Genera of palaearctic Pyrgotidae (Diptera, Acalyptrata),with nomenclatural notes and a key

На основании изучения типовых материалов, описанных И. А. Порчинским, Ф. Генделем, Г. Эндерляйном и Э. Герингом, установлена следующая синонимия: Adapsilia Waga, 1842 = Teliophleps Hering, 1940, syn. n. Adapsilia coarctata Waga, 1842 = Adapsilia alini Hering, 1940, syn. n. Adapsilia mandschurica (He...

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Дата:2004
Автор: Korneyev, V.A.
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Опубліковано: Інститут зоології ім. І. І. Шмальгаузена НАН України 2004
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Цитувати:Genera of palaearctic Pyrgotidae (Diptera, Acalyptrata),with nomenclatural notes and a key / V. A. Korneyev // Вестн. зоологии. — 2004. — Т. 38, № 1. — С. 19-46. — англ.

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Digital Library of Periodicals of National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine
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author Korneyev, V.A.
author_facet Korneyev, V.A.
citation_txt Genera of palaearctic Pyrgotidae (Diptera, Acalyptrata),with nomenclatural notes and a key / V. A. Korneyev // Вестн. зоологии. — 2004. — Т. 38, № 1. — С. 19-46. — англ.
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description На основании изучения типовых материалов, описанных И. А. Порчинским, Ф. Генделем, Г. Эндерляйном и Э. Герингом, установлена следующая синонимия: Adapsilia Waga, 1842 = Teliophleps Hering, 1940, syn. n. Adapsilia coarctata Waga, 1842 = Adapsilia alini Hering, 1940, syn. n. Adapsilia mandschurica (Hering, 1940), comb. n. (= Teliophleps mandschurica Hering) = Adapsilia breviantenna Kim et Han, 2001, syn. n. Adapsilia microcera (Portschinsky, 1892) (= Pyrgota microcera Portschinsky, Epicerella microcera: Hendel, 1933, Sooґs, 1984) = Adapsilia tenebrosa Kim et Han, 2001, syn. n. Adapsilia verrucifer Hendel, 1933 = Adapsilia cornugaster Kim et Han, 2001, syn. n. Campylocera Macquart, 1843 = Teliophleps Enderlein, 1942, syn. n. (non Teliophleps Hering) = Dicrostira Enderlein, 1942, syn. n. Campylocera apicalis (Enderlein, 1842), comb. n. (= Teliophleps apicalis Enderlein). Campylocera partitigena (Enderlein, 1942), comb. n. (= Dicrostira partitigena Enderlein). Eupyrgota facialis (Hendel, 1934), comb. n. (= Adapsilia facialis Hendel; ?= E. tigrina Kim et Han, 2000). Eupyrgota griseipennis (Hendel, 1933), comb. n. (= Adapsilia griseipennis Hendel). Eupyrgota wagae (Bigot, 1880), comb. n. (= Adapsilia wagae Bigot). Parageloemyia Hendel, 1934 = Dicranostira Enderlein, 1942, syn. n. Parageloemyia nigrofasciata (Hendel, 1933), comb. n. (= Geloemyia nigrofasciata Hendel) = Parageloemyia ornata Hering, 1940, syn. n. Porpomastix Enderlein, 1942 = Paradapsilia Chen, 1947, syn. n. Porpomastix fasciolata Enderlein, 1942 = Paradapsilia trinotata Chen, 1947, syn. n. Adapsilia hirtoscutellaris Hendel — непригодное название (неправильное первоначальное написание). Род Cardiacera Macquart (= Epicerella Macquart) исключен из числа встречающихся в Палеарктике родов. Представлены переработанная таблица для определения и обзор родов Pyrgotidae Палеарктической области. Based upon the study of the type specimens described by J. A. Portschinsky, F. Hendel, G. Enderlein and E. Hering, the following synonymy is established. Adapsilia Waga, 1842 = Teliophleps Hering, 1940, syn. n. Adapsilia coarctata Waga, 1842 = Adapsilia alini Hering, 1940, syn. n. Adapsilia mandschurica (Hering, 1940), comb. n. (= Teliophleps mandschurica Hering) = Adapsilia breviantenna Kim et Han, 2001, syn. n. Adapsilia microcera (Portschinsky, 1892) (= Pyrgota microcera Portschinsky, Epicerella microcera: Hendel, 1933, Soo´s, 1984) = Adapsilia tenebrosa Kim et Han, 2001, syn. n. Adapsilia verrucifer Hendel, 1933 = Adapsilia cornugaster Kim et Han, 2001, syn. n. Campylocera Macquart, 1843 = Teliophleps Enderlein, 1942, syn. n. (non Teliophleps Hering) = Dicrostira Enderlein, 1942, syn. n. Campylocera apicalis (Enderlein, 1842), comb. n. (= Teliophleps apicalis Enderlein). Campylocera partitigena (Enderlein, 1942), comb. n. (= Dicrostira partitigena Enderlein). Eupyrgota facialis (Hendel, 1934), comb. n. (= Adapsilia facialis Hendel; ? = E. tigrina Kim et Han, 2000). Eupyrgota griseipennis (Hendel, 1933), comb. n. (= Adapsilia griseipennis Hendel). Eupyrgota wagae (Bigot, 1880), comb. n. (= Adapsilia wagae Bigot). Parageloemyia Hendel, 1934 = Dicranostira Enderlein, 1942, syn. n. Parageloemyia nigrofasciata (Hendel, 1933), comb. n. (= Geloemyia nigrofasciata Hendel) = Parageloemyia ornata Hering, 1940, syn. n. Porpomastix Enderlein, 1942 = Paradapsilia Chen, 1947, syn. n. Porpomastix fasciolata Enderlein, 1942 = Paradapsilia trinotata Chen, 1947, syn. n. Adapsilia hirtoscutellaris Hendel is an unavailable name (incorrect original spelling). The genus Cardiacera Macquart (= Epicerella Macquart) is excluded from the list of genera occurring in Palaearctic Region. An improved key to and a review of genera of the Pyrgotidae known to occur in Palaearctic Region are provided.
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fulltext UDC 595.773.4 GENERA OF PALAEARCTIC PYRGOTIDAE (DIPTERA, ACALYPTRATA), WITH NOMENCLATURAL NOTES AND A KEY V. A. Korneyev Schmalhausen Institute of Zoology, vul. B. Khmelnits’kogo 15, Kyiv-30, MSP, 01601, Ukraine E-mail: korval@entom.freenet.kiev.ua Accepted 14 September 2003 Genera of Palaearctic Pyrgotidae (Diptera, Acalyptrata), with Nomenclatural Notes and a Key. Korne- yev V. A. — Based upon the study of the type specimens described by J. A. Portschinsky, F. Hendel, G. Enderlein and E. Hering, the following synonymy is established. Adapsilia Waga, 1842 = Teliophleps Hering, 1940, syn. n. Adapsilia coarctata Waga, 1842 = Adapsilia alini Hering, 1940, syn. n. Adapsilia mandschurica (Hering, 1940), comb. n. (= Teliophleps mandschurica Hering) = Adapsilia breviantenna Kim et Han, 2001, syn. n. Adapsilia microcera (Portschinsky, 1892) (= Pyrgota microcera Portschinsky, Epicerella microcera: Hendel, 1933, Soo´s, 1984) = Adapsilia tenebrosa Kim et Han, 2001, syn. n. Adapsilia verrucifer Hendel, 1933 = Adapsilia cornugaster Kim et Han, 2001, syn. n. Campylocera Mac- quart, 1843 = Teliophleps Enderlein, 1942, syn. n. (non Teliophleps Hering) = Dicrostira Enderlein, 1942, syn. n. Campylocera apicalis (Enderlein, 1842), comb. n. (= Teliophleps apicalis Enderlein). Cam- pylocera partitigena (Enderlein, 1942), comb. n. (= Dicrostira partitigena Enderlein). Eupyrgota facialis (Hendel, 1934), comb. n. (= Adapsilia facialis Hendel; ? = E. tigrina Kim et Han, 2000). Eupyrgota griseipennis (Hendel, 1933), comb. n. (= Adapsilia griseipennis Hendel). Eupyrgota wagae (Bigot, 1880), comb. n. (= Adapsilia wagae Bigot). Parageloemyia Hendel, 1934 = Dicranostira Enderlein, 1942, syn. n. Parageloemyia nigrofasciata (Hendel, 1933), comb. n. (= Geloemyia nigrofasciata Hendel) = Pa- rageloemyia ornata Hering, 1940, syn. n. Porpomastix Enderlein, 1942 = Paradapsilia Chen, 1947, syn. n. Porpomastix fasciolata Enderlein, 1942 = Paradapsilia trinotata Chen, 1947, syn. n. Adapsilia hir- toscutellaris Hendel is an unavailable name (incorrect original spelling). The genus Cardiacera Macquart (= Epicerella Macquart) is excluded from the list of genera occurring in Palaearctic Region. An impro- ved key to and a review of genera of the Pyrgotidae known to occur in Palaearctic Region are provided. Ke y wo r d s: Diptera, Cyclorrhapha, Acalyptrata, Tephritoidea, Pyrgotidae, Palaearctic Region, fauna, taxonomy, new taxa, synonymy. Ðîäû ïàëåàðêòè÷åñêèõ Pyrgotidae (Diptera, Acalyptrata), ñ çàìåòêàìè î íîìåíêëàòóðå è òàáëèöåé äëÿ îïðåäåëåíèÿ. Êîðíååâ Â. À. — Íà îñíîâàíèè èçó÷åíèÿ òèïîâûõ ìàòåðèàëîâ, îïèñàííûõ È. À. Ïîð÷èíñêèì, Ô. Ãåíäåëåì, Ã. Ýíäåðëÿéíîì è Ý. Ãåðèíãîì, óñòàíîâëåíà ñëåäóþùàÿ ñè- íîíèìèÿ: Adapsilia Waga, 1842 = Teliophleps Hering, 1940, syn. n. Adapsilia coarctata Waga, 1842 = Adapsilia alini Hering, 1940, syn. n. Adapsilia mandschurica (Hering, 1940), comb. n. (= Teliophleps mandschurica Hering) = Adapsilia breviantenna Kim et Han, 2001, syn. n. Adapsilia microcera (Portschinsky, 1892) (= Pyrgota microcera Portschinsky, Epicerella microcera: Hendel, 1933, Soo´s, 1984) = Adapsilia tenebrosa Kim et Han, 2001, syn. n. Adapsilia verrucifer Hendel, 1933 = Adapsilia cornugaster Kim et Han, 2001, syn. n. Campylocera Macquart, 1843 = Teliophleps Enderlein, 1942, syn. n. (non Teliophleps Hering) = Dicrostira Enderlein, 1942, syn. n. Campylocera apicalis (Enderlein, 1842), comb. n. (= Teliophleps apicalis Enderlein). Campylocera partitigena (Enderlein, 1942), comb. n. (= Dicrostira partitigena Enderlein). Eupyrgota facialis (Hendel, 1934), comb. n. (= Adapsilia facialis Hendel; ?= E. tigrina Kim et Han, 2000). Eupyrgota griseipennis (Hendel, 1933), comb. n. (= Adapsilia griseipennis Hendel). Eupyrgota wagae (Bigot, 1880), comb. n. (= Adapsilia wagae Bigot). Parageloemyia Hendel, 1934 = Dicranostira Enderlein, 1942, syn. n. Parageloemyia nigrofasciata (Hendel, 1933), comb. n. (= Geloemyia nigrofasciata Hendel) = Parageloemyia ornata Hering, 1940, syn. n. Porpomastix Enderlein, 1942 = Paradapsilia Chen, 1947, syn. n. Porpomastix fasciolata Enderlein, 1942 = Paradap- silia trinotata Chen, 1947, syn. n. Adapsilia hirtoscutellaris Hendel — íåïðèãîäíîå íàçâàíèå (íåïðà- âèëüíîå ïåðâîíà÷àëüíîå íàïèñàíèå). Ðîä Cardiacera Macquart (= Epicerella Macquart) èñêëþ÷åí èç ÷èñëà âñòðå÷àþùèõñÿ â Ïàëåàðêòèêå ðîäîâ. Ïðåäñòàâëåíû ïåðåðàáîòàííàÿ òàáëèöà äëÿ îïðå- äåëåíèÿ è îáçîð ðîäîâ Pyrgotidae Ïàëåàðêòè÷åñêîé îáëàñòè. Êëþ÷åâûå ñ ëîâ à: Diptera, Cyclorrhapha, Acalyptrata, Tephritoidea, Pyrgotidae, Ïàëåàðêòèêà, ôàóíà, òàêñîíîìèÿ, íîâûå òàêñîíû, ñèíîíèìèÿ. Vestnik zoologii, 38(1): 19–46, 2004 © V. A. Korneyev, 2004 Ôàóíà è ñèñòåìàòèêà Introduction Pyrgotidae are medium to large-sized (4–18 mm) acalyptrate flies usually with pictured wings, rather slender body, oblique face, short lobate cell bcu and stiletto-like aculeus that is much shorter than the oviscape. The list of the World fauna includes about 365 valid species names in ca. 55 genera, with the greatest number of species in tropics (Korneyev, unpublished data). Up to now, 29 nominal species of 8 ge- nera were recorded from the Palaearctic Region (Hendel, 1933, 1934; Malloch, 1934; Hering, 1940; Enderlein, 1942; Chen, 1947; Kim, Han, 2000, 2001), but synonymy of some names is highly probable. Two papers (Malloch, 1934; Chen, 1947) had remained out of the scope of the most recent catalogue of Palaearctic Pyrgotidae (Soo´s, 1984). The papers by H.-Y. Kim and S.