head: frons broad, at narrowest point 0.37–0.39 of head width (Fig. 1). Eye with short and sparse hairs (Fig. 6). Frontoorbital plate matt, black with brownishgrey pruinosity; parafacial, face and gena brownishgrey pruinose; occiput metallic blue to violet. 7–8 pairs of frontal setae; 2 reclinate orbital setae, the anterior weak. Facial ridge without setulae. Parafacial narrow, in lateral view at narrowest point 0.2 of first flagellomere width (Fig. 6). Proboscis mainly shining, dusted behind. Palpus black. Thorax. Groundcolour subshining dark metallic violetblue, dulled by pruinescence in posterior view. Mesonotum with 4 stripes, 2 median and 2 lateral. 3 + 3 developed acrostichals; 3 posterior intraalars, the anterior weaker; prealar strong, subequal to anterior notopleural seta; notopleuron with sparse setulae, mostly around second notopleural seta. Scutellum laterally setulose; with strong apical, basal and lateral setae, and corresponding setae on disc. One strong proepisternal seta and 3–4 long setulae; 3 strong proepimeral setae and many long setulae. Katepisternals 1 + 3. Katatergite distinctly setulose. Legs. Dark brown. Fore tibia without posterior seta. Mid femur with 1 short anterior and 3 posterior preapical setae. Mid tibia with 3 posterior setae, without anterodorsal or ventrals. Hind femur with a row of strong anteroventral setae, and with strong posteroventrals in basal half; 2 anterodorsal and 4 anteroventral setae; dorsal preapical strong, anterodorsal preapical weak, without posteroventral apical. Wing. Smoky, veins dark brown. Veins bare, except costa. Crossvein dmcu weakly sinuous. Vein M straight, parallel with R 4 + 5. Calypters dark brown, lower one 1.5 times length of upper one. Knob of haltere dark brown. Abdomen. Subshining metallic violet blue. Sternite 1 bare. Ovipositor: see Fig. 15. Measurements (n= 2): Body length, 7.4–8.2 mm. Wing length, 7.8–8.6 mm. Type material examined Holotype, female, ECUADOR: Pichincha, 72 Km NW Quito, 6800 ’ [feet], 24–29.viii. 1976 (J. Cohen) (FMNH). Paratype, ECUADOR: 1 female, same data as holotype (DZUP). Remarks According to the labels, these specimens were collected in carrion traps. Geographic distribution Ecuador.Published as part of De Carvalho, C. J. B. & Pont, A. C., 2006, Taxonomy, cladistics and biogeography of the South American genus Brachygasterina Macquart (Diptera: Muscidae), pp. 1-26 in Zootaxa 1151 on pages 5-7, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.17215
Drymeia fratercula Pont 2022, sp. nov.
<i>Drymeia fratercula</i> sp. nov. <p>Figs 10–18</p> <p> <b>Diagnosis.</b> This species is close to the Alpine <i>Drymeia glacialis</i> (Rondani, 1866), e.g. 3 postsutural dorsocentrals, very broad parafacial, and conspicuous facial snout. However, <i>D. glacialis</i> is a larger, more robust species with longer and stronger setae, and the male has the frontal width equal to diameter of anterior ocellus; hind femur with no or few posteroventrals in apical half; fore tarsus with tarsomere 1 produced posteroventrally at tip into a conspicuous thorn, and tarsomere 1 almost as long as the length of tarsomeres 2–5 combined.</p> <p> <b>Etymology.</b> The specific name “ <i>fratercula</i> ” is Latin and means “little brother”. This reflects the close similarity between this species and <i>D. glacialis</i> (Rondani).</p> <p> <b>Type-material Examined.</b> Holotype ♂. GEORGIA: Mtskheta-Mtianeti region: Mt Koltesh [~ 42°37’N 44°45’E], meadow/heath, 2300 m, 8.vii.1983, A.C. Pont (BMNH). Paratypes 11♂ 11♀. GEORGIA: Mtskheta-Mtianeti (Kazbegi district): data as for holotype, 4♂ 3♀ (2♂ OUMNH & ZMUM, rest BMNH); same data but date, 30.vi.1983, 3♂ 2♀ (1♂ 1♀ SZNM, rest BMNH); Mt Koltesh, heath, 2500 m, 30.vi.1983 (A.C. Pont), 2♀ (OUMNH & BMNH); Gergeti [~ 42°42’N 44°31’E], upper heaths, 2300–3000 m, 11.vi.1983 (A.C. Pont), 3♀ (1 ZMUM, 2 BMNH). ARMENIA: <i>Aragatsotn</i>: Mt Aragats, 40°29’N 44°11’E 3380–3420 m, 21.vii.2015 (A.C. Pont), 1♂ (OUMNH); Lake Kari, 40°28’N 44°11’E, 3190 m, 21.vii.2015 (A.C. Pont), 1♀ (OUMNH). RUSSIA: Caucasus Reserve, Lagonaki Plateau, 11–12.vii.2008 (O. Kosterin), 3♂ (ZMUM).