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A review of morphological characters for the identification of three common European species of Sarcophaga s. str. (Diptera: Sarcophagidae), with an emphasis on female terminalia

Schönberger, Daniel ; Giordani, Giorgia ; Vanin, Stefano and Whitmore, Daniel (2022) In Zootaxa 5205(5). p.463-480
Abstract

The subgenus Sarcophaga Meigen, 1824 (s. str.) currently comprises over 30 species distributed in the West Palearctic Region, the identification of which is normally based on characters of the male terminalia. Females of the three closely-related species Sarcophaga (Sarcophaga) carnaria (Linnaeus, 1758), S. (S.) subvicina Rohdendorf, 1937 and S. (S.) variegata (Scopoli, 1763), which are especially widespread and abundant in NW Europe, are considered morphologically indistinguishable by most authors. However, a few authors have proposed keys to separate females of these three species based on external and internal characters of the terminalia. Following a preliminary molecular identification using DNA barcode sequences (COI, cytochrome c... (More)

The subgenus Sarcophaga Meigen, 1824 (s. str.) currently comprises over 30 species distributed in the West Palearctic Region, the identification of which is normally based on characters of the male terminalia. Females of the three closely-related species Sarcophaga (Sarcophaga) carnaria (Linnaeus, 1758), S. (S.) subvicina Rohdendorf, 1937 and S. (S.) variegata (Scopoli, 1763), which are especially widespread and abundant in NW Europe, are considered morphologically indistinguishable by most authors. However, a few authors have proposed keys to separate females of these three species based on external and internal characters of the terminalia. Following a preliminary molecular identification using DNA barcode sequences (COI, cytochrome c oxidase subunit I), we herein revise the morphological characters used to differentiate female S. carnaria, S. subvicina and S. variegata in existing identification keys as well as search for additional diagnostic characters. Our results suggest that only one previously-proposed female character, namely the length to width ratio of abdominal sternite 7, can be used to separate S. subvicina from the other two species (Mann-Whitney U test: p < 0.0001), at least in a majority of cases. Other characters, such as the degree of sclerotisation and setation of tergite 8, show a high degree of overlap that does not allow to reliably separate females of these three species. Nevertheless, we propose a combination of characters that should allow the separation of female S. carnaria from female S. variegata in most cases. An additional analysis of males of the same species showed that the distribution of pruinosity and setation on syntergosternite 7+8, a character mentioned in a previously-published key, is also not reliable for identification.

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author
; ; and
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
COI, Cytochrome c oxidase subunit I, DNA barcoding, flesh flies, morphology, Sarcophaga carnaria, Sarcophaga lehmanni, Sarcophaga subvicina, Sarcophaga variegata
in
Zootaxa
volume
5205
issue
5
pages
18 pages
publisher
Magnolia Press
external identifiers
  • scopus:85142028012
  • pmid:37045422
ISSN
1175-5326
DOI
10.11646/zootaxa.5205.5.4
language
English
LU publication?
no
id
c8de3b8f-d12a-45f7-a85e-2fbd62290485
date added to LUP
2022-12-29 14:51:00
date last changed
2025-06-14 08:53:41
@article{c8de3b8f-d12a-45f7-a85e-2fbd62290485,
  abstract     = {{<p>The subgenus Sarcophaga Meigen, 1824 (s. str.) currently comprises over 30 species distributed in the West Palearctic Region, the identification of which is normally based on characters of the male terminalia. Females of the three closely-related species Sarcophaga (Sarcophaga) carnaria (Linnaeus, 1758), S. (S.) subvicina Rohdendorf, 1937 and S. (S.) variegata (Scopoli, 1763), which are especially widespread and abundant in NW Europe, are considered morphologically indistinguishable by most authors. However, a few authors have proposed keys to separate females of these three species based on external and internal characters of the terminalia. Following a preliminary molecular identification using DNA barcode sequences (COI, cytochrome c oxidase subunit I), we herein revise the morphological characters used to differentiate female S. carnaria, S. subvicina and S. variegata in existing identification keys as well as search for additional diagnostic characters. Our results suggest that only one previously-proposed female character, namely the length to width ratio of abdominal sternite 7, can be used to separate S. subvicina from the other two species (Mann-Whitney U test: p &lt; 0.0001), at least in a majority of cases. Other characters, such as the degree of sclerotisation and setation of tergite 8, show a high degree of overlap that does not allow to reliably separate females of these three species. Nevertheless, we propose a combination of characters that should allow the separation of female S. carnaria from female S. variegata in most cases. An additional analysis of males of the same species showed that the distribution of pruinosity and setation on syntergosternite 7+8, a character mentioned in a previously-published key, is also not reliable for identification.</p>}},
  author       = {{Schönberger, Daniel and Giordani, Giorgia and Vanin, Stefano and Whitmore, Daniel}},
  issn         = {{1175-5326}},
  keywords     = {{COI; Cytochrome c oxidase subunit I; DNA barcoding; flesh flies; morphology; Sarcophaga carnaria; Sarcophaga lehmanni; Sarcophaga subvicina; Sarcophaga variegata}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  month        = {{11}},
  number       = {{5}},
  pages        = {{463--480}},
  publisher    = {{Magnolia Press}},
  series       = {{Zootaxa}},
  title        = {{A review of morphological characters for the identification of three common European species of Sarcophaga s. str. (Diptera: Sarcophagidae), with an emphasis on female terminalia}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.5205.5.4}},
  doi          = {{10.11646/zootaxa.5205.5.4}},
  volume       = {{5205}},
  year         = {{2022}},
}