文章标题澳大利亚坐骨蜈蚣亚科(双翅目:坐骨蜈蚣科),东方和澳大利亚区系综述及该亚科世界概况

D. Bickel
{"title":"文章标题澳大利亚坐骨蜈蚣亚科(双翅目:坐骨蜈蚣科),东方和澳大利亚区系综述及该亚科世界概况","authors":"D. Bickel","doi":"10.3853/J.0812-7387.21.1994.50","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"The Sciapodinae (Diptera: Dolichopodidae) of Australia (including Lord Howe, Norfolk, Cocos-Keeling and Christmas Islands) are treated in detail, and 253 species, 208 newly described, are illustrated and keyed. All described Oriental and extralimital Australasian species are critically reviewed, with notes on diagnostic characters, distribution and generic placement, along with many new combinations ancl synonymies and some keys. Further, the taxonomy of the subfamily is considered at world level, with redefinition and rearrangement of genera and nomenclatural changes for taxa from all regions. The systematic position of the subfamily is discussed and a preliminary phylogenetic analysis presented. The biogeography and natural history of the Australian fauna are treated in detail. Nine new genera are erected, Dytomyia, Negrobovia, Narrabeenia, Abbemyia, Pseudoparentia and Pilbara from Australasia, Mascaromyia and Ethiosciapus from the Afrotropical Region, and Amesorhaga from the Orient. Genera incorrectly referred to the Sciapodinae are discussed. The Sciapodinae show extensive parallel evolution, and almost all diagnostic generic-level characters have evolved independently many times. Historically, this has led to uncertain generic limits and a complicated nomenclatural history. Genera are redefined on a polythetic basis, no character in isolation necessarily being diagnostic for all members. Male secondary sexual characters (MSSC) are reviewed. In some species the female phenotype shows weakened expression of MSSC. A model is presented whereby MSSC could be incorporated into the phenotype of both sexes and thereby become 'higher level' taxonomic characters. The Australian fauna is analysed in detail, with discussions of historical and ecological biogeography. The genera Parentia and Heteropsilopus display classical Bassian distribution patterns and have ties with other southern lands, New ZealandlNew Caledonia and India, respectively. The disjunction of Heteropsilopus in Australia and southern India suggests a widespread eastern Gondwanan distribution dating from the lower Cretaceous. No direct relationship with the Neotropics is evident. Australian Nothofagus rainforests are devoid of Sciapodinae, in contrast to such forests in New Zealand. A Torresian fauna of Oriental-Papuan affinity dominates the northern tropics, and has penetrated southwards along the east coast in association with tropical and subtropical rainforest. The major southern limit of Torresian taxa coincides with the southern limit of subtropical rainforest in New South Wales. Lowland Papuan species occur on Cape York 1 2 Records of the Australian Museum (1994) Supplement 21 Peninsula and across monsoonal northern Australia. In contrast to eastern Australia, the aridity of Western Australia prevented southward movement of tropical elements, and the Southwest maintains only a Bassian fauna. The faunas of Norfolk and Lord Howe Islands are of Australian origin, while those of Christmas and Cocos-Keeling Islands are of Greater Sunda origin. The faunas of all major zoogeographic regions are reviewed, with emphasis on Australasia and the Orient. Widespread and accidentally introduced species are discussed. Fossil amber Sciapodinae are treated, including new information on Dominican Republic material. The subfamily is most diverse on the Gondwana continents, where it undoubtedly arose. The possible sister group relationship with the predominately Laurasian subfamily Dolichopodinae is discussed. Vicariant distributions between Australia and India, Australia and New Zealand, and Africa and South America support a early Cretaceous origin and radiation for the Sciapodinae. The tribe Mesorhagini