Eristalis horticola

Eristalis horticola is a Palearctic species of hoverfly.

Eristalis horticola
male
female
Scientific classification
Kingdom:
Phylum:
Class:
Order:
Family:
Genus:
Subgenus:
Eoseristalis
Species:
E. horticola
Binomial name
Eristalis horticola
(De Geer, 1776)[1]
Synonyms

Description

Its wing length is 8·25-11·5 mm. The bee's face is pale dusted with a broad black median stripe. Antennomere 3 brown-black. Tergite 2 dull, even on the yellow spots. All Abdominal spots yellowish. Wing with dark clouding, more developed in the female. Femur 3 pale at the base in male and for basal half in female.[3][4][5][6] The larva is aquatic.

Distribution

Palaearctic Fennoscandia South to the Mediterranean basin and North Africa. Ireland East through Europe into Russia and the Russian Far East, through Siberia to the Pacific coast (Sakhalin). India.[7][8]

Biology

The habitat is wetland, deciduous forest, temperate coniferous forests, boreal forests, taiga, montane tundra, fen, cut-over valley bog, margins of pools, streams and rivers.[9] Flowers visited include yellow composites; white umbellifers, Compositae, Ranunculaceae, Umbelliferae, Calluna vulgaris, Cardamine, Cirsium, Crataegus, Eupatorium, Galium, Jasione, Pyrus communis, Ranunculus, Rubus fruticosus, Rubus idaeus, Sambucus, Sorbus aucuparia, Stellaria, Succisa, Viburnum opulus.[10]

Flies May to September.

Scientific name

The scientific name of this species was published as Musca horticola in 1776 by Charles De Geer.[11] The name has been in general use as Eristalis horticola (De Geer, 1776) in the two centuries following its publication. On the basis of a colour plate of Musca lineata, by Moses Harris, also published in 1776, the latter name was generally accepted as a junior synonym of Musca horticola.

At the end of the twentieth century, some entomologists noted that De Geer erroneously listed Musca nemorum Linnaeus, 1758 as a synonym under Musca horticola, which would invalidate the name. As a result of some confusion about the type material of Musca nemorum, some entomologists already regarded that name as a synonym of Musca arbustorum Linnaeus, 1758.[12] The same authors therefore also placed Musca horticola in the synonymy of Eristalis arbustorum. They proposed to use the next available scientific names for both species, and to use the name Eristalis interrupta (Poda, 1761) for the species known until then as Eristalis nemorum, and to use the name Eristalis lineata (Harris, 1776) for the species known as Eristalis horticola for over two centuries. Because the names E. nemorum and E. horticola had been in use for more than two centuries for well-defined species, and because the stability of the names was not served by the proposed new names, in 2004 Peter Chandler, Andrew Wakeham-Dawson and Angus McCullough submitted a request to the International Commission on Zoological Nomenclature to conserve both names with a neotype.[13] The request was granted less than two years after its submission.[14] In various overviews and also in Fauna Europaea, the names proposed by Thompson et al. can still be found instead of the conserved ones.[15]

References

  1. De Geer, C. (1776). Memoires pour servir a l'histoire des insectes. Stockholm: P. Hesselberg. pp. viii + 523 pp., 30 pls.
  2. Stubbs, Alan E.; Falk, Steven J. (1983). British Hoverflies: An Illustrated Identification Guide. British Entomological & Natural History Society. pp. 253, xvpp.
  3. Van Veen, M. (2004). Hoverflies of Northwest Europe: identification keys to the Syrphidae. 256pp. KNNV Publishing, Utrecht.addendum
  4. Van der Goot, V.S. (1981). De zweefvliegen van Noordwest-Europa en Europees Rusland, in het bijzonder van de Benelux. KNNV, Uitgave no. 32: 275 pp. Amsterdam.
  5. Bei-Bienko, G.Y. & Steyskal, G.C. (1988). Keys to the Insects of the European Part of the USSR, Volume V: Diptera and Siphonaptera, Part I. Amerind Publishing Co., New Delhi. ISBN 81-205-0080-6.
  6. Coe, R.L. (1953). Diptera: Syrphidae. Handbks. ident. Br. insects 10(1): 1–98. R. Ent. Soc. London. pdf
  7. Fauna Europaea
  8. Peck, L.V. (1988). Syrphidae. In: Soos, A. & Papp, L. (eds.) Catalogue of Palaearctic Diptera 8: 11–230. Akad. Kiado, Budapest.
  9. Speight, M.C.D. (2011). "Species accounts of European Syrphidae (Diptera)" (PDF). Syrph the Net, the database of European Syrphidae. 65: 285pp.
  10. de Buck, N. (1990). Bloembezoek en bestuivingsecologie van Zweefvliegen (Diptera, Syrphidae) in het bijzonder voor België. Doc. Trav. IRSNB, no.60, 1-167.
  11. De Geer, C. (1776). Memoires pour servir a l'histoire des insectes 6: 140
  12. In 1982 F. Christian Thompson and some colleagues published the results of research on the type material of hover flies in the Linaean collection, which revealed irregularities in the types of Eristalis nemorum and Eristalis arbustorum, see Thompson, F.C, Vockeroth, J.R. & Speight, M.C.D. (1982). The Linnaean species of flower flies (Diptera: Syrphidae). Memoirs of the Entomological Society of Washington 10: 150–165
  13. Chandler, P.J., Wakeham-Dawson, A. & McCullough, A. (2004). Case 3259. Eristalis Latreille, 1804 (Insecta: Diptera): proposed confirmation that the gender is feminine; Musca nemorum Linnaeus, 1758, M. arbustorum Linnaeus, 1758 and M. horticola De Geer, 1776 (currently Eristalis nemorum, E. arbustorum and E. horticola): proposed conservation of usage of the specific names by designation of neotypes. The bulletin of Zoological Nomenclature 61(4): 241–244
  14. ICZN (2006). Opinion 2153 (Case 3259). Eristalis Latreille, 1804 (Insecta: Diptera): confirmation that the gender is feminine; Musca nemorum Linnaeus, 1758, M. arbustorum Linnaeus, 1758 and M. horticola De Geer, 1776 (currently Eristalis nemorum, E. arbustorum and E. horticola): usage of the specific names conserved by designation of neotypes. The bulletin of Zoological Nomenclature 63(2): 146–147
  15. Fauna Europaea; genus Eristalis; last visited 7 January 2018
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.