Arganthomyza socculata

Arganthomyza socculata (Zetterstedt, 1847) (Figs 185–202) Geomyza socculata Zetterstedt, 1847: 2534. Anthomyza socculata : ANDERSSON (1976): 50 –51 (redescription, generic combination); SOÓS (1981): 111 (key); NDERSSON (1984b): 53 (catalogue); ROHÁĆEK (1984a): 393 (key), ROHÁĆE...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Roháćek, Jindřich, Barber, Kevin N.
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: Zenodo 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4339708
https://zenodo.org/record/4339708
id ftdatacite:10.5281/zenodo.4339708
record_format openpolar
institution Open Polar
collection DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology)
op_collection_id ftdatacite
language unknown
topic Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Arthropoda
Insecta
Diptera
Anthomyzidae
Arganthomyza
Arganthomyza socculata
spellingShingle Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Arthropoda
Insecta
Diptera
Anthomyzidae
Arganthomyza
Arganthomyza socculata
Roháćek, Jindřich
Barber, Kevin N.
Arganthomyza socculata
topic_facet Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Arthropoda
Insecta
Diptera
Anthomyzidae
Arganthomyza
Arganthomyza socculata
description Arganthomyza socculata (Zetterstedt, 1847) (Figs 185–202) Geomyza socculata Zetterstedt, 1847: 2534. Anthomyza socculata : ANDERSSON (1976): 50 –51 (redescription, generic combination); SOÓS (1981): 111 (key); NDERSSON (1984b): 53 (catalogue); ROHÁĆEK (1984a): 393 (key), ROHÁĆEK (1987a): 55 –57 (dia gnosis), ROHÁĆEK (1998a): 173 (world checklist); ROHÁĆEK (2006a): 191 –196 (redescription and synonymy). Arganthomyza socculata : ROHÁĆEK (2009a): 63, 74 (key, generic combination); ROHÁĆEK & BARBER (2013): 39 –41 (redescription, relationship). Anthomyza ungulata Loew, 1873: 301; CZERNY (1902): 252; CZERNY (1928): 5; COLLIN (1944): 267 (key); TROJAN (1962):39; STACKELBERG (1970):326 (key); ANDERSSON (1984b): 53 (catalogue); ROHÁĆEK (1984a):392 (synonymy). Type material. Geomyza socculata Zetterstedt: HOLOTYPE: ♂, “ G.socculata ♂. Ostrog.Stenh.”, “ Lectotypus Geomyza socculata Zett., design. 1974 H. Andersson ” [red label], “1969, 925” [green label], “Type No. 2095:1, Zool. Mus. Lund Sweden, Anthomyzidae ”, “ Holotypus ♂ Geomyza socculata Zett., J. Roháček des. 2005” [red label] and “ Anthomyza socculata (Zett., 1847) ♂, J. Roháček det. 2005” (MZLU, genit. prep., examined). This type specimen was incorrectly designated as lectotype by ANDERSSON (1976: 45) but it is a holotype because only this male from Östergötland: Häradshammar, collected by Stenhammar, was listed in the original description. Anthomyza ungulata Loew: LECTOTYPE: ♂ (designated by ROHÁĆEK 1984a: 392): “Kultuk, v. Maak”, “Coll. H. Loew”, “ Anthomyza ungulata Lw ” (Loew’s handwriting), “Type” [orange red label], “Zool. Mus. Berlin ” [yellow label], “ Lectotypus, Anthomyza ungulata Loew ♂, J. Roháček des. 1983” [label with red margin and the word “ Lectotypus ”] and “ Anthomyza socculata (Zett.) ♂, J. Roháček det. 1983”. The specimen is in good condition (ZMHB, genit. prep., examined). PARALECTOTYPES: 2 ♀♀, with the same labels as the lectotype except for Loew’s determination label (ZMHB, examined). Other material examined. Palaearctic specimens, 311 ♂♂ 232 ♀♀ (see ROHÁĆEK 2006a, 2009a).Nearctic specimens, 35 ♂♂ 42 ♀♀ (CASC, CNCI, DEBU, SMOC, USNM) (details in ROHÁĆEK & BARBER 2013). Diagnosis. Male 1.90–2.42 mm, female 1.98–2.94 mm. Brown to blackish brown, distinctly though rather sparsely pale grey microtomentose and relatively shining; face, parafacialia, gena, postgena, mouthparts, haltere entirely and frons, antennae, legs largely contrasting ochreous, yellow or whitish yellow. Frontal triangle reaching up to anterior third of frons. Mid and hind basitarsus without short thickened setae. T1 and T2 almost separate, only laterally fused. Wing hyaline (Figs 185–186). Reference to the genitalia is necessary to differentiate conndently this species from A. disjuncta and A. acuticuspis . Male genitalia (see Figs 187–194 for details). Epandrium (Figs 187, 189) dark brown, distinctly higher than long. Gonostylus (Figs 187, 189, 194) ochreous to yellow, nat, slightly bent medially, of elongately subtriangular shape, with tapered but narrowly rounded apex, largely micropubescent on outer side and setose mostly on inner side; its shape variable: in Nearctic and E. Palaearctic specimens more slender and apically more acute (see Fig. 194) on average than in European specimens but always with anterior margin convex and posterior margin concave (in largest extension view). Hypandrium (Fig. 190) relatively robust, with anterior internal lobes small, ventrally (anterior to pregonite) more distinctly excavated than in A. disjuncta posterior wide parts of hypandrium fused with transandrium. Pregonite (Fig. 190) fused to hypandrium, low, slightly projecting, with 2–3 posterior (1–2 longer on a tubercle-like process) and 3 anterior (all internal) setae. Aedeagal part of folding apparatus with dark granulose tubercles on proximal part (covering larger area on right side than on left) and usual nne striae (Fig. 193). Female postabdomen and genitalia (see Figs 195–202 for details). T7 and S7 completely fused into dark brown ring-shaped tergosternum, Nearctic and E. Palaearctic specimens dorsally often with distinctly paler posterior and sometimes also anterior band (Fig. 195), ventrally usually with dark, transverse anteromedial stripe (Fig. 201) which is sometimes reduced, and with long setae at posterior margin. Anterior margin of original S7 sometimes with a pair of small appendages (cf. Fig. 201). Ventral receptacle (Fig. 202) hyaline, slender, long, strongly curved, gradually tapering towards blunt apex (somewhat thicker and shorter in Nearctic specimens). Spermathecae (1+1) short-pyriform, with dark transversely striated surface and slender base provided with rosette of 5–6 characteristic bell-shaped appendages (see Figs 196, 200) some of which can have doubled apex in Nearctic specimens; duct with cervix developed but weakly sclerotized. Variability. This widespread Holarctic species displays remarkable variability in the postabdominal characters. The Nearctic specimens closely resemble those from eastern Asia (Mongolia, Russia: Far East), and compared to European specimens they seem to be generally smaller. The male gonostylus is narrower and more acute, the female T7+S7 is often anteriorly and/ or posteriorly pale-margined, the female T8 is narrower, the ventral receptacle is thicker, and the spermathecae often have doubled bell-shaped appendages. Discussion. Arganthomyza socculata is very closely allied to A. disjuncta and forms with it a distinctive sister pair distinguished by the apomorphies diagnosing the A. socculata group (see ROHÁĆEK & BARBER 2013, and above). Arganthomyza socculata and A. disjuncta are distinct in the female sex but their males are very similar even in the genitalic structures (for differences see the key and in the description and discussion under A. disjuncta ). The geographical variability discussed above, particularly the differences between European and E. Palaearctic + Nearctic specimens, will need future study to evaluate the differences between the populations in these areas. Future molecular studies may help to elucidate this problem, but for the time being these populations are considered conspecinc. However, we do not rule out the possibility that the Nearctic populations of A. socculata (hitherto known only from Alaska) interbreed in Alaska with the sympatric and closely allied A. disjuncta, because a few males found in some localities there could not be assigned to one or the other species. However, we cannot be sure that A. socculata is really restricted to Alaska in North America because much of the boreal component of the Nearctic Region has not been sunciently sampled for Anthomyzidae. Biology. Old World habitats are varied but a common thread appears to be graminoids (both grasses and sedges) in open areas, sometimes along water