-K. Han (2000, 2001) are the most comprehensive reviews of Eastern Palaearctic Pyrgotidae, insomuch they were based upon the most extensive material, and took into conside- ration numerous additional morphological (including genitalic) characters. In these papers, which aimed to consider only the local fauna, none of the species described by Hering and Enderlein from China and Japan and apparently occurring in Korea, were mentioned. In Enderlein’s and Hering’s descriptions, some impor- tant characters are lacking, and the concepts of described taxa could hardly be interpreted without study of the type specimens. While preparing the Pyrgotidae chapter for the Keys to Insects of Far East Russia and a catalogue of Pyrgotidae of the World, the material originated from Palaearctic Asia and other regions, now deposited in several European and American collections, was examined. This study has shown that some genus and species names are actually synonyms. Other species were found to need correct generic placement. As the result, 5 genera with 22 species are shown to occur in Palaearctic Region. Material The specimens examined in this study, are deposited in the following collections: CVK — V. Korneyev collection, Kyiv; DEI — Deutsche Entomologisches Institut, Eberswalde; HMNH – Hungarian Museum of Natural History (Terme´szettudoma´nyi Muzeum), Budapest; MHNG — Muse´um d’histoire naturelle, Gene`ve; NHMW — Naturhistorisches Museum Wien, SIZK — Schmalhausen Institute of Zoology, Kyiv; SMNK — Staatliches Museum fu�r Naturkunde Karlsruhe; SMNS — Staatliches Museum fu�r Naturkunde Stuttgart; USNM — U. S. National Museum of Natural History, Washington; ZMHB — Museum fu�r Naturkunde der Humboldt- Universita�t zu Berlin; ZMUM — Zoological Museum of Moscow University. Classification of Pyrgotidae M. Acze´l (1956) proposed the most detailed classification of the family. He subdi- vided it into three subfamilies, Pyrgotinae, with 2 tribes, Teretrurini (with 2 South American genera) and Pyrgotini (with vast majority of genera of the family), Toxurinae (with 9–10 Australasian genera) and Lochmostyliinae with 6 genera (in Neotropical, Oriental and Afrotropical Regions). Later, D. K. McAlpine (1990) modified it by ris- ing the rank of Lochmostyliinae to family (as Ctenostylidae), and Teretrurini to sub- family (as Teretrurinae). Toxurinae was shown to have fused abdominal sternites 1 and 2, the synapomorphy with Pyrgotini, and transferred in the subfamily Pyrgotinae as the tribe Toxurini. G. C. Steyskal (1972) suggested that details of the structure of the postabdomen (especially in the female) could be expected to show the way to a firm classification of the family. These morphological details remained almost wholly lack- ing until H.-Y. Kim and S.-K. Han (2000, 2001) figured and described terminalia of Korean pyrgotids. The further study of terminalia of Pyrgotidae (Korneyev, unpublished data) has the following taxonomic and phylogenetic implications. All Pyrgotidae examined, except Descoleia Acze´l and Toxopyrgota Hendel, have no prensisetae on medial surstylus. This character appears to be a synapomorphy of the subfamilies Teretrurinae and Pyrgotinae, the lineage that includes the vast majority of genera of the family. In Descoleia the structure of male postabdomen is similar to that in Tephritidae Tachiniscinae, which is the sister group to the other Tephritidae. Such a structure of terminalia may be considered a primitive state for both Tephritidae and Pyrgotidae, which have been shown to be sister groups (Korneyev, 1999). The absence of prensisetae opposes the rest of Pyrgotidae to Descoleia. The taxonomic position of the latter genus needs further consideration. 20 V. A. Korneyev In the case of Toxopyrgota, a single tooth-like structure on the apex of each medi- al surstylus must be treated with caution as homologous to that in Descoleia and Te- phritidae. I leave the position of this afrotropical genus pending until a wider revision of the family is done. In all examined Pyrgotini, the epandrium and lateral surstylus are completely devoid of setulae (at most, structures reminiscent of trichoid sensilla are developed). Toxopyrgota, a few Australian genera of Toxurini that were studied (Cardiacera Macquart and Neotoxura Hendel), and Teretrurinae have setulose epandrium, as in oth- er Tephritoidea. The absence of epandrial setulae is evidently universal for the palaearc- tic, oriental, afrotropical and New World Pyrgotini, but remains unstudied in australa- sian species assigned to this tribe. Oriental and eastern palaearctic pyrgotids show high diversity of chaetotaxy, wing pattern and venation, and structure of terminalia, whereas both the faunas of the Afrotropical Region and New World are apparently formed by descendants of a few lin- eages. Even a preliminary phylogenetic analysis (Kim, Han, 2001) has shown that some large genera like Adapsilia Waga, recognized mostly from the absence of advanced states of external characters, may actually be non-monophyletic. Further phylogenetic analy- sis involving characters of terminalia is needed to arrange Pyrgotini into more reliable generic classification. This task needs more paleotropical material to be involved, which is out of scope of the present paper. In this paper, I generally follow Kim and Han (2001) concepts of palaearctic gen- era, with a few exceptions discussed below. Morphological terminology for the parts of female terminalia is accepted from White et al. (1999), rather than Steyskal (1972). The tergosternite 7 forms a large o v i s c a p e, which is flat in Teretrurinae and most Higher Tephritoidea; its a n t e r o - v en t r a l a p od eme often is an unusually large flap reach- ing the dorsal side and able to close up the whole anterior opening of the oviscape. In the distal, or p o s t e r i o r ma r g i n of the oviscape bordering the e v e r s i b l e mem- b r an e, some sclerotized lobes can be recognized (fig. 10, 4). Two med i o - a p i c a l l o b e s, the ventral (v e n t r o -med i a l l o b e) and often the dorsal (d o r s o -med i a l l o b e) are extended onto the eversible membrane medially on each ventral and dorsal side; in rest, they are inverted inside the oviscape; in Campylocera Macquart they are rigid and long, and easily visible on the membrane, which is usually semi-everted in dry specimens of that genus (fig. 13, 4). In Tephritopyrgota Hendel, the ventro-medial lobe forms an unpaired hook- or nail-like sclerotized projection (fig. 14, 4). Two l a t e r a l l o b e s, symmetrical and usually displaced to the ventral side (fig. 5, 1) , as a rule con- sist of a darker and softer f i e l d o f me ch ano r e c e p t i v e s e n s i l l a, visible even when the membrane is completely inverted and an elongate, t a e n i a - l i k e s t r i p e, which extends on the membrane latero-ventrally and bears no sensilla. The e v e r s i b l e memb r an e in some cases has paired fields of short acanthi forming a rasper-like structure posterior and between the ventro-medial and lateral lobes (fig. 5, 1, 3); from their topology, these structures may be homologous to taeniae of other Tephritoidea. In Eupyrgota Coquillett they are modified into paired hook-like structures (o v i p o s i t u n - gu i sensu Steyskal, 1972), superficially similar to the unpaired hook-like structure of Tephritopyrgota, but obviously unhomologous to it. The a c u l e u s is unusually short compared with the oviscape, and very acute, with the cercal unit completely integrat- ed into its apex without a trace of fusion, and the 8 t h s t e r n i t e (or the ventral lobes) indistinguishable even on SEM pictures. Subfamily Pyrgotinae Dia gno s i s. Medium to large-sized (5.5–18.0 mm) flies with hyaline or greyish wings and yellow to brown spots at wing apex, on pterostigma and crossveins. Head variously shaped, with or, usually without ocelli; pedicel of antenna with or, usually, 21Genera of Palaearctic Pyrgotidae (Diptera, Acalyptrata)... without dorso-apical notch. Costal vein with 2 constrictions (distally of humeral vein and at apex of subcostal vein); R4+5 setulose or, usually, bare; cell bcu with short but distinctive postero-apical lobe (except in afrotropical genus Toxopyrota Hendel). Sternites 1 and 2 fused. Epandrium elliptic, without prensisetae or (in Toxopyrota) with one prensiseta. R ema r k s. The subfamily includes almost all the genera of the family, except three South American genera: Teretrura Bigot and Pyrgotosoma Malloch, which repre- sent a separate subfamily Teretrurinae, and Descoleia Acze´l, which differs from all the Pyrgotidae in the presence of two well-developed prensisetae (Norrbom, unpublished data) and either belongs to a separate subfamily or to Tephritidae. Adapsilia Waga, 1842 Typ e s p e c i e s: Adapsilia coarctata Waga, 1842: 280 (by monotypy). Teliophleps Hering, 1940: 288, syn. n. (non Teliophleps Enderlein, 1942). T yp e s p e c i e s: Teliophleps mandschurica Hering, 1940: 288 (by monotypy). Adapsilea: Enderlein, 1942: 106, error or emendation. Adapsila: Soo´s, 1984: 36–37, unjustified emendation. R ema r k s. The genus includes about 36 species, Old World in distribution. Fourteen of them occur in the Palaearctic Region, but only 4 were catalogued by Soo´s (1984). Sixteen species were listed in the Catalogue of Oriental Region (Steyskal, 1977); many of them are believed to belong in Eupyrgota Coquillett, which was con- sidered a subgenus of Adapsilia for a long time. Three species are listed in each Afrotropical and Australasian Catalogues (Steyskal, 1980; Pitkin, 1989), but their tax- onomic position is not clear. Chen (1947) keyed Chinese species and has separated Adapsilia from Eupyrgota Coquillett. The concept of the genus was recently reconsid- ered by Kim and Han (2001), who also provided detailed descriptions and a key to Korean species. Some of species described by Portschinsky (1892), Malloch (1934), Hering (1940) and Enderlein (1942) from Far East Russia and China were, however, not considered. The preliminary phylogenetic analysis provided by Kim and Han (2001) shows that Adapsilia is not a monophyletic genus, defined by plesiomorphic characters. Comprehensive keys to Palaearctic species will be provided in our forthcoming papers (Korneyev, in press; Korneyev, Nartshuk, in press). Adapsilia biseta Shi, 1996 Shi, 1996: 587. — ? Adapsilia hispida Kim & Han, 2001: 271 (possible synonym). D i a gno s i s (after Shi). Eye large, gena without subocular spot. Antenna as long as face, flagellomere 1 elongate oval, as long as pedicel. Face yellow without brown spots. Proboscis large, palpus longer than flagellomere 1. All head setae, including oc, poc and vte long and well-developed. Thorax with brownish-black pattern on mesono- tum, with 1 prst sa, 2 dc, 1 ac and 3 pairs of sctl, whereas prsc ac were not clearly shown on the figure (it may be a notopleural seta also) and kepst not mentioned. Scutellum with erect setulae on sides and apex. Wing without spur vein. Abdomen yel- low, stained with brown or black. Oviscape as long as preabdomen, with hump on mid- dle of ventral side. R ema r k s. Known from the holotype female (type locality: Beijing, China) de- scribed in Chinese with a brief diagnosis and rather schematic figures. This species concurs with A. hispida Kim et Han in the head, antenna and palpus shape, coloration and chaetotaxy of mesonotum, wing without a spur vein, and ovisca- pe with a hump on its ventral side; it differs in having the wing with brown pattern. The absence of katepisternal seta, bare area on mid femur and other characters of 22 V. A. Korneyev Fig. 1. Adapsilia brevispina, holotype }: 1 — total view; lateral; 2 — labels. Ðèñ. 1. Adapsilia brevispina, ãîëîòèï }: 1 — îáùèé âèä; ñáîêó; 2 — ýòèêåòêè. A. hispida not mentioned in English diagnosis. It is possible that A. hispida is a junior synonym of A. biseta, based on a specimen with poorly developed wing pattern. Adapsilia brevispina Malloch, 1934 (fig. 1) Malloch, 1934: 263; Chen, 1947: 68. Ma t e r i a l. T y p e. Holotype } “Shin KaiSi / Mt. Omei / Szechuen China / 4400 ft”, “DCGraham / Collector”, July 1–30 –1929”, “Type No / 50606 / USNM”, “Adapsilia / breviseta [sic!] / Type / det. JRMalloch” (USNM). D i a gno s i s. Female. Eyes high, gena low, 0.16 times as high as eye, with brown subocular spot and 0.4 times as low as flagellomere 1 long. Antenna longer than half face height, flagellomere 1 rounded and slightly narrowed apically, twice as long as pedicel. Palpus approximately as long as flagellomere 1; not very broad, labellum large. All head setae moderately long and well-developed, including oc, poc, vti, and g; vte