is established with three genera. Amesorhaga n.gen. contains seven Oriental species and is considered the most primitive sciapodine genus. Negrobovia n.gen., from eastern and northern Australia, comprises three species, two of them new. The genus Mesorhaga Schiner is redefined and its distinctive morphology reviewed. The Australian fauna comprises 36 species, 35 new. The tribe Sciapodini is established and with the genera Sciapus Zeller, Mascaromyia n.gen., Helixocerus Lamb, Naufraga Bickel, Dytomyia n.gen., Narrabeenia, n.gen., Pilbara n.gen. and Condylostylus Bigot. Sciapus is greatly restricted in definition and comprises about 65 Holarctic species. The genera Psilopiella Van Duzee, Agastoplax Enderlein, Dactylodiscia Enderlein, Dactylorhipis Enderlein and Placantichir Enderlein are newly placed in synonymy with Sciapus. Many species previously placed in Sciapus are newly referred to other genera. Mascaromyia includes 15 described species from the western Indian Ocean. Helixocerus occurs on Samoa and New Caledonia. Naufraga is known only from New Zealand. Dytomyia is found primarily Australian sclerophyll habitats and comprises five species, four newly described. Narrabeenia is found on the southern Australian coast and comprises two species, one newly described. The genus Pilbara has a single new species, P. octava, from north-western Australia. Condylostylus comprises some 300 species in the Neotropics, Afrotropics and Orient. The New World C. longicornis is recorded from French Polynesia. Neotropical species incorrectly regarded as Chryososma are given new combinations. The Oriental and eastern Palearctic species are keyed. The genus Eurostomerus Bigot, based on a nomen nudum, is made a synonymy of Condylostylus. The Tribe Chrysosmatini is defined and includes ten genera Parentia Hardy, Pseudoparentia n.gen., Krakatauia Enderlein, Heteropsilopus Bigot, Chrysosoma Guerin-Meneville, Abbemyia, n.gen., Ethiosciapus, n.gen., Plagiozopelma Enderlein, Austrosciapus n.gen. and Amblypsilopus Bigot. Parentia has a temperate distribution in southern Australia, New Zealand and New Caledonia. The Australian fauna, comprising 26 species (21 new), is found mostly in drier habitats. Pseudoparentia, comprises five new species from interior Australia. Krakatauia comprises nine Australian species (8 newly described) in the evulgata, funeralis, alanae and trustorum Groups. The Oriental anthracoides Group is defined. Heteropsilopus comprises three Groups: the trilagatus Group from southern India and Sri Lanka, and the cingulipes and brevicornis Groups with a Bassian distribution in Australia, comprising 17 species, ten newly described. Chrysosoma is redefined. The apical arista, previously used as the key generic character, is shown to have been derived many times within the Sciapodinae. The genus is confined to the Old World tropics and is especially rich in the Australasian and Oriental tropics. The Australian fauna comprises 11 species, two newly described. The genus Megistostylus is placed in synonymy with Chrysosoma, and C. crinicorne replaces M. longicornis as the name for the common Oriental-Australasian species noted for its remarkable male antenna. The Afrotropical Kalocheta Becker is also placed in synonymy with Chrysosoma. The leucopogon and proliciens Groups are rich in Australasia and Sundaland. The common tramp species, C. leucopogon, ranges from eastern Africa to Polynesia, including many isolated islands. The Oriental vittatum Group, the Papuan aeneum, arrogans, lucigena and antennatum Groups, the New Caledonian noumeanum Group, the Pacific lacteimicans Group, and the Afrotropical passiva, senegalense and gemmarium Groups are defined. The genus Abbemyia occurs in Australasia and includes two Australian species, one newly described. Ethiosciapus occurs in Africa and the islands of the western Indian Ocean. PZagiozopelma includes many species previously regarded as Chrysosoma. The