</p> <p> <b>Description.</b> ♂.</p> <p> <i>Head</i> (Fig. 12). Ground-colour black. Eye bare. Fronto-orbital plate silvery-white pruinose below, dull above; parafacial silvery-white pruinose; face grey, and gena light grey pruinose; most of occiput subshining. Frons at narrowest point separated by a distance equal to 2–3 times diameter of anterior ocellus, the margins of each fronto-orbital plate touching or narrowly separated on upper half of frons where the frontal vitta may be obsolete. Ocellar setae long. 12 pairs of frontal setae, including interstitials, and above them, just in front of ocellar tubercle, with 2 pairs of short, fine, reclinate orbitals.Antenna black, postpedicel twice as long as wide. Arista short-pubescent, the individual hairs shorter than its basal diameter. Parafacial at level of insertion of arista twice width of postpedicel, narrowing sharply below. Upper part of face with a conspicuous knob separating antennal bases. In lateral view, facial edge in front of level of profrons. Gena broad, depth below lowest eye-margin equal to length of postpedicel, densely setose and with a group of upcurved setae on anterior part of genal dilation. Occipital setulae long and dense. Palpus black, slender. Proboscis very long, slender, prementum dusted.</p> <p> <i>Thorax</i>. Ground-colour black. Scutum matt, black, with very indistinct grey vittae before suture, running inside the line of the dorsocentrals, and brownish-grey vittae running between the intra-alar and dorsocentral rows before and after suture (Fig. 11). Ground-setulae fine, erect. Postpronotal lobe light grey dusted. Pleura thinly dusted. Acrostichals 0+1, the presutural setulae in 3–4 irregular rows. Dorsocentrals 2+3, exceptionally 2+4. Prealar strong, much longer than 2nd notopleural. Notopleuron densely setulose. Prosternum bare. Katepisternal setae 1+2, with 2–3 stronger setulae below posterior seta, anterior seta fine. Scutellum black and undusted in posterior view; bare laterally and ventrally.</p> <p> <i>Legs</i>. Black. Fore tibia with 3 posteroventral setae and 2–3 stronger anterodorsal setulae just before apex; apical posteroventral seta at most 2/3 as long as length of fore tarsomere 1. Fore tarsomere 1 not as long as the length of tarsomeres 2–5 combined, not modified, with the posteroventral apical thorn very inconspicuous. Fore claws very short, half as long as length of tarsomere 5, blunt-tipped. Mid femur weakly curved; with complete rows of anteroventral and posteroventral setae, all longer than femoral depth, the posteroventrals rather shorter than the anteroventrals; 0 anterior and 2 posterodorsal to posterior preapical setae. Mid tibia with 3 strong and 2 short anterodorsals, 3 strong and 2 short posterodorsals, 4–5 short anteroventrals, and 4 posteroventrals. Mid tarsomere 1 with the ventral spinules shorter than tarsal depth. Hind femur with complete rows of long strong anteroventral and posteroventral setae, all much longer than femoral depth. Hind tibia with 4–5 posterodorsals, 3–4 strong anterodorsals interspersed with 4–5 shorter setae, 4–5 anteroventrals, and 4–5 fine posteroventrals; 1 dorsal and 1 short anterodorsal preapical seta; ventral tip slightly produced, with 1 anteroventral and 1 posteroventral apical seta (Fig. 13). Hind tarsomere 1 with a short ventral seta at base.</p> <p> <i>Wing</i>. Brown, especially at base (Fig. 10). Basicosta and tegula black. Costa with weak spinules, without costal spine. Cross-vein r-m distinctly beyond the point where subcosta enters costa. Cross-vein dm-cu oblique, almost straight. Calypters creamy, margins deeper yellow. Knob of haltere black.