short. Tho- rax yellow with brown vittae on mesonotum and anepisternum, 1 ppn, 2 dc, 2 pairs of sctl, 1 anepst and 1 kepst, but prst sa and ac absent. Scutellum with a few setulae on sides. Wing as in fig. 1, 1, R2+3 with spur vein, R4+5 bare. Mid and hind coxae and apico- ventral portions of femora with short, sparse but thickened setulae; femora brown, with- out long setae (proximal ventral setae 0.3 times as long as femur wide); mid femur with- out bare area. Abdomen blackish-brown. Oviscape approximately as long as preabdomen and mesonotum, narrowly conical, with apex curved ventrally. R ema r k s. This species shares affinities with Adapsilia coarctata Waga in head and body shape and chaetotaxy, R2+3 with spur vein and mid femur without the bare area; differing by the flagellomere 1 twice as long as pedicel, anepisternum with black spot and coxae and femora with short thickened setae. A. verrucifer Hendel, which has sim- ilar shape and coloration of antenna, head and thorax, as well as wing with and simi- 23Genera of Palaearctic Pyrgotidae (Diptera, Acalyptrata)... lar venation and pattern, may be differentiated by the mid femur with a large bare area, moderately long setulose mid and hind coxae and the oviscape often with a dorsocau- dal projection. A. brevispina was omitted in both Oriental and Palaearctic Diptera Catalogues (Steyskal, 1977; Soo´s, 1984). Adapsilia coarctata Waga, 1842 (fig. 2–3) Waga, 1842: 261; Becker, 1905: 92; Hendel, 1908: 14; 1933: 8; Stackelberg, 1970: 20; Zimina, 1985: 150 (Adapsilia). — Soo´s, 1984: 36 (Adapsila). — Adapsilia alini Hering, 1940: 289, syn. n.; Soo´s, 1984: 36 (Adapsila). Ma t e r i a l. T y p e. Holotype } Adapsilia alini: [China:] “Charbin, Manchukuo / leg. W. Alin 18.9.1940”, “Adapsilia alini m. } Type / det Hering 1940”, “Holotypus” [red paper label] (DEI). Non - t y p e. Italy: “Bozen” [Bolzano], } (Gries) (SMNS); Switzerland: Tessin, Maggia, 17.09.1964, {, 3 } (SMNS); Far East Russia: Amur Oblast’? / Khabarovskiy Kray: “Amur”, } (MTD); Primorskiy Kray, Gorno-Tayozhnoe SE of Ussuriysk, light trap, 3 { (K. Zinovyeva) (ZMUM), “Tshengauz”, { (SMNS); China: Heilongjiang, “Sjaolin, Manchukuo”, 22.08.1948, } (Alin) (“Adapsilia alini Hering”) (SMNS). D i a gno s i s. Head (fig. 2, 1) with moderately large eye, gena 0.6–0.75 times as high as eye, with or without brown subocular spot and 1–3 times as high as flagellom- ere 1 long. Pedicel 2–2.5 times as long as flagellomere 1. Head setae moderately long and well-developed, including 1 or, vti, and g; vte very short or lacking, oc present, but often reduced or lacking in male, poc absent in both sexes. Thoracic setae well-devel- oped, except prst sa, prsc ac and, in some males, ppn absent. Scutellum with 2 pairs of sctl and sparse, short setulae. Wing (fig. 2, 2): R2+3 usually with spur vein; R4+5 bare. Coxae unmodified in both sexes. Fore femur with ventral row of setae, mid femur with- out bare area. Male tergites 2 and 3 laterally with long thickened setae. Epandrium (fig. 3, 1–2) short, with very short, truncate surstyli; proctiger dorso-ventrally flattened, but not bilobate; hypandrium as in fig. 3, 3–4, with well-developed phallic guide (fig. 3, 4) and small, button-like parameres (fig. 3, 5). Phallus glans as in fig. 2, 6. Oviscape as long as mesonotum and longer than preabdomen, without apico-ventral hooks; aculeus moderately long, stiletto-like (fig. 3, 7). R ema r k s. The holotype A. alini completely fits the diagnosis of the species based on both European and Asian specimens, which show no differences exceeding certain variability of gena height and coloration, presence or absence of certain setae (oc, vte, ppn) and spur vein on R2+3. The shape of aculeus (fig. 3, 7) and the ratio of pedicel and flagellomere 1 lengths are the most consistent characters of this species. A. coarctata fits very close A. verrucifer Hendel, A. longifacies Kim et Han and A. ochrosoma Kim et Han in having pedicel and palpus long, antennal grooves almost reaching ventral margin of face and separate by carina ventrally bifurcated, mid femur without long ventral setae (except the long proximal ventral seta) and sternites 2–3 of male with long erected lateral setae. A. brevispina Malloch and A. scutellaris Chen may also belong in this group, but males are unknown. 24 V. A. Korneyev Fig. 2. Adapsilia coarctata, holotype } of Adapsilia alini Hering: 1 — head, lateral; 2 — wing. Ðèñ. 2. Adapsilia coarctata, ãîëîòèï } Adapsilia alini Hering: 1 — ãîëîâà, ñáîêó; 2 — êðûëî. Fig. 3. Adapsilia coarctata: 1 — epandrium and proctiger, posterior; 2 — epandrium and hypandrium, right; 3 — hypandrium, ventral; 4 — posterior phallic guide (modified gonites?), parameres and basiphallus, ventral; 5 — basiphallus and parameres, dorsal; 6 — phallus glans, right; 7 — aculeus, ventral. Ðèñ. 3. Adapsilia coarctata: 1 — ýïàíäðèé è ïðîêòèãåð, ñçàäè; 2 — ýïàíäðèé è ãèïàíäðèé, ñïðàâà; 3 — ãèïàíäðèé, âåíòðàëüíî; 4 — çàäíÿÿ ÷àñòü íàïðàâèòåëÿ ôàëëþñà (âèäîèçìåíåííûå ãîíèòû?), ïàðàìåðû è áàçèôàëë, âåíòðàëüíî; 5 — áàçèôàëë è ïàðàìåðû, äîðñàëüíî; 6 — ãëàíñ ôàëëþñà, ñïðàâà; 7 — àêóëåóñ, âåíòðàëüíî. 25Genera of Palaearctic Pyrgotidae (Diptera, Acalyptrata)... Adapsilia dorsocentralis Hering, 1940 (fig. 4–5) Hering, 1940: 291 (Adapsilia); Soo´s, 1984: 36 (Adapsila). Ma t e r i a l. T y p e. Holotype {: “Charbin 5.VII / Maoershan / W. Alin”, “Type” [red paper, printed], “Adapsilia / dorsocentralis /m. Type / det. M. Hering 1940” (ZMHB). Paratype }: China, Heilongjiang: “Chandaochezsy / 1.–10.8.1937”, “Mandschukuo”, “W. Alin ed.”, “Adapsilia / dorsocentralis }. P. T. / Hering 1940”, “Paratypus” [red paper printed ] (DEI). Non - t y p e. “Charbin Mandsch. / W. Alin VIII”, “Adapsilia / dorsocentralis /m. } Type / det. M. Hering 193…” (ZMHB); Russia: S of Primorskiy Kray, Gorno-Tayozhnoe [SE of Ussuriysk], light trap, 20.07.1994, } (A. Belov) (SIZK); Kamenushka 45 km SE of Ussuriysk, 29.07.1984, } (Shatalkin) (ZMUM). D i a gno s i s. Eye small, gena 0.8 times as high as eye, without subocular spot, twice as high as length of flagellomere 1. Antenna scarcely longer than half face height, flagellomere 1 narrowed towards apex, rounded apically, 1.4 times as long as pedicel. Face yellow, with antennal grooves reaching lower 1/4, and rather high, receding epis- tomal margin. Palpus moderately large, about as long and wide as antenna; labellum moderately developed. All head setae well-developed, except vte 0.3 as long as vti (fig. 4, 1). Thorax orange yellow, except postnotum brown, with 3 dc, 2 pairs of sctl, and well-developed prst sa, prsc ac and kepst) (fig. 4, 4). Prosternum with 4–5 long setulae on each side. Scutellum with 1–3 short setulae on each postero-lateral side. Wing as in fig. 4, 2. Costal vein conspicuously reaching apex of M. R2+3 without spur vein, R4+5 bare. Vein DM-Cu 2.1.5–1.7 times as long as cell r4+5 in front of it. Coxae without thickened setae, but mid and hind coxae with numerous moderately fine and long black setulae. Femora yellow, setulose, with ventral row setae; fore femur (fig. 4, 3) with 2 rows of postero-dorsal setae in apical half, hind femur with 2 dorsal subapi- cal setae; mid femur without bare area. Abdomen yellow, with moderately long black setulae. Male genitalia (in situ): epandrium oval, with elongate surstyli; proctiger dorso- ventrally flattened, apically very slightly lobate, but not split (fig. 4, 5–6). Oviscape (fig. 5, 1) wide and long, as long as mesonotum and 1.2–1.4 times as long as preab- domen, directed postero-ventrally, with ventral apodeme rather short and weakly scle- 26 V. A. Korneyev Fig. 4. Adapsilia dorsocentralis Hering, holotype {: 1 — head, lateral; 2 — wing; 3 — fore femur, left; 4 — mesonotum, dorsal; 5, 6 — epandrium and proctiger, posterior right and lateral right. Ðèñ. 4. Adapsilia dorsocentralis Hering, ãîëîòèï {: 1 — ãîëîâà, ñáîêó; 2 — êðûëî; 3 — ïåðåäíåå áåäðî, ñëåâà; 4 — ñðåäíåñïèíêà, äîðñàëüíî; 5, 6 — ýïàíäðèé è ïðîêòèãåð, ñïðàâà ñçàäè è ñïðàâà. rotized, apical portion of oviscape with ventral lobe moderately wide and short, ending with flat triangular plate (fig. 5, 3), dorsal medial lobe absent, two wrinkled, taenium-like carinae in basal half of dorsal side of eversible membrane (modified taenia?) running into each other medially (fig. 5, 2), paired lateral lobes slightly shorter than ventral lobe, two rasper-like kidney-shaped or irregular-oval sclerites (modified ventral taeniae) between medial and lateral sclerites well separated from each other and oviscape (fig. 5, 1). Aculeus as in fig. 5, 4. Three separate spermathecae, one smaller than other two (fig. 5, 5). R ema r k s. This species differs from the concept of the genus Adapsilia, as defined by Kim and Han (2001), first of all, in the presence of 3 pairs of dorsocentral setae and elongate surstyli, similarly to Parageloemyia Hendel. However, it has neither bare scutellum, nor setulose R4+5 vein, nor oviscape directed posteriorly, the characters, which differentiate Parageloemyia spp. from other Palaearctic pyrgotids. A. dorsocen- tralis has conspicuous facial carina and a complete set of setae, which are believed to be plesiomorphies, but the presence of additional dc and elongate surstyli is apparent- ly a synapomorphy with Parageloemyia Hendel; this species may be a sister-group to the latter genus; further phylogenetic analysis on a wider base is needed to determine its taxonomic position; herein, this species is placed to Adapsilia, following Kim and Han (2001) and taking this genus as non-monophyletic. 27Genera of Palaearctic Pyrgotidae (Diptera, Acalyptrata)... Fig. 5. Adapsilia dorsocentralis Hering, }: 1 — female terminalia, lateral; 2 — eversible membrane, dorsal; 3 — apex of oviscape and eversible membrane, ventral; 4 — aculeus; 5 — spermathecae. Ðèñ. 5. Adapsilia dorsocentralis Hering, }: 1 — òåðìèíàëèè ñàìêè, ñáîêó; 2 — âûâîðà÷èâàåìàÿ ìåìáðàíà, äîðñàëüíî; 3 — âåðøèíà îñíîâíîãî ÷ëåíèêà ÿéöåêëàäà è âûâîðà÷èâàåìàÿ ìåìáðàíà, âåíòðàëüíî; 4 — àêóëåóñ; 5 — ñïåðìàòåêè. Adapsilia hirtoscutellata Hendel, 1933 (fig. 6–7) Hendel, 1933: 9 (Adapsilia); Soo´s, 1984: 36 (Adapsila). — Adapsilia hirtoscutellaris Hendel, 1933: 5; Malloch, 1934: 263; Chen, 1947: 65, 66, incorrect original and subsequent spelling. Ma t e r i a l. T y p e. Syntypes: }: China: “Suifu / Szechuen / China”, “DCGraham / coll”, “Adapsilia / hirtoscutellata / Hend.”, ”Type No. / 41870” [red paper label] (USNM); {, }: China: “Foot of Washan / Szechuen, China / Jul. 27–29.1925”, “DCGraham / coll”, “Adapsilia / hirtoscutellata H. / Type {”and dark red glance paper label (male) or “Adapsilia / hirtoscutellata Hend.” [yellowish paper label] (female), “coll. / Hendel” (NHMW). 