Published December 31, 2014 | Version v1
Taxonomic treatment Open

Lucilia bufonivora

Description

Key to North American species of the Lucilia bufonivora species group

The following key is detailed and functions also as a diagnosis for each species. More detailed descriptions of L. silvarum and L. elongata were given by Hall (1948) and a more detailed description of L. bufonivora was given by Rognes (1991).The three species can be separated from other North American species of Lucilia by the following combination of character states: 1) brown or black clavate palpus (vs. yellow or orange palpus in L. sericata, L. cuprina, L. thatuna, L. coeruleiviridis Macquart, 1855, L. cluvia (Walker, 1849), L. mexicana Macquart, 1844, L. eximia (Wiedemann, 1819) and L. illustris (Meigen, 1826)); 2) length of head at level of lunule more than half height of head (a state shared also by L. magnicornis (Siebke, 1863), L. thatuna and some L. sericata; in L. cuprina, some L. sericata, L. coeruleiviridis, L. cluvia, L. mexicana and L. eximia, head length at level of lunule less than half head height); 3) first flagellomere less than half eye length in profile and arista normal, with hairs erect and longer than width of first flagellomere (in L. magnicornis, first flagellomere longer, more than half eye length in profile and arista with short setae, usually much shorter than width of first flagellomere); 4) T3 with one or two pairs of long, erect median marginal setae (a state shared by L. magnicornis and males of L. thatuna; in other North American Lucilia species, median marginals not strong or erect); 5) basicosta dark brown or black (L. sericata, L. cuprina, L. thatuna, L. coeruleiviridis and L. cluvia have yellow basicosta); 6) subcostal sclerite pubescent (a state shared by all other North American Lucilia species except L. illustris which has a setose subcostal sclerite) (Hall 1948; Shewell 1987; Rognes 1991; Whitworth 2006); and 7) aedeagus of L. bufonivora type (Rognes 1991, for L. bufonivora and L. silvarum; this study, for the three species). Male and female head, presutural area of the notum, male abdominal sternites, and the terminalia of both sexes of L. silvarum, L. bufonivora, and L. elongata are shown in Figs 1–6, 9–14, 16–48.

1. Distance between rearmost presutural acrostichal setae equal to (in most specimens examined) (Fig. 9) or slightly less than distance between rearmost presutural acrostichal and dorsocentral setae in rear row; usually with three postsutural acrostichal setae on each side; upper calypter pale and lower calypter tan in male, upper and lower calypters pale in female. Male: Frons, at narrowest, 0.07 (0.06–0.09/8) of head width (Fig. 1); discal setae on T5 only; ST5 normal (Fig. 12); cercus with apical hook in profile, surstylus long and slender with apical half evenly tapering in profile (Fig. 16). Female: Frons, at narrowest, 0.33 (0.32–0.37/8) of head width and about as wide as eye when seen from above, frontal vitta widened towards vertex (Fig. 2); T7 almost completely divided; cercus normal in shape (lobate); epiproct without microtrichia (Fig. 40); ST7 narrow apically; ST8 long and rectangular in shape (Fig. 41)......................................................... Lucilia silvarum

- Distance between rearmost presutural acrostichal setae distinctly less than (in most specimens examined) (Figs 10, 11) or almost equal to distance between presutural acrostichal and dorsocentral setae in rear row; number of postsutural acrostichal

setae variable (2–3); upper and lower calypters pale in both sexes (in a few male specimens, lower calypter with a small tan area close to inner edge). Male: Frons 0.09–0.16 of head width (Figs 3, 5); discal setae, in addition to T5, usually present on T3 and T4 (as in L. bufonivora) or on T4 only (as in L. elongata); ST5 normal or prominent (larger and longer); cercus without apical hook, surstylus broad and apically blunt (Figs 21, 26). Female: Frons 0.30–0.37 of head width (Figs 4, 6); T7 completely divided; cercus normal (lobate) or elongate; epiproct without or without microtrichia (Figs 42, 44); ST7 not as above; ST8 small and shaped as in ST7 or its distal part almost a circle (Figs 43, 45)..........................................2 2. Male: Frons 0.094 (0.09–0.10/7) of head width (Fig. 3); abdomen normal, not conspicuously elongated; T3 (see comments below) and T4 usually with 1–5 strong discal setae; ST5 normal, shorter than T5 (Fig. 13); surstylus parallel-sided in profile with a blunt tip (Fig. 21). Female: Frons narrower, at narrowest, 0.30 (0.30–0.31/7) of head width and narrower than eye when seen from above, frontal vitta parallel-sided (Fig. 4); cercus elongate (narrow); epiproct with microtrichia (Fig. 42); ST7 shaped distally as broad semi-circle; ST8 with distal part shaped as a semi-circle (Fig. 43)............ Lucilia bufonivora