</p> <p> <i>Abdomen</i>. Ground-colour black. When viewed from above, appearing matt with grey dust at sides of syntergite 1+2 and forming broad antero-lateral patches on tergites 3–5. Setae strong and erect laterally and medially on all tergites, except medially on syntergite 1+2. Sternite 1 bare. Sternite 5 (Fig. 15).</p> <p> <i>Terminalia</i> (Figs 17–18). Syntergite 6+7+8 with long dense setae.</p> <p> <i>Measurements</i>. Length of body, 6.0 mm. Length of wing, 4.5 mm.</p> <p>♀. Differs from the male as follows:</p> <p> <i>Head</i>. Dichoptic. Frons at middle 0.4 of head-width at this point, and here each fronto-orbital plate 0.3 of frontal vitta. Frontal triangle inconspicuous, not reaching the crossed setae on frontal vitta. 6–7 pairs of inclinate frontal setae, including several interstitials; 3 pairs of orbital setae, the upper two pairs reclinate and exclinate, the lower pair proclinate and exclinate. Frontal vitta with a pair of strong crossed setae. Fronto-orbital plate bare apart from the setae. Occipital setae shorter and less dense.</p> <p> <i>Legs</i>. Fore tarsomeres 1–4 (Fig. 14) with dense fine erect hairs on ventral surfaces, mostly as long as tarsal depth. Mid femur straight. Hind tibia with 4–5 anterodorsals and 4–5 anteroventrals; without posteroventrals.</p> <p> <i>Wing</i>. Brownish, especially at base. Costa with strong spinules from humeral cross-vein almost to tip of vein R1. Calypters yellow, their margins bright yellow.</p> <p> <i>Abdomen</i>. Grey dusting more extensive, tergites 3–5 each with a poorly defined black median vitta, very broad on tergite 3, to narrow on tergite 5. Without strong setae.</p> <p> <i>Ovipositor</i>. Long and slender, 1.7 times as long as length of abdomen. As in <i>D. setibasis</i> except that the two elongated rods of tergite 8 are fused into a single plate (Fig. 16), and the two lines of setulae at the tip of the tergite are placed on a single weak plate.</p> <p> <i>Measurements</i>. Length of body, 7.0 mm. Length of wing, 5.5 mm.</p> <p> <b>Remarks.</b> In Sorokina & Pont (2015), <i>D. fratercula</i> keys out to <i>D. glacialis</i> (as <i>D. alpicola</i> Rondani) from the European Alps from which it differs as stated in the diagnosis. The two species are extremely similar and are evidently sister-species. In the key by Fan (2008) it runs to couplet 29 but differs from the species therein by the armature of the ♂ mid femur. In the key by Xue et al. (2008) it runs to couplet 39 and to <i>D. melargentea</i> Fan from China (Yunnan).</p> <p> <i>Drymeia fratercula</i> and <i>D. glacialis</i> can be separated by the following key couplet:</p> <p> - Larger and more robust species, length up to 8 mm, with strong setae. Fore tibia with the apical posteroventral seta long, almost as long as fore tarsomere 1. ♂: fore tarsomere 1 with a distinct posteroventral apical thorn; frons at narrowest point usually equal in width to diameter of anterior ocellus; hind femur with no or few posteroventral setae in apical half. ♀: the mat of ventral hairs on fore tarsomeres 2–4 much longer than the depth of the tarsomeres............................. <i>D. glacialis</i> (Rondani)</p> <p> - Smaller and less robust species, length up to 7 mm, with weaker setae. Fore tibia with the apical posteroventral seta a little over half as long as length of fore tarsomere 1. ♂: fore tarsomere 1 with the posteroventral apical thorn very inconspicuous; frons at narrowest point separated by a distance equal to 2–3 times diameter of anterior ocellus; hind femur with a complete row of posteroventral setae. ♀: the mat of ventral hairs on fore tarsomeres 2–4 not as long as the depth of the tarsomeres <i>D. fratercula</i> <b>sp. nov.