28 V. A. Korneyev Fig. 6. Adapsilia hirtoscutellata, syntype }: 1 — total view, lateral; 2 — mesonotum, dorsal; 3 — labels; 4 — abdomen, lateral (preabdomen compressed laterally); 5 — same, ventral; 6 — oviscape, lateral (setulae not shown); 7 — same, ventral; 8 — apex of oviscape, enlarged; 9 — aculeus; 10 — spermathecae. Ðèñ. 6. Adapsilia hirtoscutellata, ñèíòèï }: 1 — îáùèé âèä, ñáîêó; 2 — ñðåäíåñïèíêà, äîðñàëüíî; 3 — ýòèêåòêè; 4 — áðþøêî, ñáîêó (ïðåàáäîìåí ñæàò ñ áîêîâ); 5 — òî æå, âåíòðàëüíî; 6 — îñíîâíîé ÷ëåíèê ÿéöåêëàäà, ñáîêó (âîëîñêè íå ïîêàçàíû); 7 — òî æå, âåíòðàëüíî; 8 — âåðøèíà îñíîâíîãî ÷ëåíèêà ÿéöåêëàäà, óâåëè÷åíî; 9 — àêóëåóñ; 10 — ñïåðìàòåêè. Dia gno s i s. Eye large, gena 0.3 times as high as eye in male and 0.15–0.2 in female, with subocular spot (in male) or without it (in 2 examined females), as high as or lower than flagellomere 1 high. Antenna longer than half face height, flagellomere 1 bluntly rounded apically, about as long as pedicel. Face brown, with very shallow medi- al keel and long antennal grooves reaching lower margin, with almost linear epistomal margin, which is slightly produced in profile. Palpus large, almost as long and wide as antenna; labellum large (fig. 6, 1). All head setae moderately long and well-developed, except vte 0.3 as long as vti. Thorax with brownish-black pattern on mesonotum and pleura (inconspicuous in one teneral female), with 1 dc, 2 pairs of sctl, and without prst sa, prsc ac and kepst) (fig. 6, 2). Prosternum small, without setae. Scutellum with 12–15 moderately short setulae on each postero-lateral side. Wing, short and wide, with faint brown pattern in females (fig. 6, 1) and dark brown spots in male. Costal vein conspicuously thinned after R4+5 apex, but reaching apex of M. R2+3 with (in 1 } syn- type) or without spur vein (in { and } syntypes), R4+5 bare. Vein DM-Cu 2.9–3 (}}) or 2 times ({) as long as cell r4+5 in front of it. Coxae without stiff setae, but mid and hind coxae covered by moderately fine and long black setulae. Trochanters finely setu- lose. Femora brown to dark brown, densely and rather short setulose, without outstand- ing row of ventral setae, except proximal ventral setae longer than distal ones; hind femur with 2–3 dorsal subapical setae; mid femur without bare area. Abdomen black- ish-brown (in male) or yellow-brown (in females). Male sternites 4 and 5 with 2 lat- eral groups of setulae separated by bare areas. Epandrium oval, with short surstyli; proctiger simple, apically undivided (fig. 7, 1–2); posterior half of hypandrium with unsclerotised phallic guide (fig. 7, 1). Glans of phallus narrow and simple (fig. 7, 3). Oviscape shorter than abdomen, wide, directed postero-ventrally, short setulose (fig. 6, 4), on apical ventral portion with dense and fine setulae and 2 hook-like processes (fig. 6, 5, 7–8); its basal apodeme large, with dorsal flap inserted underneath oviscape dorsal surface (fig. 6, 6–7); aculeus as in fig. 6, 9; 2 spermathecae (fig. 6, 10). R ema r k s. This species resembles A. myopoides Chen and A. hispida Kim et Han in the absence of katepisternal seta and oviscape shorter than mesonotum, almost cylin- drical (not narrowed apically), differing from both in the absence of prosternal setulae and presutural supraalar setae, as well as the face dark brown and produced in profile, with the carina very low, and the oviscape dorsally with large dark brown spot. From the species of Eupyrgota Coquillett, which also have paired hooks on ven- tro-basal part of eversible membrane, A. hirtoscutellata differs by the absence of the fin- ger-like, ventral, apically setulose projections of the prosternum. Two spellings of the name, hirtoscutellaris (in the key to species) and hirtoscutella- ta (with the description) were originally published by Hendel (1933) for this species; 29Genera of Palaearctic Pyrgotidae (Diptera, Acalyptrata)... Fig. 7. Adapsilia hirtoscutellata, syntype {: 1 — epandrium and hypandrium, lateral right; 2 — epandrium and proctiger, posterior; 3 — glans of phallus, lateral right. Ðèñ. 7. Adapsilia hirtoscutellata, ñèíòèï {: 1 — ýïàíäðèé è ãèïàíäðèé, ñáîêó ñïðàâà; 2 — ýïàíäðèé è ïðîêòèãåð, ñçàäè; 3 — glans of phallus, ñáîêó ñïðàâà. both names were primarily available, and each was cited only once in subsequent papers, but they have never been mentioned together since the publication. Herewith, I follow the Principle of the First Reviser (ICZN, 1999: Article 24.2) to fix the name hirtoscutellata, which was mentioned in the original description and then repeated on all the determination labels of syntypes and in the Catalogue of Palaearctic Diptera (Soo´s, 1984), as the correct original spelling. The name hirtoscutellaris, which was repeated only in a less known paper and is therefore less preferable, is considered an incorrect original spelling and unavailable name. Adapsilia longicaudata Kim et Han, 2001 Kim, Han, 2001: 273. D i a gno s i s (after Kim and Han). Facial carina high. Gena without subocular spot. Antenna, palpus and proboscis moderately large. All head setae present, incl. 2 or, 1 oc, 1 poc, vti and vte, the latter half as long as vti. Thorax with brown pattern on mesono- tum and pleuron, rather complete set of setae (incl. prst sa, 2 dc, 1 ac), except kepst reduced; 3 pairs of sctl. Scutellum sparsely setulose. R2+3 without spur vein, R4+5 bare. Mid femur without bare area. Oviscape twice as long as mesonotum and preabdomen. Rema r k s. This species has an isolated position in Adapsilia (Kim, Han, 2001); and may actually belong in Tephritopyrgota Hendel, because of the reticulate wing pat- tern, which was considered by Hendel (1933) the diagnostic character that genus. However, the pattern itself hardly is of generic value, because there are similarly retic- ulate wing patterns in several distant genera of Pyrgotidae, e. g., Cardiacera Macquart, Sphecomyiella Hendel; Pyrgotella Curran, Boreothrinax Steyskal, etc. The unpaired ven- tro-medial hook- or nail-like sclerotized projection, which is another character of Te- phritopyrgota, has not been reported to be present in A. longicaudata. Its generic posi- tion is unclear pending the further material is examined. See also remarks to Tephrito- pyrgota below. Adapsilia longifasciata Kim et Han, 2001 Kim, Han, 2001: 275. D i a gno s i s (after Kim and Han). Facial carina high. Gena without subocular spot. Antenna, palpus and proboscis moderately large; pedicel 1.5–1.9 times as long as flagellomere 1. Head setae moderately long and well-developed, including 1 or vti, and g; vte very short, oc present in female only, reduced in male, poc absent in both sexes. Thorax brownish yellow, often with brown pattern on mesonotum and pleuron, and with brown postnotum. Thoracic setae well-developed, except prst sa, prsc ac absent and, in males, ppn weak; 1–2 dc. Scutellum with 2 pairs of sctl and sparse, short setu- lae. R2+3 with spur vein, R4+5 bare. Mid femur of female with bare area. Male epan- drium short, with truncate surstylus, like in A. coarctata. Oviscape as long as mesono- tum and preabdomen. Rema r k s. This species appears to be very closely related to A. coarctata, especial- ly in head shape and chaetotaxy, long pedicel, spurious vein R2+3 and very short, trun- cate surstylus. It differs mostly by the presence of the bare area on mid femur, slightly shorter pedicel and lighter body coloration. Aculei, as figured by Kim and Han (2001), also have different shape. Dr. H.-Y. Han (pers. comm.) kindly confirmed that there is an error in the key to species: the mid femur of female was stated to have no bare area (Kim, Han, 2001: 261), but actually it is present, as indicated in the description (idem, 2001: 275, Fig. 10). Males of this species, which have no bare spot on the mid femur, may be indis- tinguishable from males of A. coarctata. 30 V. A. Korneyev Adapsilia mandschurica (Hering, 1940), comb. n. (fig. 8) Teliophleps mandschurica Hering, 1940: 288; Soo´s, 1984: 38. — Adapsilia breviantenna Kim et Han, 2001: 261, syn. n. Ma t e r i a l. T y p e. Holotype } Teliophleps mandschurica: [China, Heilongjiang:] Weischaiche [“Weihhache” in orig. description] / 15–20.8.38”, “W. Alin. ded.”, “Teliophleps / mandschurica m. / } Type / M. Hering det. 1940”, “Holotypus \ 1972” [red paper], “Typus” [pale red paper, strikethrough] (DEI). D i a gno s i s. Facial carina high. Gena 0.35 times as high as eye, without subocu- lar spot. Antenna, palpus and proboscis rather short. All head setae present, incl. 2 or, 1 oc, 1 poc, vti and vte, the latter half as long as vti (fig. 8, 1). Thorax with brown pat- tern on mesonotum and pleuron, rather complete set of setae (incl. prst sa, 1–2 dc, 2 pairs of sctl), except prsc ac reduced. Scutellum sparsely setulose. R2+3 without spur vein, R4+5 bare (fig. 8, 2). Mid femur without bare area. Male: abdominal sternites 2–3 without dense lateral setulae, surstylus with finger-like postero-dorsal lobe. Oviscape slightly longer than mesonotum and preabdomen. Rema r k s. The holotype of Teliophleps mandschurica fits the description of A. bre- viantenna very closely, and I consider the two names synonyms. This species agrees with the most recent concept of the genus Adapsilia, as defined by Kim and Han (2001), and I consider its original genus name Teliophleps a junior sub- jective synonym of the first name. Teliophleps Hering, 1940 is an available name, and if Adapsilia is split into several genera, it could be used as a valid one. However, Teliophleps Enderlein, 1942, which has another type species, from the Oriental Region, is an un- available name (junior homonym) (see discussion below, under Campylocera Macquart. Adapsilia megophthalma Malloch, 1934 (fig. 9) Adapsilia megophthalma Malloch, 1934: 264; Chen, 1947: 68. Ma t e r i a l. T y p e. Holotype } “Szechwan China / DCGraham / V – 1–20 – zit./ 1700 ft.” “Chen- gtu / 1933”, “Type No / 50607 / USNM”, “Adapsilia / megophthalma / Type / det. JRMalloch” (USNM). D i a gno s i s. Female. Eyes large, gena very low, ca. 1/7–1/8 as high as eye, with- out subocular spot and conspicuously lower than flagellomere 1 high. Antenna longer than half face height, flagellomere 1 bluntly rounded apically, slightly longer than pedi- cel. Face with long antennal grooves reaching lower 1/5 of frons and separated with facial keel bifurcated in ventral 1/3 of face. Palpus longer than flagellomere 1; labellum large. All head setae moderately long and well-developed, including 2 or, oc, poc, vti, vte and g (fig. 9, 1). Mesonotum and scutellum dark brown, pleuron yellow, anepime- ron with shiny dark brown stripe in anterior part, katatergite and mediotergite of post- notum brown. All setae developed (incl. prst sa, 2 dc, 1 ac, 2 sctl, 1 kepst). Scutellum fine, short and rather sparsely setulose over whole its dorsal surface. Wing as in fig. 9, 1. 31Genera of Palaearctic Pyrgotidae (Diptera, Acalyptrata)... Fig. 8. Adapsilia mandschurica, holotype }: 1 — head, lateral; 2 — wing. Ðèñ. 8. Adapsilia mandschurica, ãîëîòèï }: 1 — ãîëîâà, ñáîêó; 2 — êðûëî. Costa conspicuously thinned after R4+5 apex, but reaching apex of M. R2+3 without spur vein, R4+5 bare. Vein DM-Cu 2.9 times long as cell r4+5 in front of it. Femora with rather long, unthickened ventral setae. Mid coxa without thickened setae. Mid femur without bare area. Abdomen blackish-brown. Oviscape approximately as long as pre- abdomen, narrowly conical, short setulose. R ema r k s. The type specimen is compressed and shrivelled, which makes certain measurements of head, thorax and abdomen impossible. This species resembles Adapsilia hispida in brown body coloration, head shape and wing venation (cell r4+5 nar- row and cell dm very broad), differing in the wing patterned, katepisternal seta present and scutellum more uniformly and short setulose. Oviscape shape in the holotype of A. megophthalma cannot be compared, as it is strongly deformed. This species was omitted in both Oriental and Palaearctic Diptera Catalogues (Steyskal, 1977; Soo´s, 1984). Adapsilia microcera (Portschinsky, 1892) (fig. 10–11) Portschinsky, 1892: 212; Hendel, 1914: 10 (Pyrgota); Becker, 1905: 92 (Adapsilia); Hendel, 1933: 15; Chen, 1947: 52; Soo´s, 1984: 37 (Epicerella). — Adapsilia tenebrosa Kim et Han, 2001: 279, syn. n. Ma t e r i a l. T y p e. Holotype { Pyrgota microcera: [green paper square], “Pyrgota microcera” [Por- tschinsky’s hand], “Àìóð, Âëàäèâîñòîê / Epicerella microcera Portsh.” [collection curator’s label; modern orthography] [Far East Russia, Primorsky Kray: “Amur (Wladiwostok)”], “Holotypus { / Pyrgota / microcera / Portsch. 