Eupeodes perplexus explained

Eupeodes perplexus, the bare-winged aphideater, is a species of hoverfly native to North America. Adults feed on nectar; larvae feed on aphids and scale insects.[1] [2] [3]

Description

thumb|Close-up of abdomen

Head

The frons of both sexes not unusually puffed out. The third segment of antennae (flagellum) is exceptionally large. The pile of the face dominantly is pale, and the is head hemispherical; the face is slightly concave below antennae, tuberculate, whitish-yellow, with black cheeks and dark median vitta over tubercle; antennae short, third joint oval; dark crescent-shaped spot over base of each antenna; eyes bare.[2]

Thorax

The metasternum and pleura are covered with white pile. The scutellum is raised, exposing the metanotum. The anterior anepisternum, meron, and metepisternum are bare. For males the pile of scutellum yellow or black or mixed, but in females the pile is mostly black.[2]

Abdomen

The abdominal spots are yellow, finger-like wide, curved and interrupted in the middle. The first segment is very narrow and all black. The spots on the second segment do not reach the sides. In the females, abdominal bands are broader. The fifth segment is yellow, sometimes with a small median black spot. The spots on segments three and four are very slightly lunate with the posterior margins of fourth and fifth segments narrowly yellow.[2]

Wings

The wings are hyaline. The third longitudinal vein (R4+5) is only slightly curved. The marginal cell (r1) is open with the anterior cross-vein (R-M) located near the base of discal cell. The stigma is thin, long and brown.[2]

Legs

The legs are mainly pale reddish. The base of femora are black, with the hind femora black on the basal half or more.[2]

Distribution

The species has a Nearctic distribution across North America and Canada.

Similar species

The similar Melangyna lasiophthalma can be distinguished from E.perplexus by the abdominal spots reaching the lateral margin of the abdomen, which they do not in E. perplexum. In Scaeva pyrastri, the third wing vein vein (R4+5) has a long, moderately deep curvature, and the spots on the abdomen are more curved and slightly constricted in the middle.[3] [4]

Notes and References

  1. Heiss . Elizabeth Madeleine . 1938 . A classification of the larvae and puparia of the Syrphidae of Illinois exclusive of aquatic forms . Series: Illinois biological monographs . 16 . 1-142 .
  2. Book: Vockeroth . J.R. . 1992 . The Flower Flies of the Subfamily Syrphinae of Canada, Alaska, and Greenland (Diptera: Syrphidae). Part 18. The Insects and Arachnids of Canada . 1–456 . Canadian Government Pub Centre . Ottawa, Ontario . 0-660-13830-1.
  3. Fluke . C. L . 1952 . The Metasyrphus Species of North America . The American Museum of Natural History . 1590 . 1-27 .
  4. Book: Vockeroth . J.R. . 1992 . The Flower Flies of the Subfamily Syrphinae of Canada, Alaska, and Greenland (Diptera: Syrphidae). Part 18. The Insects and Arachnids of Canada . 1–456 . Canadian Government Pub Centre . Ottawa, Ontario . 0-660-13830-1.