Cheilosia (Taeniochilosia) armeniaca Stackelberg, 1960
Fig. 6
Cheilosia armeniaca Stackelberg, 1960: 439 .
Cheilosia (Taeniochilosia) circassica Ståhls & Barkalov, 2017: 153 . Syn. nov.
Cheilosia armeniaca – Stackelberg & Richter 1968: 245. — Peck 1988: 97. — Barkalov 1993: 712. — Ståhls & Barkalov 2017: 144. — Mengual et al. 2020: 25.
Cheilosia armeniaca Stackelberg, 1956 [sic] – Gujabidze 2002: 245.
Cheilosia (Taeniochilosia) circassica – Barkalov & Mutin 2018: 486.
Differential diagnosis
Cheilosia armeniaca belongs within Taeniochilosia to the caerulescens group identified by typically having both bicoloured legs and infuscate wing cross-veins. Within the caerulescens group, it can be distinguished by the combination of face with only slightly pruinosity, postpedicel dark orange to black (not bright orange), meso- and metafemur with yellow pile, terga with whitish pile only and acetabula confluent. Genetically indistinguishable from C. longifacies sp. nov., but morphologically very different. For a differential diagnosis between the two species, see the account of C. longifacies . The male genitalia are figured in Barkalov & Ståhls (1997).
Material examined
Collected in 2018, 2019 and 2021; see Mengual et al. (2020) for detailed records from 2018.
Genetics
DNA barcodes of C. armeniaca are resolved into a cluster with high support (BS = 100%) together with the barcodes of C. longifacies sp. nov. and C. caerulescens .
Remarks
Ståhls & Barkalov (2017) described C. circassica based on two males from Northern Caucasus. These two Caucasus endemic taxa, C. circassica and C. armeniaca, are very similar morphologically, with a single described difference: C. armeniaca has some bare areas of microtrichia in the wing cells bm and cua, whereas C. circassica has the wing completely microtrichose. However, this character is variable, as shown by a male collected in 2018 (Mengual et al. 2020) with an intermediate pattern (a single small area bare of microtrichia in wing cell bm). We thus consider C. circassica a junior synonym of C. armeniaca .
Biology
During our expeditions, collected between 24 June and 14 July at an altitude between 1836 and 2500 m a.s.l. Occurs in rather rocky, open environments, such as on glacier and river terraces or in rocky high alpine environments. Found feeding on low flowers, e.g., Leucanthemum sp.
Distribution
Caucasus: Armenia, Georgia and Russia.