1892” [red paper label, curator’s hand] (ZISP). Non-type. N. Korea: prov. Kangwon, Mt. Kum-gang san, 9.08.1971, } (J. Papp & Horvatovich) (HMNH). De s c r i p t i o n. Female (previously unknown). Fits description and figures of Adapsilia tenebrosa holotype male (Kim, Han, 2001), with the following features deserving redescription. Head yellow, with brown frontal vitta. antennal and genal groove, and dorsal mar- gin of occiput. Ocelli absent. Setae as described for A. tenebrosa male, 1–2 or and vte 0.25 as long as vti, oc moderately short, 0.3 as long as vti, poc absent; genal seta indis- tinct. Palpus 0.8 as long as gena high; labellum shorter than eye horizontal diameter. Mesonotum with 4 partly fused dark brown vittae (lateral pair broken by transverse suture) and darkened supraalar area; all pleural sclerites brown, with yellowish margins. 32 V. A. Korneyev Fig. 9. Adapsilia megophthalma, holotype }: 1 — total view, lateral; 2 — labels. Ðèñ. 9. Adapsilia megophthalma, ãîëîòèï }: 1 — îáùèé âèä, ñáîêó; 2 — ýòèêåòêè. 33Genera of Palaearctic Pyrgotidae (Diptera, Acalyptrata)... Fig. 10. Adapsilia microcera (1–2 — holotype { of Pyrgota microcera; 3 — holotype { of Adapsilia tenebrosa): 1 — head, lateral; 2 — wing; 3 — total view, lateral. Ðèñ. 10. Adapsilia microcera (1–2 — ãîëîòèï { Pyrgota microcera; 3 — ãîëîòèï { of Adapsilia tenebrosa): 1 — ãîëîâà, ñáîêó; 2 — êðûëî; 3 — îáùèé âèä, ñáîêó. Fig. 11. Adapsilia microcera, }: 1 — abdomen, lateral (setulae not shown); 2 — oviscape, lateral; 3 — abdomen, ventral; 4 — aculeus; 5 — spermathecae. Ðèñ. 11. Adapsilia microcera, }: 1 — áðþøêî, ñáîêó (âîëîñêè íå ïîêàçàíû); 2 — îñíîâíîé ÷ëåíèê ÿéöåêëàäà, ñáîêó; 3 — áðþøêî, âåíòðàëüíî; 4 — àêóëåóñ; 5 — ñïåðìàòåêè. Scutellum yellow, with 2 pairs of setae and 5–6 setulae on each side. Metanotum dark brown. Legs brownish yellow. Fore coxa with 3 strong antero-lateral setae and a row of 10–12 shorter setae at antero-ventral margin; fore trochanter unmodified; fore femur very slightly swollen, with subbasal ventral seta and ventro-apical row of rather short setae, as shown in fig. 13 E (Kim, Han, 2001) for male. Fore tibia latero-dorsal and two latero-ventral apical setulae rather distinctive among shorter and thinner other setu- lae; subapical medio-ventral area with denser and shorter brownish setulae forming brush. 5th tarsal joint 1.4 times as long as and conspicuously wider than 4th. Mid coxa with one very dense row of black thick setae on antero-ventral margin, which form pos- tero-ventrally directed comb. Mid femur with 6–8 setae ventro-basally, without bare area. Mid tibia with 3 closely inserted subequal, thickened apico-ventral setae. Mid tar- sus unmodified, except 5th joint large. Hind coxa unmodified, with 2 setae on lateral surface and 6–7 short setulae medio-ventrally. Wing (fig. 10, 2–3) with very pale grey reticulate pattern, slightly darker and bro- wnish at anterior margin. Costal vein reaching apex of medial vein; with 2 constrictions: distal to humeral vein and at apex of subcostal vein. Sc indistinct at very apex. R1 with 35–38 setulae on dorsal surface. R4+5 bare. Wing length 6.9 mm. Length of cell c 1.7 mm. Ratio of medial vein sections m1 : m2 : m3 : m4 = 1.0 : 1.35 : 0.7 : 1.65. Abdomen wide, not petiolate, brown, tergites with yellowish median area and pos- terior margins, black setulose. Syntergite 1+2 1.8 times as long as tergites 3–6 com- bined. Oviscape brownish yellow, broad, conical, 1.2 times as long as preabdominal ter- gites combined, very slightly bowed ventrally, without humps or projections; aperture ventral (fig. 10, 1–2); eversible membrane inverted and poorly visible in specimen on hands: ventro-medial lobe moderately long, lateral lobes and paired rasper-like plates similar to those in A. dorsocentralis (fig. 10, 3). Aculeus as in fig. 11, 4. Three sper- mathecae (fig. 11, 5) Rema r k s. Hendel (1933) assigned this species to the Australasian genus Epice- rella Macquart (now considered a junior synonym of Cardiacera Macquart) based on the reticulate wing pattern and slightly pointed apex of the flagellomere 1 only, but he had never seen any material on this species. The holotype of P. microcera actually has neither ocelli, pedicellar notch, subcostal vein broken at right angle, nor setulose epan- drium, which are characteristic of Cardiacera species. This species agrees very closely with the description of Adapsilia tenebrosa, having the gena high, proboscis small and antenna small with dorsal margin of flagellomere 1 almost straight and the apex almost bluntly angulate, as well as by the body coloration, structure of epandrium and surstyli and absence of postocellar seta. Original drawing of the holotype of A. tenebrosa (Kim, Han, 2001) gives a wrong impression that its wing pattern is paler or more reduced, but the photograph, kindly sent by Dr. H.-Y. Han (fig. 10, 3) clearly shows no significant differences, and I consider these specimens conspecific, and synonymize the two names. This species is not closely related to Tephritopyrgota, because the head shape of A. tenebrosa is not common in Tephritopyrgota, and the unpaired ventro-medial hook- or nail-like sclerotized projection, which is another character of Tephritopyrgota, are absent in A. microcera. This species does not belong to Cardiacera (= Epicerella), and the latter genus must be excluded from the list of genera occurring in Palaearctic Region. Adapsilia myopoides Chen, 1947 Chen, 1947: 66. D i a gno s i s (after Chen). Eye large, gena without subocular spot. Antenna short- er than face, flagellomere 1 subquadrate, as long as pedicel. Face yellow, with long antennal grooves almost reaching lower margin. All head setae long and well-developed. 34 V. A. Korneyev Thorax with brownish-black pattern on mesonotum, with 1 dc, 2 pairs of sctl, and 1 prst sa, whereas prsc ac and kepst absent. Prosternum without 4–6 setae on each lobe. Scutellum with dense setulae on sides and apex. Wing with brownish marks posterior of R1 and R2+3 apices and on R-M and DM-Cu crossveins. Mid coxa with very stiff setulae. Femora densely and rather long setulose, fore and hind femora with dorsal sub- apical setae; mid femur with conspicuous bare area. Abdomen yellow, stained with brown or black. Oviscape slightly shorter than preabdomen, narrowly conical, with cone-like protuberance at each side of its apex. Rema r k s. Known from the holotype female from Kirin (= Jilin, north-eastern China). This species resembles A. hirtoscutellata Hendel and A. hispida Kim et Han in the absence of katepisternal seta and oviscape shorter than mesonotum, differing from both in the presence of thickened short setulae on mid coxa and bare area on the mid femur of female. Adapsilia ochrosoma Kim et Han, 2001 Kim, Han, 2001: 278. D i a gno s i s (after Kim and Han). Facial carina high. Gena without subocular spot. Antenna, palpus and proboscis moderately large; pedicel 0,8 times as long as flag- ellomere 1. Head setae moderately long and well-developed, including 1 or vti, and g; vte, oc and poc short. Thorax yellow, without dark marks. Thoracic setae well-devel- oped, except prst sa, prsc ac absent and, in males, ppn weak; 1 dc. Scutellum with 2 pairs of sctl and sparse, short setulae. R2+3 with spur vein, R4+5 bare. Mid femur with bare area. Male unknown. Oviscape as long as mesonotum and preabdomen. Rema r k s. This species fits near A. coarctata and A. longifasciata in head shape and chaetotaxy and spurious vein R2+3. It differs from them by the pedicel short and body coloration light, and from A. coarctata also by the presence of the bare area on mid femur. Adapsilia trypetoides Chen, 1947 Chen, 1947: 66. D i a gno s i s (after Chen). Gena 0.25 as high as eye, with brown subocular spot. Flagellomere 1 subquadrate, slightly shorter than pedicel. All head setae well-developed, oc, poc and vte short. Thorax with faint brownish pattern on mesonotum, 2 pairs of sctl, whereas ppn, prst sa, dc and prsc ac absent. Scutellum with sparse setulae on sides. Wing with spur vein, pattern similar to that of A. coarctata and A. longifacies. Abdomen brownish. Female unknown. Rema r k s. Known from the holotype male from Szechwan (Peipeh). This species resembles A. coarctata and A. longifacies by the head and antenna shape, and by wing venation and pattern, differing in thoracic setae much reduced. A. verrucifer Hendel has similar wing pattern and venation, differing by femora and tib- iae and medial portion of scutellum brown, and abdominal tergites blackish-brown. Adapsilia verrucifer Hendel, 1933 (fig. 12) Hendel, 1933: 9; Soo´s, 1984: 37. — Adapsilia cornugaster Kim, Han, 2001: 267, syn. n. Ma t e r i a l. T y p e. Holotype } A. verrucifer: China: “Szechuen / China / DCGraham”, “near Tatsien- lu“, “Altitude 5000 ft to 8500”, “June 18—/ VII—12—23” (USNM). N on - t y p e. China: Sichuan: Graham “9 mi SW of / Tatsienlu / Jun. 25—7’23 / 8500–13000 ft”, “Adapsilia / verrucifer H.” [Hendel’s h/w], } (Graham) (NHMW); Fujian, “Kwangtseh [=Hangchuan]-Fukien / J. Klapperich /27.9.37”, 1 { (ZMFK); Guandung: “Drachenkopf / Nord-Kuantung / 23.IV.17”, “leg. Dr. Mey”, } (dissected) (ZMHB); Thailand: Chieng Mai Province, Doi Suthep, summit, light catch, 30.09.1981, { (ZMUC). 35Genera of Palaearctic Pyrgotidae (Diptera, Acalyptrata)... Rema r k s. The holotype female of A. verrucifer (fig. 12, 1) fits well the detailed description and figures of the holotype female of A. cornugaster, except the base of scutellum is destroyed by the pin, and the body is compressed laterally, giving some- what slender appearance to the specimen. I consider the specimens conspecific and syn- onymize these names. This species is redescribed in details by Kim and Han (2001) (as A. cornugaster), and only the following remark must be added. The dorso-caudal pro- jection of oviscape (shown by the arrow in fig. 12, 1), found in two females from Sichuan and figured for A. cornugaster (Kim, Han, 2001), is absent in the female from “Drakenkopf”, but the structure of aculeus and other characters of that specimen fit well A. verrucifer. This species is recorded from the Oriental Region for the first time. Campylocera Macquart, 1843 Typ e s p e c i e s: Campylocera ferruginea Macquart, 1843: 377 (by original designation). Prosyrogaster Rondani, 1875: 438. T yp e s p e c i e s: Prosyrogaster chelyonothus Rondani, 1875: 438 (by monotypy). Teliophleps Enderlein, 1942: 128, syn. n. (non Teliophleps Hering, 1940). T yp e s p e c i e s: Teliophleps apicalis Enderlein, 1942: 128 (by original designation). Hexamerinx Enderlein, 1942: 131. Type species: Campylocera latigenis Hendel, 1914: 98 (by original designation). Dicrostira Enderlein, 1942: 125, syn. n. T yp e s p e c i e s: Dicrostira partitigena Enderlein, 1942: 126 (by original designation). Campilocera: Shi, 1996: 575, 581, unjustified emendation. D i a gno s i s. R2+3 without or (in subgenus Stypina) with spur vein, costal vein pos- teriorly to R4+5 vein disappearing (fig. 13, 2), femora without spine-like setulae, ovis- cape apex without hook-like ventro-apical sclerites, both dorso- and ventro-medial sclerites long and narrow, rigid and well visible on semi-everted membrane, usually as long or longer than diameter of oviscape apex (fig. 13, 4). Scutellum setulose, often densely, with 2 or 3 pairs of setae. R ema r k s. The genus includes 42 nominal species in Oriental, Australasian and Afrotropical Regions. Most of them were described from single specimens of only one sex and are hardly recognizable from minor differences of body coloration and sizes of face, facialia and gena. The reduced apical portion of costal vein is a synapomorphy of Campylocera Macquart, Congopyrgota