bodies but also under birch canopy (see ROHÁĆEK & BARBER 2013 for details). Unfortunately no data on habitat and/or plant association are available for the Nearctic (Alaska) specimens, except for one specimen swept in tundra and one from vegetation on the edge of a lake. The habitat is nonetheless assumed to be similar to that of A. disjuncta (see above), at least in Alaska, where the two species co-occur at a few sites. Adults were recorded here in 15 June to 4 August. Distribution. A Boreo-alpine circumpolar species widespread in the northern belt of the Palaearctic Region ranging from Iceland to Kamchatka but also occurring in montane ranges of more southern latitudes. Its Palaearctic distribution is summarized by ROHÁĆEK (2006a, 2009a) as follows: Austria, Czech Republic (Bohemia), Estonia, Finland, Great Britain (Scotland), Iceland, Kazakhstan, Kirghizia, Lithuania, Mongolia, North Korea, Norway, Poland, Russia (Central and North European Territory, W. and E. Siberia, Far East), Slovakia, Sweden, Switzerland, Ukraine. It was recorded for the nrst time from the Nearctic Region from Alaska (United States of America) by ROHÁĆEK & BARBER (2013) (see Table 2, Fig. 600). Arganthomyza socculata / disjuncta Male specimens not distinctly referable to either of the two species. UNITED STATES OF AMERICA: ALASKA: 10 ♂♂ (CNCI, USNM) (details in ROHÁĆEK & BARBER 2013). : Published as part of Roháćek, Jindřich & Barber, Kevin N., 2016, Nearctic Anthomyzidae: a monograph of Anthomyza and allied genera (Diptera), pp. 1-412 in Acta Entomologica Musei Nationalis Pragae (suppl.) (suppl.) 56 on pages 96-100, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.4272829 : {"references": ["ZETTERSTEDT J. W. 1847: Diptera Scandinaviae. Disposita et descripta. Vol. 6. Ofncina Lundbergiana, Lundae [= Lund], 2163 - 2580 pp.", "ANDERSSON H. 1976: Revision of the Anthomyza species of Northwest Europe (Diptera: Anthomyzidae) I. The gracilis group. Entomologica Scandinavica 7: 41 - 52.", "ROHACEK J. 1984 a: New species and records of Palaearctic species of the Anthomyza gracilis-group (Diptera, Anthomyzidae). Acta Entomologica Bohemoslovaca 81: 384 - 394.", "ROHACEK J. 1987 a: Two new species of the Anthomyza gracilis-group (Diptera, Anthomyzidae) from Nepal. Acta Entomologica Bohemoslovaca 84: 48 - 59.", "ROHACEK J. 1998 a: Taxonomic limits, phylogeny and higher classincation of Anthomyzidae (Diptera), with special regard to fossil record. European Journal of Entomology 95: 141 - 177.", "ROHACEK J. 2006 a: A monograph of Palaearctic Anthomyzidae (Diptera) Part 1. Casopis Slezskeho Zemskeho Muzea, Opava (A) 55 (supplement 1): 1 - 328.", "ROHACEK J. 2009 a: A monograph of Palaearctic Anthomyzidae (Diptera) Part 2. Casopis Slezskeho Zemskeho Muzea, Opava (A) 58 (supplement 1): 1 - 180.", "ROHACEK J. & BARBER K. N. 2013: A worldwide review of the genus Arganthomyza Rohacek, with revision of the Nearctic species (Diptera: Anthomyzidae). Zootaxa 3604 (1): 1 - 72.", "LOEW H. 1873: Beschreibungen europaischer Dipteren. Vol. 3. Verlag von H. W. Schmidt, Halle, 320 pp.", "CZERNY L. 1902: Bemerkungen zu den Arten der Gattungen Anthomyza Fll. und Ischnomyia Lw. Wiener Entomologische Zeitung 21: 249 - 256.", "CZERNY L. 1928: 54 b. Anthomyzidae. In: LINDNER E. (ed.): Die Fliegen der palaearktischen Region. Vol. 6, pt. 1. E. Schweizerbartsche Verlagsbuchhandlung, Stuttgart, 8 pp.", "COLLIN J. E. 1944: The British species of Anthomyzidae (Diptera). Entomologist's Monthly Magazine 80: 265 - 272.", "TROJAN P. 1962: Zeszyt 54 - 58 Odiniidae, Clusiidae, Anthomyzidae, Opomyzidae, Tethinidae. In: Klucze do oznaczania owadow Polski. Czcsc XXVIII Muchowki - Diptera. [Keys to the identifcation of insects of Poland. Part XXVIII Flies - Diptera]. PaEstwowe Wydawnictwo Naukove, Warszawa, 68 pp (in Polish).", "ANDERSSON H. 1984 b: Family Anthomyzidae. Pp. 50 - 53. In: SOOS A. & PAPP L. (eds): Catalogue of Palaearctic Diptera. Vol. 10. Akademiai Kiado, Budapest, 402 pp."]}
format Text
author Roháćek, Jindřich
Barber, Kevin N.