genus occurs widely across the Old World tropics but is richest in the Orient. The Australian fauna comprises six species, four newly described. The jlavipodex Group occurs across the Orient and Australasia, and includes the widespread P. jlavipodex. The alliciens and annotatum Groups are Oriental, the terminiferum and angustifacies Groups Australasian, and the bequaerti Group Afrotropical. The new genus Austrosciapus comprises 42 Australian species, 35 newly described. The proximus Group is eastern Australian, although Bickel: Australian Sciapoilinae 3 A. connexus appears to have been introduced to various Pacific islands and Perth, W A, and A. proximus was introduced to New Zealand. The tumidus Group, sarinensis Group, muelleri Group, dendrohalma Group (found on eucalypt trunks), and storeyi Group, all occur in eastern Australia, while the hollowayi Group is known from Western Australia. Amblypsilopus is given new status and includes many species previously regarded as Sciapus. New combinations and synonymies are presented from all zoogeographic regions. The genera Australiola, Labeneura, Sciopolina and Leptorhethum are new synonyms of Amblypsilopus. The genus has 87 Australian species, 78 newly described. The triscuticatus, pallidicornis and jlaviappendiculatus Groups are found throughout the tropical Orient and Australasia. The zonatus Group, from Australia and Norfolk and Lord Howe Islands, often has strikingly modified male wings. The argyrodendron, bertiensis, topendensis, cyplus and trogon Groups are northern Australian, while the anomalicornis and glaciunguis, neoplatypus and rimbija Groups occur in Australia and New Guinea. The abruptus Group is found across the Old World tropics. BrCKEL, D.J., 1994. The Australian Sciapodinae (Diptera: Dolichopodidae), with a review of the Oriental and Australasian faunas, and a world conspectus of the subfamily. Records of the Australian Museum, Supplement 21: 1-394.","PeriodicalId":371360,"journal":{"name":"Records of The Australian Museum, Supplement","volume":"31 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"1994-12-23","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"69","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"The Australian Sciapodinae (Diptera: Dolichopodidae), with a review of the Oriental and Australasian faunas, and a world conspectus of the subfamily\",\"authors\":\"D. Bickel\",\"doi\":\"10.3853/J.0812-7387.21.1994.50\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"The Sciapodinae (Diptera: Dolichopodidae) of Australia (including Lord Howe, Norfolk, Cocos-Keeling and Christmas Islands) are treated in detail, and 253 species, 208 newly described, are illustrated and keyed. All described Oriental and extralimital Australasian species are critically reviewed, with notes on diagnostic characters, distribution and generic placement, along with many new combinations ancl synonymies and some keys. Further, the taxonomy of the subfamily is considered at world level, with redefinition and rearrangement of genera and nomenclatural changes for taxa from all regions. The systematic position of the subfamily is discussed and a preliminary phylogenetic analysis presented. The biogeography and natural history of the Australian fauna are treated in detail. Nine new genera are erected, Dytomyia, Negrobovia, Narrabeenia, Abbemyia, Pseudoparentia and Pilbara from Australasia, Mascaromyia and Ethiosciapus from the Afrotropical Region, and Amesorhaga from the Orient. Genera incorrectly referred to the Sciapodinae are discussed. The Sciapodinae show extensive parallel evolution, and almost all diagnostic generic-level characters have evolved independently many times. Historically, this has led to uncertain generic limits and a complicated nomenclatural history. Genera are redefined on a polythetic basis, no character in isolation necessarily being diagnostic for all members. Male secondary sexual characters (MSSC) are reviewed. In some species the female phenotype shows weakened expression of MSSC. A model is presented whereby MSSC could be incorporated into the phenotype of both sexes and thereby become 'higher level' taxonomic characters. The Australian fauna is analysed in detail, with discussions of historical and ecological biogeography. The genera Parentia and Heteropsilopus display classical Bassian distribution patterns and have ties with other southern lands, New ZealandlNew Caledonia and India, respectively. The disjunction of Heteropsilopus in Australia and southern India suggests a widespread eastern Gondwanan distribution dating from the lower Cretaceous. No direct relationship with the Neotropics is evident. Australian Nothofagus rainforests are devoid of Sciapodinae, in contrast to such forests in New Zealand. A Torresian fauna of Oriental-Papuan affinity dominates the northern tropics, and has penetrated southwards along the east coast in association with tropical and subtropical rainforest. The major southern limit of Torresian taxa coincides with the southern limit of subtropical rainforest in New South Wales. Lowland Papuan species occur on Cape York 1 2 Records of the Australian Museum (1994) Supplement 21 Peninsula and across monsoonal northern Australia. In contrast to eastern Australia, the aridity of Western Australia prevented southward movement of tropical elements, and the Southwest maintains only a Bassian fauna. The faunas of Norfolk and Lord Howe Islands are of Australian origin, while those of Christmas and Cocos-Keeling Islands are of Greater Sunda origin. The faunas of all major zoogeographic regions are reviewed, with emphasis on Australasia and the Orient. Widespread and accidentally introduced species are discussed. Fossil amber Sciapodinae are treated, including new information on Dominican Republic material. The subfamily is most diverse on the Gondwana continents, where it undoubtedly arose. The possible sister group relationship with the predominately Laurasian subfamily Dolichopodinae is discussed. Vicariant distributions between Australia and India, Australia and New Zealand, and Africa and South America support a early Cretaceous origin and radiation for the Sciapodinae. The tribe Mesorhagini is established with three genera. Amesorhaga n.gen. contains seven Oriental species and is considered the most primitive sciapodine genus. Negrobovia n.gen., from eastern and northern Australia, comprises three species, two of them new. The genus Mesorhaga Schiner is redefined and its distinctive morphology reviewed. The Australian fauna comprises 36 species, 35 new. The tribe Sciapodini is established and with the genera Sciapus Zeller, Mascaromyia n.gen., Helixocerus Lamb, Naufraga Bickel, Dytomyia n.gen., Narrabeenia, n.gen., Pilbara n.gen. and Condylostylus Bigot. Sciapus is greatly restricted in definition and comprises about 65 Holarctic species. The genera Psilopiella Van Duzee, Agastoplax Enderlein, Dactylodiscia Enderlein, Dactylorhipis Enderlein and Placantichir Enderlein are newly placed in synonymy with Sciapus. Many species previously placed in Sciapus are newly referred to other genera. Mascaromyia includes 15 described species from the western Indian Ocean. Helixocerus occurs on Samoa and New Caledonia. Naufraga is known only from New Zealand. Dytomyia is found primarily Australian sclerophyll habitats and comprises five species, four newly described. Narrabeenia is found on the southern Australian coast and comprises two species, one newly described. The genus Pilbara has a single new species, P. octava, from north-western Australia. Condylostylus comprises some 300 species in the Neotropics, Afrotropics and Orient. The New World C. longicornis is recorded from French Polynesia. Neotropical species incorrectly regarded as Chryososma are given new combinations. The Oriental and eastern Palearctic species are keyed. The genus Eurostomerus