</b></p> <p> Some of these differential characters are slightly variable, but these two allopatric taxa appear to be species in the process of divergence. <i>D. glacialis</i> is found in the Western Palaearctic only in the European Alps, where it occupies the highest alpine biotopes, meadows and alpine heaths from 1450 to 2500 m. <i>D. fratercula</i> is endemic to the Caucasus Mountains and is found only in the zone of alpine heaths from 2300 to 3420 m asl. The Alps and the Caucasus are two segments of the late Coenozoic trans-Eurasian orogenic belt (Sharkov et al. 2015). During the Quaternary glaciations the snow-line in the Caucasus was up to 1300 m lower than it is at present (Tielidze 2017, Revaz et al. 2018) and the foothills were in the tundra zone. During subsequent warming, the retreating tundra led to the faunistic isolation of these two ranges and the tundra fauna eventually occupied the highest zones where individual taxa have evidently begun to separate into sister-species.</p> <p> <b> Note on <i>Aspilia glacialis</i> Rondani, 1866.</b> This species was described by Rondani from a single female from the Insubrian Alps of northern Italy (“unicum exemplar collectionis meae... in Alpibus Insubriae captum et olim a Clar. De Cristofari Mediolanensi missum”). The name was tentatively synonymised with <i>Drymeia alpicola</i> (Rondani, 1870) (as <i>Pogonomyia</i>) by Stein (in Becker <i>et al.</i> 1907: 631). In the course of his revision of the Palaearctic Muscidae, Hennig (1961) studied Rondani’s collection but did not find the holotype. Later (Hennig, 1962b), after correspondence with several Italian Museums, he reported that the holotype must be presumed lost and <i>D. glacialis</i> remained as an “unrecognised species” although the possibility of a synonymy with <i>D. alpicola</i> was left open (Hennig 1962b: 677; Pont 1986: 73).</p> <p> The holotype has recently been located in MZUF (Sforzi & Sommaggio 2021: 140). It is a female, with two labels: (1) A white oval label, with “1162” printed in red ink; (2) A red label with the printed information “Museu “La Specola” / coll. Rondani / HOLOTYPUS ”. It is in fair condition (Fig. 19): slightly mouldy and dusty; both postpedicels and right hind leg missing; ptilinum partly extruded; right wing with part of costa missing; beetle damage to left side of syntergite 1+2; many setae on scutum rubbed off. Nevertheless, it can be recognised as <i>Drymeia alpicola</i> (Rondani, 1871) on account of the very enlarged parafacial, elongate proboscis, presence of a small snout between the antennal bases, and dense fine ventral setulae on fore tarsomeres 1–4, and, being an earlier name, must replace <i>D. alpicola</i>. This information was passed to Drs Jade Savage (Sherbrooke, Canada) and Vera Sorokina (Novosibirsk, Russia) who formally published the synonymy (Savage & Sorokina 2021: 51).</p>Published as part of <i>Pont, Adrian C., 2022, The genus Drymeia Meigen in the Caucasus Mountains, with a note on the identity of Aspilia glacialis Rondani, 1866 (Diptera: Muscidae), pp. 355-382 in Zootaxa 5134 (3)</i> on pages 364-368, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.5134.3.2, <a href="http://zenodo.org/record/6538197">http://zenodo.org/record/6538197</a>
FIGURES 15–16. Female terminalia, ventral view. 15. Brachygasterina andina. 16. B in Taxonomy, cladistics and biogeography of the South American genus Brachygasterina Macquart (Diptera: Muscidae)
FIGURES 15–16. Female terminalia, ventral view. 15. Brachygasterina andina. 16. B. stuebeli. Abbreviation: spmt, spermathecae. Scale bar: 1 mm.Published as part of De Carvalho, C. J. B. & Pont, A. C., 2006, Taxonomy, cladistics and biogeography of the South American genus Brachygasterina Macquart (Diptera: Muscidae), pp. 1-26 in Zootaxa 1151 on page 8, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.17215
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