Sunday, August 30, 2020

[Entomology • 2020] Prosoeca torquata Key Long-proboscid Fly Pollinator Overlooked: Morphological and Molecular Analyses reveal A New Prosoeca Species (Diptera: Nemestrinidae)


Prosoeca torquata hovering over Lapeirousia dolomitica.

in Theron, Grenier, Anderson, ... et van der Niet, 2020. 
 Photo: Florent Grenier. 
 
Abstract
Long-proboscid nemestrinid flies are keystone pollinators of dozens of Southern African plants and, consequently, their taxonomic status might have important consequences for insect and plant conservation. We focus on Prosoeca peringueyi, considered to be a single, morphologically variable species, upon which a guild of ~28 plants in the winter rainfall region depends for pollination. We quantified morphological variation and established whether it was associated with genetic variation within and among sites. Phylogenetic analyses of the mitochondrial COI gene revealed two well-supported clades. One clade contains long-proboscid individuals that conform morphologically to the holotype of P. peringueyi. The sister clade contains individuals that frequently occur sympatrically with P. peringueyi and have shorter proboscides, with additional diagnostic characters that set it apart from P. peringueyi. A haplotype analysis based on nuclear ribosomal 28S DNA sequences of a subset of individuals corroborated these results. Based on our results, we propose the recognition of two species: P. peringueyi and Prosoeca torquata sp. nov., which is described here. Future research is required to quantify the interaction networks of these two fly species and the plant guilds with which they interact, to facilitate conservation in the global biodiversity hotspot where they occur.

Keywords: cryptic species, DNA barcoding, keystone pollinator, morphological variation, proboscis, Succulent Karoo, tangle-veined flies, taxonomy


Photographs of in situ adult Prosoeca peringueyi visiting Zaluzianskya sp. 
 Photo: Steven Johnson. 

Prosoeca torquata hovering over Lapeirousia dolomitica.
 Photo: Florent Grenier. 

      Prosoeca Schiner, 1867

 Prosoeca torquata Theron sp. nov.
 
Etymology: torquata (Latin) = being adorned with a neck collar; referring to the characteristic white band of hairs on the anterior margin of the thorax.


Genevieve L. Theron, Florent Grenier, Bruce C. Anderson, Allan G. Ellis, Steven D. Johnson, John M. Midgley and Timotheüs van der Niet. 2020. Key Long-proboscid Fly Pollinator Overlooked: Morphological and Molecular Analyses reveal A New Prosoeca (Nemestrinidae) Species. Biological Journal of the Linnean Society. blaa075.  DOI: 10.1093/biolinnean/blaa075

My very first #fly #LongTongueFly description and first PhD chapter is finally out! Special flies that have tongues far longer than their bodies and pollinate loads of pretty flowers!! #Nemestrinidae #Namaqualand #RSA @UKZN @StellenboschUni