Colobaea, Zetterstedt, 1837

Bratt, Albertus D., Knutson, Lloyd V., Murphy, William L. & Daniels, Anthony A., 2020, Biology, immature stages, and systematics of snail-killing flies of the genus Colobaea (Diptera: Sciomyzidae), with overviews of aspects of the tribe Sciomyzini, Zootaxa 4840 (1), pp. 1-64 : 55

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4840.1.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:56993BCA-1A3E-415E-A765-0D55AB3E7A97

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4478748

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/7170D74F-6A34-FFE1-FF4F-FF3F8BB8D945

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Colobaea
status

 

Keys to third-instar larvae and puparia of Palearctic species of Colobaea View in CoL View at ENA

The only keys to genera of larvae and puparia of Palearctic Sciomyzidae are those of Rozkošný (2002) and Knutson & Vala (2011). Rozkošný (2002) provided a key to the puparia of two species of Colobaea ( C. distincta and C. pectoralis ).

Key to larvae

1 Posterior end with two pairs of reduced, welt-like lobes ( Fig. 16 View FIGURES 15–20 ); dorsal surface of segments XI–XII tanned, with many fine scales ( Fig. 22 View FIGURES 21–22 ); anterior spiracles with 14–20 large, fingerlike papillae ( Fig. 35 View FIGURES 32–35 ). In species of Lymnaeidae View in CoL . Ireland to Kazakhstan, northeastern Siberia, Russian South Maritime Territory......................................... C. bifasciella View in CoL

– Posterior end with four pairs of conical lobes ( Figs 15, 17–19 View FIGURES 15–20 ); dorsal surface of segments XI–XII smooth, white; anterior spiracles with 12–16 small papillae. Various snail prey........................................................ 2

2 Anterior spiracles with 12–14 marginal papillae ( Fig. 33 View FIGURES 32–35 ); posterior spiracular plates with margins projecting at ends of slits ( Fig. 30 View FIGURES 28–30 ). In Gyraulus intermixtus View in CoL . Iran, Pakistan................................................... C. deemingi View in CoL

– Anterior spiracles with 14–16 marginal papillae ( Fig. 34 View FIGURES 32–35 ); posterior spiracular plates subcircular. In species of Anisus , Bathyomphalus View in CoL , Planorbis View in CoL , and Lymnaeidae View in CoL . Widespread in Europe and Middle East....................................... 3

3 Dorsal cornu of pharyngeal sclerite longer than ventral cornu, posterior margin of dorsal cornu irregular, slender; dorsal and ventral cornua converging posteriorly ( Fig. 40 View FIGURES 40–43 ). In Radix peregra View in CoL and species of Planorbis View in CoL . Trans-Palearctic east to eastern Siberia, south to Egypt, Israel.................................................................... C. punctata View in CoL

– Dorsal and ventral cornua subequal in length, posterior margins less irregular, dorsal and ventral cornua not converging posteriorly ( Fig. 41 View FIGURES 40–43 ). In Anisus vortex and Bathyomphalus contortus View in CoL . Trans-Palearctic east to Moscow and northern Kazakhstan; absent from southeastern Europe................................................................ C. pectoralis View in CoL

Key to puparia

1 Robust form; anterior half expanded to close opening of snail shell whorl, posterior half smaller, twisted; anterior spiracles large, protrudent, with 14–20 large papillae ( Figs 24, 27 View FIGURES 23–27 ). In species of Lymnaeidae View in CoL . Ireland to Kazakhstan, northeastern Siberia, Russian South Maritime Territory........................................................... C. bifasciella View in CoL

– More slender; anterior end expanded to fit tightly within snail shell whorl, body form crescent shaped or subcylindrical in lateral aspect, not twisted; anterior spiracles protrudent or sessile, with 12–16 small papillae. In various species of snails..... 2

2 Anterior spiracles small, sessile; posterior spiracles large, protrudent; dorsal cephalic cap widened to close shell whorl, then narrowed abruptly ( Figs 45–46 View FIGURES 44–48 ). In Gyraulus intermixtus View in CoL ; septum material may be present. Southwestern Iran, Pakistan............................................................................................... C. deemingi View in CoL

– Anterior spiracles large, protrudent; posterior spiracles small, not protrudent; anterior end widened to close shell whorl but not abruptly narrowed ( Figs 23, 26 View FIGURES 23–27 , 47–48 View FIGURES 44–48 ). In species of Anisus , Bathyomphalus View in CoL , Planorbis View in CoL , and Lymnaeidae View in CoL . No septum material present.............................................................................................. 3

3 Form slender, dorsoventrally compressed, crescent shaped in lateral aspect; anterior spiracles slender, strongly projecting anteriorly ( Figs 23, 26 View FIGURES 23–27 ). In Anisus vortex and Bathyomphalus contortus View in CoL . Ireland east to Moscow and northern Kazakhstan..... ............................................................................................ C. pectoralis View in CoL

– Form robust, subcylindrical, not dorsoventrally compressed; anterior spiracles subcircular, projecting dorsally ( Figs 47–48 View FIGURES 44–48 ). In Radix peregra View in CoL and species of Planorbis View in CoL . Trans-Palearctic to eastern Siberia, south to Egypt, Israel............. C. punctata View in CoL

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Diptera

Family

Sciomyzidae

GBIF Dataset (for parent article) Darwin Core Archive (for parent article) View in SIBiLS Plain XML RDF