- Male: Frons wider, at narrowest, 0.13 (0.12–0.16/11) of head width (Fig. 5); abdomen distinctly elongated; T3 without discal setae; T4 with discal setae in some specimens; ST5 larger and as long as T5 (Fig. 14); surstylus with a straight upper edge and a lower rounded edge, tip slightly upturned in profile (Fig. 26). Female: frons wider, at narrowest, 0.35 (0.32–0.37/6) of head width and about as wide as eye when seen from above, frontal vitta widened towards vertex (Fig. 6); cercus normal (lobate); epiproct without microtrichia (Fig. 44); ST7 distally constricted then dilated with a median process; ST8 with distal part almost a circle (Fig. 45).......................................................................... Lucilia elongata

Notes

Published as part of Tantawi, Tarek I. & Whitworth, Terry, 2014, First record of Lucilia bufonivora Moniez, 1876 (Diptera: Calliphoridae) from North America and key to North American species of the L. bufonivora species group, pp. 101-124 in Zootaxa 3881 (2) on pages 104-105, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.3881.2.1, http://zenodo.org/record/251014

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Linked records

Additional details

Biodiversity

Family
Calliphoridae
Genus
Lucilia
Kingdom
Animalia
Order
Diptera
Phylum
Arthropoda
Species
bufonivora
Taxon rank
species

References

  • Hall, D. G. (1948) The blowflies of North America. The Thomas Say Foundation, Baltimore, 477 pp.
  • Rognes, K. (1991) Blowflies (Diptera, Calliphoridae) of Fennoscandia and Denmark. Fauna Entomologica Scandinavica, 24, 1 - 272.
  • Macquart, J. (1855) Dipteres exotiques nouveaux ou peu connus. 5. e supplement. Memoires de la Societe Royale des Sciences, e l'Agriculture et des Arts de Lille, Ser 2, 1, 25 - 156. [+ 7 plates]
  • Walker, F. (1849) List of the specimens of dipterous insects in the collection of the British Museum. Part IV. British Museum, London, pp. 689 - 1172.
  • Macquart, J. (1844) Dipteres exotiques nouveaux ou peu connus. Tome deuxieme. - 3. e partie [1843]. Roret, Paris, 304 pp. [+ 36 plates]
  • Wiedemann, C. R. W. (1819) Brazilianische Zweiflugler. Zoologisches Magazin, 1 (3), 40 - 56.
  • Meigen, J. W. (1826) Systematische Beschreibung der bekannten europaischen zweiflugeligen Insekten. Funfter Theil. Schulz, Hamm, xii + 412 pp. [+ plates 42 - 54]
  • Siebke, H. (1863) Beretning om en i Sommeren 1850 foretagen entomologisk Reise. Nyt Magazin for Naturvidenskaberne, 12, 105 - 192.
  • Shewell, G. E. (1987) Calliphoridae. In: McAlpine, J. F., Peterson, B. V., Shewell, G. E., Teskey, H. J., Vockeroth, J. R. & Wood, D. M. (Eds.), Manual of Nearctic Diptera. Vol. 2. Research Branch, Agriculture Canada Monograph, 28, 1133 - 1145.
  • Whitworth, T. (2006) Keys to the genera and species of blow flies (Diptera: Calliphoridae) of America north of Mexico. Proceedings of the Entomological Society of Washington, 108, 689 - 725.