author_facet Roháćek, Jindřich
Barber, Kevin N.
author_sort Roháćek, Jindřich
title Arganthomyza socculata
title_short Arganthomyza socculata
title_full Arganthomyza socculata
title_fullStr Arganthomyza socculata
title_full_unstemmed Arganthomyza socculata
title_sort arganthomyza socculata
publisher Zenodo
publishDate 2016
url https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4339708
https://zenodo.org/record/4339708
long_lat ENVELOPE(9.914,9.914,63.019,63.019)
ENVELOPE(116.250,116.250,67.600,67.600)
ENVELOPE(162.919,162.919,56.441,56.441)
geographic Norway
Stripe
Maak
Kultuk
geographic_facet Norway
Stripe
Maak
Kultuk
genre Iceland
Kamchatka
Tundra
Alaska
Siberia
genre_facet Iceland
Kamchatka
Tundra
Alaska
Siberia
op_relation http://publication.plazi.org/id/FFC2FFD1FFE7FF85FFC06A3AFFC2FFC3
http://treatment.plazi.org/id/038387E6FFAEFF96C7F0FD05FC5F199A
http://zoobank.org/urn:lsid:zoobank.org:pub:E95E58A5-E0F1-4237-9D7C-4A81BB3120DD
https://zenodo.org/communities/biosyslit
https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4272829
http://publication.plazi.org/id/FFC2FFD1FFE7FF85FFC06A3AFFC2FFC3
https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4272913
https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4272915
https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4272917
https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4273061
http://treatment.plazi.org/id/038387E6FFAEFF96C7F0FD05FC5F199A
http://zoobank.org/urn:lsid:zoobank.org:pub:E95E58A5-E0F1-4237-9D7C-4A81BB3120DD
https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4339707
https://zenodo.org/communities/biosyslit
op_rights Open Access
Creative Commons Zero v1.0 Universal
https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/legalcode
cc0-1.0
info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
op_rightsnorm CC0
op_doi https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4339708
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4272829
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4272913
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4272915
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4272917
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4273061
https://d
_version_ 1766043964859744256
spelling ftdatacite:10.5281/zenodo.4339708 2023-05-15T16:53:25+02:00 Arganthomyza socculata Roháćek, Jindřich Barber, Kevin N. 2016 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4339708 https://zenodo.org/record/4339708 unknown Zenodo http://publication.plazi.org/id/FFC2FFD1FFE7FF85FFC06A3AFFC2FFC3 http://treatment.plazi.org/id/038387E6FFAEFF96C7F0FD05FC5F199A http://zoobank.org/urn:lsid:zoobank.org:pub:E95E58A5-E0F1-4237-9D7C-4A81BB3120DD https://zenodo.org/communities/biosyslit https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4272829 http://publication.plazi.org/id/FFC2FFD1FFE7FF85FFC06A3AFFC2FFC3 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4272913 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4272915 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4272917 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4273061 http://treatment.plazi.org/id/038387E6FFAEFF96C7F0FD05FC5F199A http://zoobank.org/urn:lsid:zoobank.org:pub:E95E58A5-E0F1-4237-9D7C-4A81BB3120DD https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4339707 https://zenodo.org/communities/biosyslit Open Access Creative Commons Zero v1.0 Universal https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/legalcode cc0-1.0 info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess CC0 Biodiversity Taxonomy Animalia Arthropoda Insecta Diptera Anthomyzidae Arganthomyza Arganthomyza socculata Text Taxonomic treatment article-journal ScholarlyArticle 2016 ftdatacite https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4339708 