New species of Prepseudatrichia Kelsey from Thailand (Diptera, Scenopinidae)

Abstract A new species of Prepseudatrichia Kelsey, 1969 (Prepseudatrichia tiger sp. n.) is described from Thailand, the first record of the genus from the Oriental region. A key to world species of Prepseudatrichia is given.


Introduction
Window flies (Diptera: Scenopinidae) are a small family (ca. 420 species in 24 extant genera) of cosmopolitan asiloid flies with an adult body size rarely exceeding 5.0 mm. Scenopinids are distributed throughout all major biogeographical regions, but with significant continental endemism at the genus level, and most genera confined to one or two biogeographical regions (Kelsey, 1973).
The genus Prepseudatrichia Kelsey, 1969 contains four described species from Africa (P. mateui Kelsey, 1969, P. stenogaster (Séguy, 1931) and P. violacea Kelsey, 1969) and central Asia (Turkmenistan) (P. kelseyi Krivosheina, 1980). These rare flies are notable for their elongate, glossy black body habitus, similar to members of the genera Pseudatricha Osten Sacken, 1877 and Neopseudatrichia Kelsey, 1969. The elongate body shape and lack of pile in adults of these genera is presumed to be a morphological adaptation for escaping the narrow confines of wood boring beetle galleries, where species in these genera appear as specialist predators of wood boring beetle larvae. The larval and pupal stages of P. kelseyi were described by Krivosheina (1980). Prepseudatrichia is differentiated from all other window fly genera based on the wing vein M 1 being fused to the wing margin, separate from R 5 , an elongate glossy black body, the male genitalia with a well developed hypandrium, an aedeagus extending anteriorly into the body cavity and lateral aedeagal lobes well developed, and the female lacking acanthophorite spines. As mentioned by Kelsey (1969), while Prepseudatrichia has a body shape similar to Pseudatrichia and Neopseudatrichia, the male genitalic morphology and wing venation more closely resemble members of Scenopinus Latreille, 1802. This may indicate a closer relationship to Scenopinus and the elongate, glabrous adult morphology representing convergence associated with larval feeding in wood boring beetle galleries. This question remains to be tested in a quantitative phylogenetic context.
A distinctive new species of Prepseudatrichia (P. tiger sp. n.) is described herein from Thailand based on a single male specimen. This is a new geographical record for this genus, previously known only from the Afrotropical and Palaearctic regions. A key to species of Prepseudatrichia is presented.

Materials and methods
Genitalia were macerated in 10% KOH at room temperature for one day to remove soft tissue, then rinsed in distilled water and dilute acetic acid, and dissected in 80% ethanol. Preparations were then placed into glycerine, with images made with the aid of a digital camera mounted on a stereomicroscope. Genitalia preparations were placed in glycerine in a genitalia vial mounted on the pin beneath the specimen. Terminology follows McAlpine (1981) and modified following Winterton (2005) and Winterton and Woodley (2009). In contrast to the scenopinid subfamilies Proratinae and Caenotinae, the male terminalia of Scenopininae are rotated 180°. To avoid confusion with terminology and comparative homology, structures are described and labeled as they are in related flies with terminalia not rotated; therefore the ventral apodeme of the aedeagus described herein is physically located dorsally. Type material is deposited in the Queen Sirikit Botanic Garden -Entomology collection, Chiang Mai, Thailand (QSBG). Specimen images were taken using a digital camera with a series of images montaged using Helicon Focus (©HeliconSoft). Diagnosis. Male abdomen with white bands on segments 3-4; antenna yellowbrown; thorax glossy black with metallic iridescence; femora brown; hypandrial lobes with triangular processes extending posteriorly to apex on epandrial lobes; hypoproct narrow, extending beyond epandrial lobes.
Etymology. The species epithet is derived from the acronym for the Thailand Inventory Group for Entomological Research (TIGER) project, from which this species was discovered.  Comments. This species is known only from a single male specimen collected in Thailand. This represents a considerable range extension for the genus, into the Oriental Region, as Prepseudatrichia was previously only known from few species in the Palaearctic and Afrotropical regions. This distinctive species is differentiated from other species in the genus by the shape of the male genitalia, the white bands on the abdomen and dark femora color.