Acze´l, Diasteneura Hendel, Hypotyphla Loew, Prohy- potyphla Hendel, Hypotyphlina Enderlein and some other genera, mostly afrotropical. Their 36 V. A. Korneyev Fig. 12. Adapsilia verrucifer, holotype }: 1 — total view, lateral; 2 — labels. Ðèñ. 12. Adapsilia verrucifer, ãîëîòèï }: 1 — îáùèé âèä, ñáîêó; 2 — ýòèêåòêè. relationships are poorly understood and need further study. Oriental species of Campylocera are heavily and long setose, including scutellum and oviscape (fig. 13, 1, 3–4). Several species of Campylocera, including C. hirsuta Aldrich (fig. 13, 1–3) occur in Taiwan and southern Mainland China, but none has been recorded yet from the Pa- laearctic Region. Enderlein (1942) originally noted two differences of Teliophleps, the M vein not reaching the wing margin, and the scutellum with 6 setae. From the study of the type specimens of T. apicalis and a wide range of Campylocera species, it becomes evident that both characters are represented in many species including both type species of the two nominal genera. The type species of Teliophleps is quite a typical representative of Campylocera, and must be transferred to that genus, as Campylocera apicalis (Ender- lein), comb. n. I therefore consider Teliophleps a junior subjective synonym of Campy- locera. Furthermore, the name Teliophleps Enderlein is a junior homonym of Telio- phleps Hering, 1940 and thus unavailable. Dicrostira was established to separate a species, which has antennal groves shorter than in the other Campylocera, the character actually widely varying among examined species. The type species of Dicrostira, which has no other considerable differences from Campylocera, is transferred to that genus, as Campylocera partitigena (Enderlein), comb. n., and Dicrostira is a junior subjective synonym of Campylocera. Aczél (1958) has synonymized Hexamerinx Enderlein and Stypina Enderlein with Campylocera and decreased the rank of Stypina to subgenus. Study of the type species of these two genera shows there are no considerable differences to distinguish them, except 37Genera of Palaearctic Pyrgotidae (Diptera, Acalyptrata)... Fig. 13. Campylocera, females (1–3 — C. hirsuta Aldrich, oriental; 4–5 — C. ferruginea Macquart, afrotropical): 1 — total view, lateral (wings not shown); 2 — wing; 3 —abdomen, posterior; 4 — oviscape, lateral; 5 — aculeus. Ðèñ. 13. Campylocera, ñàìêè (1–3 — C. hirsuta Aldrich (Îðèåíòàëüíàÿ îáëàñòü); 4–5 — C. ferruginea Macquart (Àôðîòðîïè÷åñêàÿ îáëàñòü): 1 — îáùèé âèä, ñáîêó (êðûëüÿ íå ïîêàçàíû); 2 — êðûëî; 3 — áðþøêî, ñçàäè; 4 — îñíîâíîé ÷ëåíèê ÿéöåêëàäà, ñáîêó; 5 — àêóëåóñ. Hexamerinx has 6 scutellar setae and Stypina possesses the spur vein on R2+3 (Korneyev, unpublished data); both characters are variable in some species of Pyrgotidae. Examined species of Campylocera also have long and rigid lateral, medial dorso- apical and ventro-apical lobes of the oviscape, and the eversible membrane is very often semi-everted in collection specimens (fig. 13, 3–4). Tephritopyrgota Hendel 1914 Typ e s p e c i e s: Tephritopyrgota passerina Hendel 1914: 104 (by original designation). Stypina Enderlein, 1942: 105. T yp e s p e c i e s: Tephritopyrgota vesicatoria Hendel, 1914: 100 (by original designation). Euthioza Enderlein, 1942: 117. T yp e s p e c i e s: Euthioza madagascariensis Enderlein, 1942: 128 (by original designation). Tephrilopyrgota: Shi, 1996: 591, unjustified emendation D i a gno s i s. R2+3 with or without spur vein, costal vein posteriorly of R4+5 vein distinctive, wing grey with numerous hyaline spots (fig. 14, 1, 3), femora without spine- like setulae, oviscape ventro-medially with unpaired hook-like projection (derivative of apical ventro-medial lobe of oviscape) (fig. 14, 4). Scutellum short and sparsely setu- lose, with 2 pairs of setae. R ema r k s. The genus includes 35 species in Afrotropical (of them, 19 in Madagas- car), 2 in Oriental and 1 in Palaearctic Regions. While there are considerable hiatuses between afrotropical Tephritopyrgota and other genera occurring in the Afrotropical Region, Asian Tephritopyrgota hardly can be differentiated only from their reticulate grey wing pat- tern, without study male and especially female genitalia. At least, there is a reticulate wing pattern in two species currently assigned to Adapsilia (namely, A. longicauda and A. micro- cera). However, such a pattern is widespread in various unrelated genera of Pyrgotidae (Australasian Cardiacera, some New World genera, etc.) being either plesiomorphic or sub- ject to homoplasy, and cannot serve evidence that A. longicauda and A. microcera belong to Tephritopyrgota, until the structures of the apex of oviscape are examined. Tephritopyrgota miliaria Hendel, 1933 (fig. 14, 1–2) Hendel, 1933: 12; Soo´s, 1984: 38. — Tephritopyrgota yunnanensis Shi, 1996: 591, 595, possible synonym. Ma t e r i a l. T y p e. Syntype } T. miliaria: China: “Szechuen / Suifu / China”, “DCGraham / Collector”, “Type No / 41874”, “Tephritopyrgota / miliaria / Hend.] Hend. [det.]” (USNM). D i a gno s i s. Gena with faint subocular spot. All head setae present, incl. 2 or, 1 oc, 1 poc, vti and vte. Thorax with brown pattern on mesonotum and pleuron, complete set of setae (incl. prst sa, 2 dc, 1 ac, 2 pairs of sctl, 1 kepst). Scutellum setulose. R2+3 without spur vein, R4+5 bare. Mid femur without bare area. R ema r k s. The examined syntype specimen was rather adequately described by Hendel (1933) and needs no redescription. It is closely related to the group of afrotrop- ical species, which includes the type species, Tephritopyrgota passerina Hendel, sharing the fronto-facial angle acute and strongly produced anteriorly (fig. 14, 1, 3). Judging from original English diagnosis and figures (Shi, 1996: 595, fig. 91), T. yunnanensis does not differ conspicuously from the holotype of T. miliaria (all the characters given as differences of T. yunnanensis are virtually present in A. miliaria), and the two species are very probably synonyms. Additional material must be examined to justify their synonymy. Eupyrgota Coquillett, 1898 Typ e s p e c i e s: Eupyrgota luteola Coquillett, 1898 (by monotypy). D i a gno s i s. R2+3 with spur vein, femora with 2 rows of spine-like setulae on apico- ventral portion, apico-ventral part of oviscape with 2 hook-like sclerites. At least the first and the last characters may serve the synapomorphies proving monophyly of the genus. 38 V. A. Korneyev Rema r k s. Ten species occur in the Palaearctic Region, of them only 7 were listed by Soo´s (1984) in the Catalogue of Palaearctic Diptera under the name Adapsilia. Steyskal (1977) listed one species under the subgenus Eupyrgota, but some oriental species assigned to Adapsilia s. str., may actually belong here. Three species of afrotropical Adapsilia (see Steyskal, 1980) have 2 hooks on oviscape, but the femoral spines are expressed either poorly or not expressed at all. Taxonomic position of Australasian species assigned to Adapsilia (Pitkin, 1989) is also unclear. Chen (1947) keyed Chinese species and has part- ly separated Eupyrgota from Adapsilia Coquillett. The concept of the genus was recently reconsidered by Kim and Han (2001). Most species remain inadequately described; the characters used for identification are mostly head and body pattern and chaetotaxy. Most species were keyed by Hendel (1914, 1934) under Adapsilia. Chen (1947) provided a key to 7 Chinese, and Kim and Han (2000, 2001) to 3 Korean species. A key to eastern palaearctic species is compiled by Korneyev and Nartshuk (in press). Only 3 species were available in this study, and further material is needed to be examined. Judging from descriptions, I am assuming that some species names may appear synonyms. Pa l e a r c t i c s p e c i e s i n c l u d ed. Eupyrgota facialis (Hendel, 1934) comb. n. (?= E. tigrina Kim et Han, 2000); E. flavopilosa (Hendel, 1914); E. fusca Hendel, 1914; E. griseipennis (Hendel, 1933), comb. n.; E. luteola Coquillett, 1898 (= E. omorii Matsumura, 1916); E. pekinensis Chen, 1947; E. pieli Chen, 1947; E. rufosetosa Chen, 1947; E. similis Chen, 1947; E. wagae (Bigot, 1880), comb. n. Eupyrgota griseipennis (Hendel, 1933), comb. n. (fig. 15) Hendel, 1933: 9; Malloch, 1934: 262; Chen, 1947: 68 (Adapsilia); Soo´s, 1984: 36 (Adapsila). Ma t e r i a l. T y p e. Holotype }. “Shin Kai Si / Mt Omei / Szechuen China / 4400 ft”, “July 1–30 / 1921”, “DCGraham / Collector” (USNM). 39Genera of Palaearctic Pyrgotidae (Diptera, Acalyptrata)... Fig. 14. Tephritopyrgota, females (1–2 — T. miliaria, palaearctic; 3–5 — T. sp. probably passerina (afrotropical): 1, 3 — total view, lateral; 2 — labels; 4 — abdomen, lateral; 5 — aculeus. Ðèñ. 14. Tephritopyrgota, ñàìêè (1–2 — T. miliaria (Ïàëåàðêòè÷åñêàÿ îáëàñòü); 3–5 — T. sp., âîçìîæíî passerina (Àôðîòðîïè÷åñêàÿ îáëàñòü): 1, 3 — îáùèé âèä, ñáîêó; 2 — ýòèêåòêè; 4 — áðþøêî, ñáîêó; 5 — àêóëåóñ. Dia gno s i s. Ventral portions of antennal grooves and medial spot at ventral mar- gin of face, gena and latero-dorsal areas of occiput with black or brown spots; vte seta reduced; mesonotum with black vittae and chaetotaxy as figured for E. luteola Coquillett (Kim, Han, 2000), except scutellum with 2 pairs of setae (fig. 15, 1–2). Thoracic setae and femoral setulae long and black. Femora with 2 rows of thickened setulae. Mid femur with large bare area (fig. 15, 3). Abdomen yellow, syntergite 1+2 with 2 large longitudinal spots; oviscape without dark markings, as long as or slightly longer than preabdomen. Rema r k s. Oviscape strongly shrivelled in the holotype, so preapical hooks are not visible. However, head and body coloration, shape of antenna and palpus and wing pat- tern and venation, in combination with spinulose femora, clearly show that this species belongs to Eupyrgota, differing from all eastern Palaearctic species by having 4 scutel- lar setae. The only other Palaearctic species with 4 sctl, E. wagae (Bigot) occurs in the Near East and Middle Asia and differs by very short setae on head and legs. Eupyrgota tigrina Kim et Han, 2000 Kim, Han, 2000: 227. — facialis Hendel, 1934: 148; Chen, 1947: 66; Steyskal, 1977: 38 (Adapsilia) (possible senior synonym). R ema r k s. A. facialis from Taiwan is known to me from its original short diagno- sis (in the key); it is characterized by 2 pairs of sctl setae, ventral part of antennal groove and gena with brownish black spots, femora ventrally spinulose, and the proster- num setulose. These characters coincide with those of the only species E. tigrina from Korea, which was described in details recently; no further details were provided by Hendel. However, the key characters of A. facialis also fit all species of Euphya Wulp, 1885, the genus, which differs by the face concave, without medial carina. H.-Y. Han and S.-K. Kim (pers. comm.) examined some specimens superficially resembling E. tig- rina and determined as Euphya tripunctata Doleschall in USNM collection (Steyskal det.). Females of that species have the bare mid-femoral spot located in the basal third, which is another character, found in all hitherto examined species of Euphya (Korne- 40 V. A. Korneyev Fig. 15. Eupyrgota griseipennis, holotype }: 1 — total view, lateral; 2 — same, dorsal, wings not shown; 3 — mid femur and tibia; 4 — labels. Ðèñ. 15. Eupyrgota griseipennis, ãîëîòèï }: 1 — îáùèé âèä, ñáîêó; 2 — òî æå, äîðñàëüíî, êðûëüÿ íå ïîêàçàíû; 3 — ñðåäíåå áåäðî è ãîëåíü; 4 — ýòèêåòêè. yev, personal observation), whereas in E. tigrina the bare spot is in the apical third of mid femur. To confirm or disprove possible synonymy of E. tigrina and A. facialis, the type material of A. facialis is needs to be re-examined. Eupyrgota luteola Coquillett, 1898 Coquillett, 1898: 337; Matsumura, 1916: 409; Chen, 1947: 62; Kim, Han, 2000: 220 (Eupyrgota); Hendel, 1914: 83 (Adapsilia); Hendel, 1933: 7 (Adapsilia (Eupyrgota)); Soo´s, 1984: 37 (Adapsila). Ma t e r i a l. T y p e. Syntype }. “Japan / Mitsukuri”, “Type No / 4012 / U.S.N.M.”