Bigot, based on a nomen nudum, is made a synonymy of Condylostylus. The Tribe Chrysosmatini is defined and includes ten genera Parentia Hardy, Pseudoparentia n.gen., Krakatauia Enderlein, Heteropsilopus Bigot, Chrysosoma Guerin-Meneville, Abbemyia, n.gen., Ethiosciapus, n.gen., Plagiozopelma Enderlein, Austrosciapus n.gen. and Amblypsilopus Bigot. Parentia has a temperate distribution in southern Australia, New Zealand and New Caledonia. The Australian fauna, comprising 26 species (21 new), is found mostly in drier habitats. Pseudoparentia, comprises five new species from interior Australia. Krakatauia comprises nine Australian species (8 newly described) in the evulgata, funeralis, alanae and trustorum Groups. The Oriental anthracoides Group is defined. Heteropsilopus comprises three Groups: the trilagatus Group from southern India and Sri Lanka, and the cingulipes and brevicornis Groups with a Bassian distribution in Australia, comprising 17 species, ten newly described. Chrysosoma is redefined. The apical arista, previously used as the key generic character, is shown to have been derived many times within the Sciapodinae. The genus is confined to the Old World tropics and is especially rich in the Australasian and Oriental tropics. The Australian fauna comprises 11 species, two newly described. The genus Megistostylus is placed in synonymy with Chrysosoma, and C. crinicorne replaces M. longicornis as the name for the common Oriental-Australasian species noted for its remarkable male antenna. The Afrotropical Kalocheta Becker is also placed in synonymy with Chrysosoma. The leucopogon and proliciens Groups are rich in Australasia and Sundaland. The common tramp species, C. leucopogon, ranges from eastern Africa to Polynesia, including many isolated islands. The Oriental vittatum Group, the Papuan aeneum, arrogans, lucigena and antennatum Groups, the New Caledonian noumeanum Group, the Pacific lacteimicans Group, and the Afrotropical passiva, senegalense and gemmarium Groups are defined. The genus Abbemyia occurs in Australasia and includes two Australian species, one newly described. Ethiosciapus occurs in Africa and the islands of the western Indian Ocean. PZagiozopelma includes many species previously regarded as Chrysosoma. The genus occurs widely across the Old World tropics but is richest in the Orient. The Australian fauna comprises six species, four newly described. The jlavipodex Group occurs across the Orient and Australasia, and includes the widespread P. jlavipodex. The alliciens and annotatum Groups are Oriental, the terminiferum and angustifacies Groups Australasian, and the bequaerti Group Afrotropical. The new genus Austrosciapus comprises 42 Australian species, 35 newly described. The proximus Group is eastern Australian, although Bickel: Australian Sciapoilinae 3 A. connexus appears to have been introduced to various Pacific islands and Perth, W A, and A. proximus was introduced to New Zealand. The tumidus Group, sarinensis Group, muelleri Group, dendrohalma Group (found on eucalypt trunks), and storeyi Group, all occur in eastern Australia, while the hollowayi Group is known from Western Australia. Amblypsilopus is given new status and includes many species previously regarded as Sciapus. New combinations and synonymies are presented from all zoogeographic regions. The genera Australiola, Labeneura, Sciopolina and Leptorhethum are new synonyms of Amblypsilopus. The genus has 87 Australian species, 78 newly described. The triscuticatus, pallidicornis and jlaviappendiculatus Groups are found throughout the tropical Orient and Australasia. The zonatus Group, from Australia and Norfolk and Lord Howe Islands, often has strikingly modified male wings. The argyrodendron, bertiensis, topendensis, cyplus and trogon Groups are northern Australian, while the anomalicornis and glaciunguis, neoplatypus and rimbija Groups occur in Australia and New Guinea. The abruptus Group is found across the Old World tropics. BrCKEL, D.J., 1994. The Australian Sciapodinae (Diptera: Dolichopodidae), with a review of the Oriental and Australasian faunas, and a world conspectus of the subfamily. 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引用次数: 69

