J 2024

Anthomyza gilviventris in Palaearctic Region: integrative taxonomy, variability and habitat associations of North European population (Diptera: Anthomyzidae)

ROHACEK, Jindrich; Sven HELLQVIST and Andrea ŠPALEK TÓTHOVÁ

Basic information

Original name

Anthomyza gilviventris in Palaearctic Region: integrative taxonomy, variability and habitat associations of North European population (Diptera: Anthomyzidae)

Authors

ROHACEK, Jindrich (guarantor); Sven HELLQVIST and Andrea ŠPALEK TÓTHOVÁ (703 Slovakia, belonging to the institution)

Edition

Acta entomologica musei nationalis pragae, PRAHA, NARODNI MUZEUM - PRIRODOVEDECKE MUZEUM, 2024, 0374-1036

Other information

Language

English

Type of outcome

Article in a journal

Field of Study

10616 Entomology

Country of publisher

Czech Republic

Confidentiality degree

is not subject to a state or trade secret

References:

Impact factor

Impact factor: 0.900 in 2023

RIV identification code

RIV/00216224:14310/24:00137558

Organization unit

Faculty of Science

UT WoS

001351957200002

EID Scopus

2-s2.0-85208740789

Keywords in English

Diptera; Anthomyzidae; Anthomyza tschirnhausi group; biology; distribution; DNA sequences; morphology of terminalia; taxonomy; Sweden; Palaearctic Region

Tags

Tags

International impact, Reviewed
Changed: 4/4/2025 13:44, Mgr. Marie Novosadová Šípková, DiS.

Abstract

V originále

Anthomyza gilviventris Roh & aacute;& ccaron;ek & Barber, 2016, hitherto known only from the Nearctic Region, is recorded from the Palaearctic Region (NE Sweden) for the fi rst time. Specimens from the Swedish population have been compared with those of A. gilviventris from Canada and the USA and those of A. tschirnhausi Roh & aacute;& ccaron;ek, 2009 from the Kamchatka Peninsula (Far East of Russia). Both morphological and molecular analyses (BI and RAxML, based on seven DNA markers: 12S, 16S, 28S, COI, COII, CytB, ITS2) confi rmed that the Swedish specimens belong to A. gilviventris. Because no specimen of A. tschirnhausi has been available for molecular study, the most diagnostic morphological characters used for separation of this species from A. gilviventris have been re-evaluated with respect to Swedish specimens, and their variability discussed. However, these diff erences, although stable, are relatively small and, consequently, the possibility that they fall within the limits of a single variable species has not been entirely eliminated. New biological information (habitat and host-plant associations) on the Swedish population of A. gilviventris is presented.