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4272829 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4272913 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4272915 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4272917 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4273061 https://d 2021-11-05T12:55:41Z Arganthomyza socculata (Zetterstedt, 1847) (Figs 185–202) Geomyza socculata Zetterstedt, 1847: 2534. Anthomyza socculata : ANDERSSON (1976): 50 –51 (redescription, generic combination); SOÓS (1981): 111 (key); NDERSSON (1984b): 53 (catalogue); ROHÁĆEK (1984a): 393 (key), ROHÁĆEK (1987a): 55 –57 (dia gnosis), ROHÁĆEK (1998a): 173 (world checklist); ROHÁĆEK (2006a): 191 –196 (redescription and synonymy). Arganthomyza socculata : ROHÁĆEK (2009a): 63, 74 (key, generic combination); ROHÁĆEK & BARBER (2013): 39 –41 (redescription, relationship). Anthomyza ungulata Loew, 1873: 301; CZERNY (1902): 252; CZERNY (1928): 5; COLLIN (1944): 267 (key); TROJAN (1962):39; STACKELBERG (1970):326 (key); ANDERSSON (1984b): 53 (catalogue); ROHÁĆEK (1984a):392 (synonymy). Type material. Geomyza socculata Zetterstedt: HOLOTYPE: ♂, “ G.socculata ♂. Ostrog.Stenh.”, “ Lectotypus Geomyza socculata Zett., design. 1974 H. Andersson ” [red label], “1969, 925” [green label], “Type No. 2095:1, Zool. Mus. Lund Sweden, Anthomyzidae ”, “ Holotypus ♂ Geomyza socculata Zett., J. Roháček des. 2005” [red label] and “ Anthomyza socculata (Zett., 1847) ♂, J. Roháček det. 2005” (MZLU, genit. prep., examined). This type specimen was incorrectly designated as lectotype by ANDERSSON (1976: 45) but it is a holotype because only this male from Östergötland: Häradshammar, collected by Stenhammar, was listed in the original description. Anthomyza ungulata Loew: LECTOTYPE: ♂ (designated by ROHÁĆEK 1984a: 392): “Kultuk, v. Maak”, “Coll. H. Loew”, “ Anthomyza ungulata Lw ” (Loew’s handwriting), “Type” [orange red label], “Zool. Mus. Berlin ” [yellow label], “ Lectotypus, Anthomyza ungulata Loew ♂, J. Roháček des. 1983” [label with red margin and the word “ Lectotypus ”] and “ Anthomyza socculata (Zett.) ♂, J. Roháček det. 1983”. The specimen is in good condition (ZMHB, genit. prep., examined). PARALECTOTYPES: 2 ♀♀, with the same labels as the lectotype except for Loew’s determination label (ZMHB, examined). Other material examined. Palaearctic specimens, 311 ♂♂ 232 ♀♀ (see ROHÁĆEK 2006a, 2009a).Nearctic specimens, 35 ♂♂ 42 ♀♀ (CASC, CNCI, DEBU, SMOC, USNM) (details in ROHÁĆEK & BARBER 2013). Diagnosis. Male 1.90–2.42 mm, female 1.98–2.94 mm. Brown to blackish brown, distinctly though rather sparsely pale grey microtomentose and relatively shining; face, parafacialia, gena, postgena, mouthparts, haltere entirely and frons, antennae, legs largely contrasting ochreous, yellow or whitish yellow. Frontal triangle reaching up to anterior third of frons. Mid and hind basitarsus without short thickened setae. T1 and T2 almost separate, only laterally fused. Wing hyaline (Figs 185–186). Reference to the genitalia is necessary to differentiate conndently this species from A. disjuncta and A. acuticuspis . Male genitalia (see Figs 187–194 for details). Epandrium (Figs 187, 189) dark brown, distinctly higher than long. Gonostylus (Figs 187, 189, 194) ochreous to yellow, nat, slightly bent medially, of elongately subtriangular shape, with tapered but narrowly rounded apex, largely micropubescent on outer side and setose mostly on inner side; its shape variable: in Nearctic and E. Palaearctic specimens more slender and apically more acute (see Fig. 194) on average than in European specimens but always with anterior margin convex and posterior margin concave (in largest extension view). Hypandrium (Fig. 190) relatively robust, with anterior internal lobes small, ventrally (anterior to pregonite) more distinctly excavated than in A. disjuncta posterior wide parts of hypandrium fused with transandrium. Pregonite (Fig. 190) fused to hypandrium, low, slightly projecting, with 2–3 posterior (1–2 longer on a tubercle-like process) and 3 anterior (all internal) setae. Aedeagal part of folding apparatus with dark granulose tubercles on proximal part (covering larger area on right side than on left) and usual nne striae (Fig. 193). Female postabdomen and genitalia (see Figs 195–202 for details). T7 and S7 completely fused into dark brown ring-shaped tergosternum, Nearctic and E. Palaearctic specimens dorsally often with distinctly paler posterior and sometimes also anterior band (Fig. 195), ventrally usually with dark, transverse anteromedial stripe (Fig. 201) which is sometimes reduced, and with long setae at posterior margin. Anterior margin of original S7 sometimes with a pair of small appendages (cf. Fig. 201). Ventral receptacle (Fig. 202) hyaline, slender, long, strongly curved, gradually tapering towards blunt apex (somewhat thicker and shorter in Nearctic specimens). Spermathecae (1+1) short-pyriform, with dark transversely striated surface and slender base provided with rosette of 5–6 characteristic bell-shaped appendages (see Figs 196, 200) some of which can have doubled apex in Nearctic specimens; duct with cervix developed but weakly sclerotized. Variability. This widespread Holarctic species displays remarkable variability in the postabdominal characters. The Nearctic specimens closely resemble those from eastern Asia (Mongolia, Russia: Far East), and compared to European specimens they seem to be generally smaller. The male gonostylus is narrower and more acute, the female T7+S7 is often anteriorly and/ or posteriorly pale-margined, the female T8 is narrower, the ventral receptacle is thicker, and the spermathecae often have doubled bell-shaped appendages. Discussion. Arganthomyza socculata is very closely allied to A. disjuncta and forms with it a distinctive sister pair distinguished by the apomorphies diagnosing the A. socculata group (see ROHÁĆEK & BARBER 2013, and above). Arganthomyza socculata and A. disjuncta are distinct in the female sex but their males are very similar even in the genitalic structures (for differences see the key and in the description and discussion under A. disjuncta ). The geographical variability discussed above, particularly the differences between European and E. Palaearctic + Nearctic specimens, will need future study to evaluate the differences between the populations in these areas. Future molecular studies may help to elucidate this problem, but for the time being these populations are considered conspecinc. However, we do not rule out the possibility that the Nearctic populations of A. socculata (hitherto known only from Alaska) interbreed in Alaska with the sympatric and closely allied A. disjuncta, because a few males found in some localities there could not be assigned to one or the other species. However, we cannot be sure that A. socculata is really restricted to Alaska in North America because much of the boreal component of the Nearctic Region has not been sunciently sampled for Anthomyzidae. Biology. Old World habitats are varied but a common thread appears to be graminoids (both grasses and sedges) in open areas, sometimes along water bodies but also under birch canopy (see ROHÁĆEK & BARBER 2013 for details). Unfortunately no data on habitat and/or plant association are available for the Nearctic (Alaska) specimens, except for one specimen swept in tundra and one from vegetation on the edge of a lake. The habitat is nonetheless assumed to be similar to that of A. disjuncta (see above), at least in Alaska, where the two species co-occur at a few sites. Adults