摘要

对澳大利亚(包括豪勋爵岛、诺福克岛、科科斯-基林岛和圣诞岛)的水虻科(双翅目:水虻科)进行了详细的研究,并对253种(其中208种是新发现的)进行了图解和分类。所有被描述的东方和澳洲外物种都进行了批判性的回顾,并对诊断特征、分布和属位进行了注释,以及许多新的组合、同义词和一些关键字。此外,亚科的分类学在世界范围内进行了研究,包括各地区分类群的属的重新定义和重新排列以及命名的变化。讨论了该亚科的系统位置,并进行了初步的系统发育分析。详细介绍了澳大利亚动物群的生物地理学和自然史。新增9个属:Dytomyia、Negrobovia、Narrabeenia、Abbemyia、Pseudoparentia和Pilbara属来自大洋洲,Mascaromyia和Ethiosciapus属来自非洲热带地区,Amesorhaga属来自东方。讨论了被误称为坐骨足科的属。Sciapodinae表现出广泛的平行进化,几乎所有诊断的属级特征都是多次独立进化的。从历史上看,这导致了不确定的属界限和复杂的命名史。属是在综合的基础上重新定义的,没有任何孤立的特征必须是所有成员的诊断。对男性第二性征(MSSC)进行了综述。在一些物种中,雌性表型显示MSSC的表达减弱。提出了一种模型,即MSSC可以被纳入两性表型,从而成为“更高水平”的分类特征。详细分析了澳大利亚的动物群,并讨论了历史和生态生物地理学。父本属和异古猿属分别与新西兰、新喀里多尼亚和印度等南部地区有联系,具有典型的巴西分布模式。在澳大利亚和印度南部发现的异长猿的分离表明,早在白垩纪下,冈瓦南东部就有广泛的分布。与新热带地区没有明显的直接关系。与新西兰的热带雨林相比,澳大利亚的Nothofagus雨林没有坐骨龙科动物。一种与东方和巴布亚有亲缘关系的托雷西亚动物群在北部热带地区占主导地位,并在与热带和亚热带雨林有关的东海岸向南渗透。Torresian类群的主要南部边界与新南威尔士州亚热带雨林的南部边界重合。低地巴布亚物种出现在约克角12澳大利亚博物馆记录(1994)增补21半岛和整个季风性的澳大利亚北部。与澳大利亚东部相比,西澳大利亚的干旱阻止了热带元素向南移动,西南部只保留了一种巴西动物群。诺福克岛和豪勋爵群岛的动物来自澳大利亚,而圣诞岛和科斯基林群岛的动物来自大巽他群岛。回顾了所有主要动物地理区域的动物群,重点是澳大利亚和东方。讨论了广泛的和偶然引入的物种。化石琥珀Sciapodinae处理,包括多米尼加共和国材料的新信息。这个亚科在冈瓦纳大陆上最为多样化,它无疑是在那里出现的。讨论了其与月桂亚科的姐妹群关系。澳大利亚和印度、澳大利亚和新西兰、非洲和南美洲之间的替代分布支持了坐骨恐龙早白垩纪的起源和辐射。Mesorhagini部落由三个属组成。Amesorhaga n.gen。包含七个东方种类,被认为是最原始的sciapodine属。Negrobovia n.gen。产于澳大利亚东部和北部,由三种组成,其中两种是新物种。重新定义了Mesorhaga Schiner属,并回顾了其独特的形态。澳大利亚的动物群有36种,其中35种是新的。部落Sciapodini成立,与属Sciapus Zeller, Mascaromyia n.gen。, Helixocerus Lamb, Naufraga Bickel, Dytomyia n.gen。纽约州纳拉贝尼亚市新泽西州皮尔巴拉市和尖锐髁突偏执狂。坐骨鱼的定义非常有限,由大约65种全北极物种组成。将Psilopiella Van Duzee属、Agastoplax Enderlein属、dactylodisa Enderlein属、Dactylorhipis Enderlein属和Placantichir Enderlein属与Sciapus同义。许多以前归入坐骨蕨属的种最近被归入其他属。Mascaromyia包括来自西印度洋的15种已描述的物种。Helixocerus出现在萨摩亚和新喀里多尼亚。鹦鹉螺只产于新西兰。Dytomyia主要发现于澳大利亚的硬藻栖息地,包括5种,其中4种是新发现的。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The Australian Sciapodinae (Diptera: Dolichopodidae), with a review of the Oriental and Australasian faunas, and a world conspectus of the subfamily
The Sciapodinae (Diptera: Dolichopodidae) of Australia (including Lord Howe, Norfolk, Cocos-Keeling and Christmas Islands) are treated in detail, and 253 species, 208 newly described, are illustrated and keyed. All described Oriental and extralimital Australasian species are critically reviewed, with notes on diagnostic characters, distribution and generic placement, along with many new combinations ancl synonymies and some keys. Further, the taxonomy of the subfamily is considered at world level, with redefinition and rearrangement of genera and nomenclatural changes for taxa from all regions. The systematic position of the subfamily is discussed and a preliminary phylogenetic analysis presented. The biogeography and natural history of the Australian fauna are treated in detail. Nine new genera are erected, Dytomyia, Negrobovia, Narrabeenia, Abbemyia, Pseudoparentia and Pilbara from Australasia, Mascaromyia and Ethiosciapus from the Afrotropical Region, and Amesorhaga from the Orient. Genera incorrectly referred to the Sciapodinae are discussed. The Sciapodinae show extensive parallel evolution, and almost all diagnostic generic-level characters have evolved independently many times. Historically, this has led to uncertain generic limits and a complicated nomenclatural history. Genera are redefined on a polythetic basis, no character in isolation necessarily being diagnostic for all members. Male secondary sexual characters (MSSC) are reviewed. In some species the female phenotype shows weakened expression of MSSC. A model is presented whereby MSSC could be incorporated into the phenotype of both sexes and thereby become 'higher level' taxonomic characters. The Australian fauna is analysed in detail, with discussions of historical and