[red paper], “Adapsilia / luteola Coq.” (USNM). Non - t y p e. China: “Schanghai / [unreadible: ?1100] / Kiangsu / H. Ho�hne [sic!] /// 24.I.[19]35 [yellow h/w]”, “Schanghai, (China) / Provinz Kiangsu [= Jiangsu] / 24.4[sic!].1935. H. Ho�ne [blue printed label]”, { (ZMHB) Rema r k s. The species is adequately redescribed by Kim and Han (2000). Coquillett (1898) mentioned a male or males in his description, however, it liter- ally says that “…the hypopyg… almost as long as the first abdominal segment”; howev- er, male hypopygium is much smaller in this species; also, Coquillett mentioned five visible tergites (i. e., 1+2 syntergite and 3–6 tergites), which means that the examined specimen certainly was a female. Coquillett merely took its oviscape with two apical hooks as male genitalia and have erred in thinking this specimen to be a male. I there- fore consider the female specimen a syntype of E. luteola. There is another female with same labels except the red type label in the collection of USNM (A. Norrbom, pers. comm.), but certainly no males. Eupyrgota wagae (Bigot, 1880), comb. n. (fig. 16) Pyrgota vagae Bigot, 1880: 152. — Adapsilia wagae: Becker, 1905: 92; Hendel, 1908: 14; 1933: 11; Stackelberg, 1970: 121; Zimina, 1985: 150. — Adapsila wagai: Soo´s, 1984: 37. — Adapsilia picta Portschinsky, 1881: 37; Becker, 1905: 92; Soo´s, 1984: 37. Ma t e r i a l. Non - t y p e. SE Kazakhstan, Aksu-Dzhabagly [Natural Reserve, 88 km ENE of Shym- kent], 25.06.1966, {, } (Zimina) (ZMUM); Tadjikistan: Ganishou, 1500–2100 m, meadow, 15.06.1987, 2 { (Pljushch) (SIZK); Iraq: Samarra, 06.1965, } (Moussli) (CVK); Afghanistan: Gulbahar, 1700 m, 15.08.1956, }; Pol-i-Charchi 18 km E of Kabul, 1700 m, 25.06–3.07.1966, } (Amsel); SE Afghanistan, Safed Koh Range, S side of Kotkal, 2350 m, 14–23.06.1966, 3 } (Elbert) (SMNK). D i a gno s i s. Head with high and short eye, gena 0.5 times as high as eye, with brown subocular spot and as low as flagellomere 1 long. Pedicel as long as flagellom- ere 1. Head setae very short or reduced, only very short or, poc and vti present. Thoracic setae very short, prst sa, dc and prsc ac completely reduced, ppn, anepst and kepst very short, seta-like. Prosternum with pair of postero-ventral processes bearing 1–2 fine setulae at apices. Scutellum bare, with 2 pairs of short sctl. R2+3 with spur vein; R4+5 bare. Coxae unmodified in both sexes, mid coxa with long seta on dorsal portion of eucoxite and disticoxite with brush of moderately thick setulae directed poster-ventrally. Femora with 2 ventral rows of short thickened setae, mid femur with bare area. Epandrium short, with moderately elongate surstyli (fig. 16, 1); proctiger large, dorso-ventrally flattened, with cerci separated by membrane, but not bilobate; glans of phallus as in fig. 16, 4. Oviscape 0.7 times as long as mesonotum and preab- domen, with 2 apico-ventral hooks; aculeus short, subtriangular, as shown for E. rufo- setosa (Kim, Han, 2000: fig. 4B). Rema r k s. This species agrees with the diagnosis of Eupyrgota, differing from other Palaearctic species of the genus by the combination of yellow and black body pattern, short black setae (including 4 sctl), both black and yellow setulae, mid femur of female with bare area and very complex structure of glans in male. It is the only species of the family known so far in the Middle East of the Palaearctic Region. T. Becker (1905) intentionally changed the original spelling to “wagae”, and Soo´s (1984) modified it to “wagai”, to reflect the original spelling of Michal Waga’s name and the fact that he was a man. Both these spellings are, in the terms of the Code (ICZN, 41Genera of Palaearctic Pyrgotidae (Diptera, Acalyptrata)... 1999), unjustified emendations. However, the spelling “wagae” is in the prevailing use and must be deemed a justified emendation, according to the Article 33.2.3.1 (ICZN, 1999), but the emendation to “wagai” remains unjustified, as the original name “vagae”, derived from a latinized personal name, met the requirements of the Article 31.1.1. Parageloemyia Hendel, 1934 Hendel, 1934: 142; Soo´s, 1984: 37; Kim, Han, 2001: 281. T yp e s p e c i e s: Geloemyia nigrofasciata Hendel, 1933: 13 (by original designation). Dicranostira Enderlein, 1942: 111; Soo´s, 1984: 37, syn. n. T yp e s p e c i e s: Parageloemyia ornata Hering, 1940: 293 (by original designation, as “D. ornata (Hering)”). D i a gno s i s. Set of head and body setae complete; 3–4 dc and 2 pairs of sctl pre- sent; femora with ventral setae, but unspinulose; mid femur with or without bare area in females; antenna half as long as face; facial carina and antennal grooves poorly expressed; scutellum bare; R4+5 usually setulose, sometimes bare; epandrium with elon- gate triangular, postero-ventrally directed surstyli and dorso-ventrally flattened cerci; oviscape apex posteriorly directed, with postero-ventral, almost apical, opening; aculeus 2.5 times as long as wide, distinctly barbed apically; 3 oval spermathecae. Rema r k s. When Enderlein (1942) described Dicranostira, he apparently had seen only the type specimen or an early draft of Hering’s manuscript, but not the published paper by Hering (1940). The specimens mentioned in Enderlein’s paper, were deter- mined in 1934, before the date of publication of Hering’s paper. Hering had already published ornata under the genus name Parageloemyia, not Geloemyia, as was suggest- ed by Enderlein, who compared Dicranostyra with Geloemyia, not with Parageloemyia. Enderlein (loc. cit.: 98), also noted that Dicranostyra and Parageloemyia differ in the presence of facial fork. Actually, P. nigrofasciata has a smoothed carina with a low, almost inconspicuous fork, as in some specimens of P. quadriseta. Currently, Parageloemyia includes 3 species occurring in the Far East of Palaearc- tic Region: P. nigrofasciata (Hendel, 1933), P. quadriseta (Hendel, 1933) and P. won- juensis Kim et Han, 2001, and the fourth, P. globa Shi, 1996 in Oriental Region (China: 42 V. A. Korneyev Fig. 16. Eupyrgota wagae, { (lateral right): 1 — epandrium and proctiger; 2 — hypandrium; 3 — basiphallus, right paramere and apex of phallapodeme; 4 — glans of phallus. Ðèñ. 16. Eupyrgota wagae, { (ñáîêó ñïðàâà): 1 — ýïàíäðèé è ïðîêòèãåð; 2 — ãèïàíäðèé; 3 — áàçèôàëë, ñïðàâà, ïàðàìåð è âåðøèíà ôàëëàïîäåìû; 4 — ãëàíñ ôàëëþñà. Yunnan). A key to 3 Palaearctic species is provided by the author (Korneyev, Nartshuk, in press). The monotypic genus Geloemyia Hendel, 1908 is known only from the type locality of G. stylata Hendel (type species), Tongking (Vietnam), and must be exclud- ed from the list of genera occurring in the Palaearctic Region. Parageloemyia is closely related to Trichempodia trifasciata Enderlein, 1942 from Madagascar (Korneyev, unpublished data). They share R-M crossvein situated proxi- mally of R1 apex, R4+5 setulose, terminalia structure (unknown for Trichempodia cocke- relli Malloch), and probably form a monophyletic group, differing mainly by details of chaetotaxy and head shape. Parageloemyia nigrofasciata (Hendel, 1933) (fig. 17, 1–2) Hendel, 1933: 13; Soo´s, 1984: 37 (Geloemyia); Kim et Han, 2001: 281 (Parageloemyia). — Parageloe- myia ornata Hering, 1940: 293, syn. n. — Dicranostira ornata: Enderlein, 1942: 111; Soo´s, 1984: 37. Ma t e r i a l. T y p e. Holotype Geloemyia nigrofasciata {: “Suifu / Szechuen / China”, “DC Graham / coll.”, “Type No / 41873 / U.S.N.M.” (red paper rectangle), “Geloemyia / nigrofasciata / Hend.” (USNM). Holotype Parageloemyia ornata }: “Chandaoche / Manchukuo, VIII. 1938 / W Alin”, “Type”, “Parageloe- myia ornata m. Type } / Hering det.” (DEI). Non - t y p e. Far East Russia, Primorskiy Kray: “Ussuri- Gebiet, Sutschan”, } (ZMHB); Gornotayozhnoe, light trap, 10–20.07.1994, } (heavily damaged by dermes- tids; one wing and remainders of oviscape left) (A. Belov) (CVK). Parageloemyia quadriseta (Hendel, 1933) (fig. 17, 3–4) Hendel, 1933: 13; Soo´s, 1984: 37 (Geloemyia). — quadriseta Hendel, 1934: 142; Chen, 1947: 55 (Pa- rageloemyia). — Parageloemyia nigrofasciata: Chen, 1947: 55; Kim, Han, 2001: 281 (misidentification). Ma t e r i a l. T y p e. Syntype Geloemyia quadriseta }: “Shin Kai Si [not Li, as in original description] / Mt. Omei / Szechuen China”, “1000 [not 4000, as in original description] feet / alt”, “DCGraham / collector”, “Geloemyia / quadrisetosa [sic!] / Hend. Hend. [det.]” (red paper rectangle) (USNM). Pictures of wings of Geloemyia nigrofasciata and G. quadriseta (Hendel, 1933: Taf. 1) originally had captions confused and not corresponding to their descriptions; this has been noted already by Hering (1940), but Chen (1947) and Kim and Han (2001) erroneously applied the name “P. nigrofasciata” to Paragelomyia quadriseta. 43Genera of Palaearctic Pyrgotidae (Diptera, Acalyptrata)... Fig. 17. Paragelomyia nigrofasciata, holotype } (1, 2) and P. quadriseta, holotype } (3, 4): 1, 3 — total view, lateral; 2, 4 — labels. Ðèñ. 17. Paragelomyia nigrofasciata, ãîëîòèï } (1, 2) è P. quadriseta, ãîëîòèï } (3, 4): 1, 3 — îáùèé âèä, ñáîêó; 2, 4 — ýòèêåòêè. Judging from illustrations, specimens recorded from Korea and China (Kirin) in these papers actually belong in P. quadriseta. Wing pattern in species determined as P. nigrofasciata or P. quadriseta is variable, and they might actually be synonyms, if more specimens are available. Porpomastix Enderlein, 1942 Typ e s p e c i e s: Porpomastix fasciolata Enderlein, 1942: 123 (by original designation). Paradapsilia Chen, 1947: 53; Shi, 1996: 575; Kim, Han, 2000: 230, syn. n. T yp e s p e c i e s: Paradapsilia trinotata Chen, 1947: 53 (by original designation). The two genera names are based on type species, which are synonyms. Chen was certainly unaware of Enderlein’s paper. S.-K. Kim and H.-Y. Han (2000) recently pro- vided a detailed redescription of Paradapsilia. Porpomastix fasciolata Enderlein, 1942 Enderlein, 1942: 123; Soo´s, 1984: 38. — Paradapsilia trinotata Chen, 1947: 53; Shi, 1996: 575; Kim, Han, 2000: 230, syn. n. Ma t e r i a l. T y p e. Syntypes P. fasciolata 2 }: Japan: Hokkaido, “N.-Japan (Morioka). Ohmorin”, }: Far East Russia, Primorskiy Kray: “NO.-Asien (Ussuri-Gebiet) aus Kasakewitsch; 1907” (ZMHB). Non - t y p e. S Korea: Wonju-si: Yonsei University campus, 27.05.1996, } (Byun) (MHNG). Examined types of P. fasciolata fit the description and figures of P. trinotata (Chen, 1947; Kim, Han, 2000) in all the details, and the two names are synonyms. Key to Genera of Palaearctic Pyrgotidae Òàáëèöà äëÿ îïðåäåëåíèÿ ðîäîâ ïàëåàðêòè÷åñêèõ Pyrgotidae 1. Femora in apical part with a row (usually 2 rows) of short spinulae or thickened short setulae. Prosternum with 2 ventral finger-like projections bearing setulae. Apex of oviscape with 2 medio-ven- tral hooks. ............................................................................................................ Eupyrgota Coquillett – Femora not spinulose. Apex of oviscape at most with unpaired medio-ventral hook-like projection, or without it, and if with 2 hooks, then prosternum without projections, bare. ............................... 2 2. 