The first Canadian record of the zoophilic fruit fly P. variegata JESO Volume 150, 2019 FIRST CANADIAN RECORD OF THE ZOOPHILIC FRUIT FLY PHORTICA VARIEGATA (FALLÉN) (DIPTERA: DROSOPHILIDAE) M. MILLER1*, S. A. HILL2, B. J. SINCLAIR3 University of Guelph, 50 Stone Rd E, Guelph, ON, Canada, N1G 2W1 email,
[email protected] Scientific Note J. ent. Soc. Ont. 150: 31–36 The large cosmopolitan family Drosophilidae (Diptera) (vinegar flies) contains over 4,000 species and is very well-known for its extensive use in biological research. The family is divided into two subfamilies, Drosophilinae (43 genera) and Steganinae (28 genera), in addition to two genera incertae sedis within Drosophilidae (Brake and Bächli 2008). Within the subfamily Steganinae, nine genera have been recorded in the Nearctic Region, five of which are found in Canada (Brake and Bächli 2008). Feeding habits of the Steganinae are highly diverse, with the ecology of many genera much less known than those in Drosophilinae, which typically feed on plant materials or fungi (Baechli et al. 2004). Phortica Schiner in the subfamily Steganinae is composed of over 97 species found largely in the Oriental and Palearctic regions (Brake and Bächli 2008; Cheng et al. 2008). Prior to 2014, four species of Phortica had been reported in the Nearctic Region: P. albavictoria (Patterson & Mainland) from Mexico, P. huachucae (Wheeler) from Arizona, P. picta (Coquillett) from Mexico to Nevada, and P. polychaeta (Wheeler) from northern Mexico and the southwestern United States. All four species are native to the Nearctic Region (Brake and Bächli 2008; D. Grimaldi, American Museum of Natural History, pers.