ecological biogeography. The genera Parentia and Heteropsilopus display classical Bassian distribution patterns and have ties with other southern lands, New ZealandlNew Caledonia and India, respectively. The disjunction of Heteropsilopus in Australia and southern India suggests a widespread eastern Gondwanan distribution dating from the lower Cretaceous. No direct relationship with the Neotropics is evident. Australian Nothofagus rainforests are devoid of Sciapodinae, in contrast to such forests in New Zealand. A Torresian fauna of Oriental-Papuan affinity dominates the northern tropics, and has penetrated southwards along the east coast in association with tropical and subtropical rainforest. The major southern limit of Torresian taxa coincides with the southern limit of subtropical rainforest in New South Wales. Lowland Papuan species occur on Cape York 1 2 Records of the Australian Museum (1994) Supplement 21 Peninsula and across monsoonal northern Australia. In contrast to eastern Australia, the aridity of Western Australia prevented southward movement of tropical elements, and the Southwest maintains only a Bassian fauna. The faunas of Norfolk and Lord Howe Islands are of Australian origin, while those of Christmas and Cocos-Keeling Islands are of Greater Sunda origin. The faunas of all major zoogeographic regions are reviewed, with emphasis on Australasia and the Orient. Widespread and accidentally introduced species are discussed. Fossil amber Sciapodinae are treated, including new information on Dominican Republic material. The subfamily is most diverse on the Gondwana continents, where it undoubtedly arose. The possible sister group relationship with the predominately Laurasian subfamily Dolichopodinae is discussed. Vicariant distributions between Australia and India, Australia and New Zealand, and Africa and South America support a early Cretaceous origin and radiation for the Sciapodinae. The tribe Mesorhagini is established with three genera. Amesorhaga n.gen. contains seven Oriental species and is considered the most primitive sciapodine genus. Negrobovia n.gen., from eastern and northern Australia, comprises three species, two of them new. The genus Mesorhaga Schiner is redefined and its distinctive morphology reviewed. The Australian fauna comprises 36 species, 35 new. The tribe Sciapodini is established and with the genera Sciapus Zeller, Mascaromyia n.gen., Helixocerus Lamb, Naufraga Bickel, Dytomyia n.gen., Narrabeenia, n.gen., Pilbara n.gen. and Condylostylus Bigot. Sciapus is greatly restricted in definition and comprises about 65 Holarctic species. The genera Psilopiella Van Duzee, Agastoplax Enderlein, Dactylodiscia Enderlein, Dactylorhipis Enderlein and Placantichir Enderlein are newly placed in synonymy with Sciapus. Many species previously placed in Sciapus are newly referred to other genera. Mascaromyia includes 15 described species from the western Indian Ocean. Helixocerus occurs on Samoa and New Caledonia. Naufraga is known only from New Zealand. Dytomyia is found primarily Australian sclerophyll habitats and comprises five species, four newly described. Narrabeenia is found on the southern Australian coast and comprises two species, one newly described. The genus Pilbara has a single new species, P. octava, from north-western Australia. Condylostylus comprises some 300 species in the Neotropics, Afrotropics and Orient. The New World C. longicornis is recorded from French Polynesia. Neotropical species incorrectly regarded as Chryososma are given new combinations. The Oriental and eastern Palearctic species are keyed. The genus Eurostomerus Bigot, based on a nomen nudum, is made a synonymy of Condylostylus. The Tribe Chrysosmatini is defined and includes ten genera Parentia Hardy, Pseudoparentia n.gen., Krakatauia Enderlein, Heteropsilopus Bigot, Chrysosoma Guerin-Meneville, Abbemyia, n.gen., Ethiosciapus, n.gen., Plagiozopelma Enderlein, Austrosciapus