3–4 pairs of dc; scutellum bare, R2+3 without spur vein; R4+5 setulose; 4 scut. ............. ........................................................................................................................... Parageloemyia Hendel – Usually 1–2 pairs of dc, if 3–5 pairs of dc (in Adapsilia dorsocentralis and Porpomastix fasciolata), then either R4+5 bare and scutellum with setulae, or R2+3 with spur vein and scutellum bare. Other characters variable. ........................................................................................................................... 3 3. Costal vein reaching at most slightly beyond R2+3 apex. Medial vein usually not reaching wing mar- gin or very thinned in apical portion. Dorso- and ventro-medial lobes of oviscape longer than later- al lobes or oviscape opening, spring-like. ....................................................... Campylocera Macquart – Costal vein reaching M apex. Medial vein complete, reaching wing margin, not very thinned apical- ly Dorso- and ventro-medial lobes of oviscape shorter or absent. ................................................... 4 4. Pedicel with finger-like projection dorsally; arista 3-segmented: basal aristal segment clearly visible. Ocellar and basal scutellar seta reduced. ......................................................... Porpomastix Enderlein – Pedicel without finger-like projection dorsally; arista 2-segmented: basal aristal segment indistinct or absent. Ocellar and/or basal scutellar seta present. ........................................................................... 5 5. Wing grey, with hyaline spots. Ventro-medial lobe of oviscape forming unpaired nail- or hook-like projection. ....................................................................................................... Tephritopyrgota Hendel – Wing hyaline, often with brown or grey areas around stigma, crossveins and on apex. Ventro-medi- al lobe of oviscape not forming projections. ............................................................... Adapsilia Waga This paper is the result of studies supported by the Deutscher Academischer Austauschdienst (DAAD) stipend in 2003 (Referat 322, Kennziffer A/03/20351). My thanks are due to Dr. Allen L. Norrbom (USDA SEL, Washington, D. C.), Dr. Joachim Ziegler (formerly in DEI, Eberswalde, currently in ZMHB), Dr. Laszlo Papp (HMNH), Dr. Emilia P. Nartshuk (ZISP), Dr. Ho-Yeon Han (Yonsei University), Dr. Hans- Peter Tschorsnig (SMNS), Dr. Alexander Riedl (SMNK), Dr. Bernhard Merz (MHNG), Dr. Ruth-Eva Contreras-Lichtenberg and Mr. Peter Sehnal (NHMW), who kindly put at my disposal important material, both type and undetermined, or provided necessary data on the specimens deposited in collections under their care. Dr. Andrew Whittington kindly read the early proof of this paper. I thank 2 anonymous reviewers for their criticism and valuable comments. 44 V. A. Korneyev Acze´l M. Revisio´n parcial de las Pyrgotidae neotropicales y anta´rcticas, con sinópsis de los ge´neros y especies (Diptera, Acalyptratae). P. 3. (Conclusão) // Revista Brasileira de Entomologia. — 1956. — 6. — P. 1–38. Acze´l M. Pyrgotidae (Diptera Acalyptrata) // Parc National de l’Upemba. I. Mission G. F. de Witte. — 1958. — 50, 4. — P. 35–53. Becker T. Ortalidae // Katalog der pala�arktischen Dipteren. Eds. Becker, Bezzi, Kerte´sz & Stein.2 — Bd. 4. — Budapest, 1905. — S. 92–107. Chen S. H. Chinese and Japanese Pyrgotidae // Sinensia. — 1947. — 17. — P. 47–74. Coquillett C. D. Report on a collection of Japanese Diptera, presented to the U.S. National Museum by the Imperial University of Tokyo // Proceedings of the United States National Museum. — 1898. — 21 [= No. 1146]. — P. 301–340. Enderlein G. Klassifikation der Pyrgotiden // Sitzungsberichte der Gesellschaft Naturforschenden Freunde zu Berlin. — 1942 (1941). — H. 2. — S. 98–134. Hendel F. Diptera. Fam. Muscaridae. Subfam. Pyrgotidae. // Genera Insectorum. Ed. P. Wytsman. — Fasc. 79. — Bruxelles, 1908. — 33 S + I Taf. Hendel F. Neue Beitra �ge zur Kenntnis der Pyrgotinen // Archiv fu�r Naturgeschichte. — 1914 (1913). — 79A (11). — S. 77–117 + 1 Taf. Hendel F. 36. Pyrgotidae Die Fliegen der palaearktischen Region. / Ed. E. Lindner. — 5, Lfg. 73. — Stuttgart, 1933. — S. 1–15. Hendel F. U �bersicht u�ber die Gattungen der Pyrgotiden, nebst Beschreibung neuer Gattungen und Arten // Encyclopedie Entomologique (B) II. Dipt. — 1934. — 7. — S. 141–156. Hering E. M. Acalyptraten aus Manchukuo. (Diptera: Pyrgotidae, Drosophilidae, Otitidae) // Arbeiten u�ber morphologische und taxonomische Entomologie aus Berlin-Dahlem. — 1940. — 7, H. 4. — S. 288–295. Kim S.-K., Han H.-Y. A taxonomic revision of the genera Eupyrgota and Paradapsilia in Korea (Diptera: Pyrgotidae). // Korean. J. Ent. — 2000. — 30, N 4. — P. 219–233. Kim S.-K., Han H.-Y. A systematic study of the genera Adapsilia and Parageloemyia in Korea // Insecta Koreana. — 2001. — 18, N 3. — P. 255–291. Korneyev V. A. 1. Phylogenetic relationships among the families of the superfamily Tephritoidea / Eds. M. Aluja, A. L. Norrbom. Fruit Flies (Tephritidae): Phylogeny and Evolution of Behavior. — Boca Ra- ton ; London ; New York ; Washington, D. C. : CRC Press., 1999 (2000). — P. 3–22. 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Crosskey. — London : British Museum (Natural History), 1980. — P. 556–562. Waga M. Adapsilia, genre de Dipte`res, appartenant a la sous-tribu Dolichoceres de Macquart, voisin de Sepedon et Tetanocera // Annales de la Societe Entomologique de France. — 1842. — 11, N 1. — P. 279–282. White I. M., Headrick D. H., Norrbom A. L., Carroll L. E. 33. Glossary // Fruit Flies (Tephritidae): Phylogeny and Evolution of Behavior / Eds. M. Aluja, A. L. Norrbom. — Boca Raton; London; New York ; Washington, D. C. : CRC Press, 1999 (2000). — P. 881–924. Zimina L. V. (Çèìèíà Ë. Â.) On the dipterofauna of the Soviet Union. Families Stratiomyiidae, Nemestrinidae, Mydidae, Pyrgotidae, Platystomatidae (Ê äèïòåðîôàóíå Ñîâåòñêîãî Ñîþçà. Ñåìåéñòâà Stratiomyidae, Nemestrinidae, Mydidae, Pyrgotidae, Platystomatidae) // Proceedings of the Zoological Museum of Moscow State University (Ñá. òð. Çîîë. ìóçåÿ ÌÃÓ). — 1985. — 23. — Ñ. 137–154. — Russian. 46 V. A. Korneyev
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publishDate 2004
publisher Інститут зоології ім. І. І. Шмальгаузена НАН України
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spelling Korneyev, V.A.
2009-07-06T09:25:31Z
2009-07-06T09:25:31Z
2004
Genera of palaearctic Pyrgotidae (Diptera, Acalyptrata),with nomenclatural notes and a key / V. A. Korneyev // Вестн. зоологии. — 2004. — Т. 38, № 1. — С. 19-46. — англ.
0084-5604
https://nasplib.isofts.kiev.ua/handle/123456789/3201
595.773.4
На основании изучения типовых материалов, описанных И. А. Порчинским, Ф. Генделем, Г. Эндерляйном и Э. Герингом, установлена следующая синонимия: Adapsilia Waga, 1842 = Teliophleps Hering, 1940, syn. n. Adapsilia coarctata Waga, 1842 = Adapsilia alini Hering, 1940, syn. n. Adapsilia mandschurica (Hering, 1940), comb. n. (= Teliophleps mandschurica Hering) = Adapsilia breviantenna Kim et Han, 2001, syn. n. Adapsilia microcera (Portschinsky, 1892) (= Pyrgota microcera Portschinsky, Epicerella microcera: Hendel, 1933, Sooґs, 1984) = Adapsilia tenebrosa Kim et Han, 2001, syn. n. Adapsilia verrucifer Hendel, 1933 = Adapsilia cornugaster Kim et Han, 2001, syn. n. Campylocera Macquart, 1843 = Teliophleps Enderlein, 1942, syn. n. (non Teliophleps Hering) = Dicrostira Enderlein, 1942, syn. n. Campylocera apicalis (Enderlein, 1842), comb. n. (= Teliophleps apicalis Enderlein). Campylocera partitigena (Enderlein, 1942), comb. n. (= Dicrostira partitigena Enderlein). Eupyrgota facialis (Hendel, 1934), comb. n. (= Adapsilia facialis Hendel; ?= E. tigrina Kim et Han, 2000). Eupyrgota griseipennis (Hendel, 1933), comb. n. (= Adapsilia griseipennis Hendel). Eupyrgota wagae (Bigot, 1880), comb. n. (= Adapsilia wagae Bigot). Parageloemyia Hendel, 1934 = Dicranostira Enderlein, 1942, syn. n. Parageloemyia nigrofasciata (Hendel, 1933), comb. n. (= Geloemyia nigrofasciata Hendel) = Parageloemyia ornata Hering, 1940, syn. n. Porpomastix Enderlein, 1942 = Paradapsilia Chen, 1947, syn. n. Porpomastix fasciolata Enderlein, 1942 = Paradapsilia trinotata Chen, 1947, syn. n. Adapsilia hirtoscutellaris Hendel — непригодное название (неправильное первоначальное написание). Род Cardiacera Macquart (= Epicerella Macquart) исключен из числа встречающихся в Палеарктике родов. Представлены переработанная таблица для определения и обзор родов Pyrgotidae Палеарктической области.
Based upon the study of the type specimens described by J. A. Portschinsky, F. Hendel, G. Enderlein and E. Hering, the following synonymy is established. Adapsilia Waga, 1842 = Teliophleps Hering, 1940, syn. n. Adapsilia coarctata Waga, 1842 = Adapsilia alini Hering, 1940, syn. n. Adapsilia mandschurica (Hering, 1940), comb. n. (= Teliophleps mandschurica Hering) = Adapsilia breviantenna Kim et Han, 2001, syn. n. Adapsilia microcera (Portschinsky, 1892) (= Pyrgota microcera Portschinsky, Epicerella microcera: Hendel, 1933, Soo´s, 1984) = Adapsilia tenebrosa Kim et Han, 2001, syn. n. Adapsilia verrucifer Hendel, 1933 = Adapsilia cornugaster Kim et Han, 2001, syn. n. Campylocera Macquart, 1843 = Teliophleps Enderlein, 1942, syn. n. (non Teliophleps Hering) = Dicrostira Enderlein, 1942, syn. n. Campylocera apicalis (Enderlein, 1842), comb. n. (= Teliophleps apicalis Enderlein). Campylocera partitigena (Enderlein, 1942), comb. n. (= Dicrostira partitigena Enderlein). Eupyrgota facialis (Hendel, 1934), comb. n. (= Adapsilia facialis Hendel; ? = E. tigrina Kim et Han, 2000). Eupyrgota griseipennis (Hendel, 1933), comb. n. (= Adapsilia griseipennis Hendel). Eupyrgota wagae (Bigot, 1880), comb. n. (= Adapsilia wagae Bigot). Parageloemyia Hendel, 1934 = Dicranostira Enderlein, 1942, syn. n. Parageloemyia nigrofasciata (Hendel, 1933), comb. n. (= Geloemyia nigrofasciata Hendel) = Parageloemyia ornata Hering, 1940, syn. n. Porpomastix Enderlein, 1942 = Paradapsilia Chen, 1947, syn. n. Porpomastix fasciolata Enderlein, 1942 = Paradapsilia trinotata Chen, 1947, syn. n. Adapsilia hirtoscutellaris Hendel is an unavailable name (incorrect original spelling). The genus Cardiacera Macquart (= Epicerella Macquart) is excluded from the list of genera occurring in Palaearctic Region. An improved key to and a review of genera of the Pyrgotidae known to occur in Palaearctic Region are provided.
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Інститут зоології ім. І. І. Шмальгаузена НАН України
Фауна и систематика
Genera of palaearctic Pyrgotidae (Diptera, Acalyptrata),with nomenclatural notes and a key
Роды палеарктических Pyrgotidae (Diptera, Acalyptrata), с заметками о номенклатуре и таблицей для определения
Article
published earlier
spellingShingle Genera of palaearctic Pyrgotidae (Diptera, Acalyptrata),with nomenclatural notes and a key
Korneyev, V.A.
Фауна и систематика
title Genera of palaearctic Pyrgotidae (Diptera, Acalyptrata),with nomenclatural notes and a key
title_alt Роды палеарктических Pyrgotidae (Diptera, Acalyptrata), с заметками о номенклатуре и таблицей для определения
title_full Genera of palaearctic Pyrgotidae (Diptera, Acalyptrata),with nomenclatural notes and a key
title_fullStr Genera of palaearctic Pyrgotidae (Diptera, Acalyptrata),with nomenclatural notes and a key
title_full_unstemmed Genera of palaearctic Pyrgotidae (Diptera, Acalyptrata),with nomenclatural notes and a key
title_short Genera of palaearctic Pyrgotidae (Diptera, Acalyptrata),with nomenclatural notes and a key
title_sort genera of palaearctic pyrgotidae (diptera, acalyptrata),with nomenclatural notes and a key
topic Фауна и систематика
topic_facet Фауна и систематика
url https://nasplib.isofts.kiev.ua/handle/123456789/3201
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