were recorded here in 15 June to 4 August. Distribution. A Boreo-alpine circumpolar species widespread in the northern belt of the Palaearctic Region ranging from Iceland to Kamchatka but also occurring in montane ranges of more southern latitudes. Its Palaearctic distribution is summarized by ROHÁĆEK (2006a, 2009a) as follows: Austria, Czech Republic (Bohemia), Estonia, Finland, Great Britain (Scotland), Iceland, Kazakhstan, Kirghizia, Lithuania, Mongolia, North Korea, Norway, Poland, Russia (Central and North European Territory, W. and E. Siberia, Far East), Slovakia, Sweden, Switzerland, Ukraine. It was recorded for the nrst time from the Nearctic Region from Alaska (United States of America) by ROHÁĆEK & BARBER (2013) (see Table 2, Fig. 600). Arganthomyza socculata / disjuncta Male specimens not distinctly referable to either of the two species. UNITED STATES OF AMERICA: ALASKA: 10 ♂♂ (CNCI, USNM) (details in ROHÁĆEK & BARBER 2013). : Published as part of Roháćek, Jindřich & Barber, Kevin N., 2016, Nearctic Anthomyzidae: a monograph of Anthomyza and allied genera (Diptera), pp. 1-412 in Acta Entomologica Musei Nationalis Pragae (suppl.) (suppl.) 56 on pages 96-100, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.4272829 : {"references": ["ZETTERSTEDT J. W. 1847: Diptera Scandinaviae. Disposita et descripta. Vol. 6. Ofncina Lundbergiana, Lundae [= Lund], 2163 - 2580 pp.", "ANDERSSON H. 1976: Revision of the Anthomyza species of Northwest Europe (Diptera: Anthomyzidae) I. The gracilis group. Entomologica Scandinavica 7: 41 - 52.", "ROHACEK J. 1984 a: New species and records of Palaearctic species of the Anthomyza gracilis-group (Diptera, Anthomyzidae). Acta Entomologica Bohemoslovaca 81: 384 - 394.", "ROHACEK J. 1987 a: Two new species of the Anthomyza gracilis-group (Diptera, Anthomyzidae) from Nepal. Acta Entomologica Bohemoslovaca 84: 48 - 59.", "ROHACEK J. 1998 a: Taxonomic limits, phylogeny and higher classincation of Anthomyzidae (Diptera), with special regard to fossil record. European Journal of Entomology 95: 141 - 177.", "ROHACEK J. 2006 a: A monograph of Palaearctic Anthomyzidae (Diptera) Part 1. Casopis Slezskeho Zemskeho Muzea, Opava (A) 55 (supplement 1): 1 - 328.", "ROHACEK J. 2009 a: A monograph of Palaearctic Anthomyzidae (Diptera) Part 2. Casopis Slezskeho Zemskeho Muzea, Opava (A) 58 (supplement 1): 1 - 180.", "ROHACEK J. & BARBER K. N. 2013: A worldwide review of the genus Arganthomyza Rohacek, with revision of the Nearctic species (Diptera: Anthomyzidae). Zootaxa 3604 (1): 1 - 72.", "LOEW H. 1873: Beschreibungen europaischer Dipteren. Vol. 3. Verlag von H. W. Schmidt, Halle, 320 pp.", "CZERNY L. 1902: Bemerkungen zu den Arten der Gattungen Anthomyza Fll. und Ischnomyia Lw. Wiener Entomologische Zeitung 21: 249 - 256.", "CZERNY L. 1928: 54 b. Anthomyzidae. In: LINDNER E. (ed.): Die Fliegen der palaearktischen Region. Vol. 6, pt. 1. E. Schweizerbartsche Verlagsbuchhandlung, Stuttgart, 8 pp.", "COLLIN J. E. 1944: The British species of Anthomyzidae (Diptera). Entomologist's Monthly Magazine 80: 265 - 272.", "TROJAN P. 1962: Zeszyt 54 - 58 Odiniidae, Clusiidae, Anthomyzidae, Opomyzidae, Tethinidae. In: Klucze do oznaczania owadow Polski. Czcsc XXVIII Muchowki - Diptera. [Keys to the identifcation of insects of Poland. Part XXVIII Flies - Diptera]. PaEstwowe Wydawnictwo Naukove, Warszawa, 68 pp (in Polish).", "ANDERSSON H. 1984 b: Family Anthomyzidae. Pp. 50 - 53. In: SOOS A. & PAPP L. (eds): Catalogue of Palaearctic Diptera. Vol. 10. Akademiai Kiado, Budapest, 402 pp."]} Text Iceland Kamchatka Tundra Alaska Siberia DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology) Norway Stripe ENVELOPE(9.914,9.914,63.019,63.019) Maak ENVELOPE(116.250,116.250,67.600,67.600) Kultuk ENVELOPE(162.919,162.919,56.441,56.441)