n.gen. and Amblypsilopus Bigot. Parentia has a temperate distribution in southern Australia, New Zealand and New Caledonia. The Australian fauna, comprising 26 species (21 new), is found mostly in drier habitats. Pseudoparentia, comprises five new species from interior Australia. Krakatauia comprises nine Australian species (8 newly described) in the evulgata, funeralis, alanae and trustorum Groups. The Oriental anthracoides Group is defined. Heteropsilopus comprises three Groups: the trilagatus Group from southern India and Sri Lanka, and the cingulipes and brevicornis Groups with a Bassian distribution in Australia, comprising 17 species, ten newly described. Chrysosoma is redefined. The apical arista, previously used as the key generic character, is shown to have been derived many times within the Sciapodinae. The genus is confined to the Old World tropics and is especially rich in the Australasian and Oriental tropics. The Australian fauna comprises 11 species, two newly described. The genus Megistostylus is placed in synonymy with Chrysosoma, and C. crinicorne replaces M. longicornis as the name for the common Oriental-Australasian species noted for its remarkable male antenna. The Afrotropical Kalocheta Becker is also placed in synonymy with Chrysosoma. The leucopogon and proliciens Groups are rich in Australasia and Sundaland. The common tramp species, C. leucopogon, ranges from eastern Africa to Polynesia, including many isolated islands. The Oriental vittatum Group, the Papuan aeneum, arrogans, lucigena and antennatum Groups, the New Caledonian noumeanum Group, the Pacific lacteimicans Group, and the Afrotropical passiva, senegalense and gemmarium Groups are defined. The genus Abbemyia occurs in Australasia and includes two Australian species, one newly described. Ethiosciapus occurs in Africa and the islands of the western Indian Ocean. PZagiozopelma includes many species previously regarded as Chrysosoma. The genus occurs widely across the Old World tropics but is richest in the Orient. The Australian fauna comprises six species, four newly described. The jlavipodex Group occurs across the Orient and Australasia, and includes the widespread P. jlavipodex. The alliciens and annotatum Groups are Oriental, the terminiferum and angustifacies Groups Australasian, and the bequaerti Group Afrotropical. The new genus Austrosciapus comprises 42 Australian species, 35 newly described. The proximus Group is eastern Australian, although Bickel: Australian Sciapoilinae 3 A. connexus appears to have been introduced to various Pacific islands and Perth, W A, and A. proximus was introduced to New Zealand. The tumidus Group, sarinensis Group, muelleri Group, dendrohalma Group (found on eucalypt trunks), and storeyi Group, all occur in eastern Australia, while the hollowayi Group is known from Western Australia. Amblypsilopus is given new status and includes many species previously regarded as Sciapus. New combinations and synonymies are presented from all zoogeographic regions. The genera Australiola, Labeneura, Sciopolina and Leptorhethum are new synonyms of Amblypsilopus. The genus has 87 Australian species, 78 newly described. The triscuticatus, pallidicornis and jlaviappendiculatus Groups are found throughout the tropical Orient and Australasia. The zonatus Group, from Australia and Norfolk and Lord Howe Islands, often has strikingly modified male wings. The argyrodendron, bertiensis, topendensis, cyplus and trogon Groups are northern Australian, while the anomalicornis and glaciunguis, neoplatypus and rimbija Groups occur in Australia and New Guinea. The abruptus Group is found across the Old World tropics. BrCKEL, D.J., 1994. The Australian Sciapodinae (Diptera: Dolichopodidae), with a review of the Oriental and Australasian faunas, and a world conspectus of the subfamily. Records of the Australian Museum, Supplement 21: 1-394.
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