Scaptodrosophila bryani ( Malloch, 1934:310 )

Mcevey, Shane F. & Polak, Michal, 2021, Drosophilidae (Diptera) of the Cook Islands, Records of the Australian Museum (Rec. Aust. Mus.) 73 (5), pp. 153-170 : 167

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.3853/j.2201-4349.73.2021.1770

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:5F204B3F-03AD-459D-83F3-4D14B41A1677

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/73198795-DB5E-E111-2E8A-F933E5FAB4CC

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Scaptodrosophila bryani ( Malloch, 1934:310 )
status

 

Scaptodrosophila bryani ( Malloch, 1934:310) View in CoL

Figs 34–41 View Figures 34–41

Of the two Scaptodrosophila species known from the Cook Islands, this one— S. bryani — is by far the most abundant: absent at only one of the 16 sites surveyed and the second most common species overall ( Table 2). Easily recognized by reference to the relative lengths of the scutellar setae: the basal pair are much shorter than the apical pair ( Fig. 41 View Figures 34–41 ); males and females are similar in general appearance ( Figs 34–40 View Figures 34–41 ); note that the katepisternal setae are large and subequal (indicated in Figs 36–37 View Figures 34–41 ), a characteristic of many species of Scaptodrosophila but not one of Drosophila . Throughout the TSP reference to subequal katepisternal and unequal scutellar setae is an easy and reliable diagnostic for this species. However, Curran (1936) named a species that is, from a reading of his description, indistinguishable from S. bryani . Curran’s species Drosophila anuda (which he recognized as belonging in Paradrosophila Duda = Scaptodrosophila ] is known only from the very small “Anuda Island” [sic, possiblyAnuta Island –11.6120° 169.8496°, Fig. 1 View Figure 1 ] and from the “Nupani Reef Island” (–10.0483° 165.7211° or –10.2340° 166.3100°) in the Santa Cruz Group of the Solomon Islands. Years of collecting in the TSP allows the generalization that if drosophilids are found at all on any remote or small island, especially on low sparsely vegetated islands, they will be one of the three most common species often associated with humans in or near dwellings at sea level: D. ananassae , D. sulfurigaster or S. bryani . An examination of the S. anuda (Curran, 1936) types series (5♂♂, 5♀♀) in the Museum of the California Academy of Sciences (Entomology) would be necessary to settle the question of whether or not it is a junior synonym of S. bryani .

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Diptera

Family

Drosophilidae

Genus

Scaptodrosophila

Loc

Scaptodrosophila bryani ( Malloch, 1934:310 )

Mcevey, Shane F. & Polak, Michal 2021
2021
Loc

Scaptodrosophila bryani ( Malloch, 1934:310 )

Malloch, John R. 1934: 310
1934
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