Peradon trilinea (Hull)

Reemer, Menno, Skevington, Jeffrey H. & Kelso, Scott, 2019, Revision of the Neotropical hoverfly genus Peradon Reemer (Diptera, Syrphidae, Microdontinae), ZooKeys 896, pp. 1-93 : 1

publication ID

https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.896.36493

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:3E0BC795-B569-442A-AE6F-DFD4A9FB9534

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/EFBC5E47-C7D3-5E60-BA7D-C2945F9C853E

treatment provided by

ZooKeys by Pensoft

scientific name

Peradon trilinea (Hull)
status

 

Peradon trilinea (Hull) Figs 17 View Figures 13–18 , 23 View Figures 19–24 , 25 View Figures 25–27 , 27 View Figures 25–27 , 100 View Figures 97–104 , 101 View Figures 97–104 , 252-254 View Figures 252–255 , 259 View Figures 256–261

Microdon trilinea Hull, 1943: 710. Holotype ♂: Amazon (NHMUK) [examined]; Thompson et al. 1976: 67.

Peradon trilinea (Hull): Reemer and Ståhls 2013a: 146.

Studied type specimens.

Amazon Region • 1 ♂, holotype of Microdon trilinea Hull; NHMUK.

Label 1 (small, round, red-bordered): "Holo- / type"; label 2: "Amazon / 66 53"; label 3 (red): "Holotype / Microdon / trilinea / Hull".

Additional specimens.

Peru • 1 ♀; Pucallpa; 19 Apr. 1962; J. Schunke leg.; NHMUK.

Diagnosis.

Body size: male 13 mm, female 15 mm. The triangle of golden pile on the mesoscutum place this species in a group together with P. aureus , P. aureoscutus and P. trivittatus . From the first two species, P. trilinea differs by the presence of golden pile along the anterior and lateral margins of the mesoscutum. The male differs from P. trivittatus by tergite 2 being parallel-sided (widened posteriorly in P. trivittatum ), and by the presence of a bulge-like, long pilose, median tubercle on the anterior 1/3 of sternite 4 ( Fig. 25 View Figures 25–27 ) (sternite 4 evenly convex and short pilose in P. trivittatus ). Male genitalia as in Fig. 259 View Figures 256–261 . The female differs from P. trivittatus by the strongly arched sternite 3, with a wide yellowish membrane between its posterior margin and the straight anterior margin of tergite 4 ( Fig. 27 View Figures 25–27 ).

Notes.

The examined female from Peru is associated with the male holotype because of the shape of tergite 2 (flatter and more parallel-sided than in P. trivittatus ), and because of the modified sternite 3 (unmodified in P. trivittatus ).

Distribution.

Know from the Brazilian Amazon and eastern Peru.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Diptera

Family

Syrphidae

Genus

Peradon