Insects (Nov 2022)

Discovery of a Lineage of Soil-Dwelling <i>Medetera</i> Species with Multi-Coloured Eyes in Southern Europe (Diptera: Dolichopodidae)

  • Marc Pollet,
  • Rui Andrade,
  • Ana Gonçalves,
  • Piluca Álvarez Fidalgo,
  • José Luis Camaño Portela,
  • Frédéric Belin,
  • Jonas Mortelmans,
  • Andreas Stark

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/insects13111012
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 11
p. 1012

Abstract

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Seven species in the genus Medetera (Diptera: Dolichopodidae) are described here: Medetera aglaops sp. nov., Medetera corsicana sp. nov., Medetera gibbosipyga sp. nov., Medetera hispanica sp. nov., Medetera lusitana sp. nov., Medetera parva sp. nov., and Medetera rectipyga sp. nov. They all originate from the wider Mediterranean region in southwestern Europe (Iberian Peninsula, southern France, Corsica, Sardinia). The most striking feature in most of the species is the bi- or multicolour pattern of the eyes, most conspicuous in Medetera aglaops sp. nov. and Medetera lusitana sp. nov. This character is shared by the male and female sex and is thus not regarded as Male Secondary Sexual Character. All species belong to the Medetera apicalis species group sensu Bickel and are closely related based on shared characters in the hypandrium and cercus. Interestingly, three species with and four species without the basal pair of anterodorsal and posterodorsal bristles on the mid tibia are represented. This suggests that this diagnostic character has less phylogenetic relevance than previously anticipated. Unlike most Palaearctic Medetera, at least five of the new species are mostly found on rocky substrates in dry biotopes with a sclerophyllous vegetation. This further supports their relationship with species of the Medetera muralis subclade sensu Pollet, Germann and Bernasconi.

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