25 results on '"Hover flies"'
Search Results
2. A new species of the genus Milesia Latreille (Diptera: Syrphidae) from Crete
- Author
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Sander Bot, Ximo Mengual, Jeroen van Steenis, and Jeffrey H. Skevington
- Subjects
hover flies ,flower flies ,endemic ,new species ,DNA barcoding ,Zoology ,QL1-991 ,Botany ,QK1-989 - Abstract
Milesia cretica Bot & van Steenis sp. nov. is described from the Island of Crete, Greece. An identification key to all the European species of Milesia Latreille, 1804 is provided, together with DNA barcodes to distinguish the new species.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Syrphidae of Southern Illinois: Diversity, floral associations, and preliminary assessment of their efficacy as pollinators
- Author
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Jacob Chisausky, Nathan Soley, Leila Kassim, Casey Bryan, Gil Felipe Miranda, Karla Gage, and Sedonia Sipes
- Subjects
Syrphidae ,hover flies ,flower flies ,syrphid rich ,Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 - Abstract
Syrphid flies (Diptera: Syrphidae) are a cosmopolitan group of flower-visiting insects, though their diversity and importance as pollinators is understudied and often unappreciated. Data on 1,477 Syrphid occurrences and floral associations from three years of pollinator collection (2017-2019) in the Southern Illinois region of Illinois, United States, are here compiled and analyzed. We collected 69 species in 36 genera off of the flowers of 157 plant species. While a richness of 69 species is greater than most other families of flower-visiting insects in our region, a species accumulation curve and regional species pool estimators suggest that at least 33 species are yet uncollected. In order to further the understanding of Syrphidae as pollinators in the Southern Illinois region, we produced a NMDS ordination of floral associations for the most common syrphid species. The NMDS did not sort syrphid species into discrete ecological guilds, and syrphid floral associations generally fit those predicted by traditional pollination syndromes. We also conducted a preliminary analysis of the pollen-carrying capacity of different syrphid taxa, which found several Eristalis species to carry pollen loads comparable to the European Honey Bee, Apis mellifera, and showed significant differences in the pollen-carrying capacity of various syrphid species. Notably, the extremely common genus Toxomerus and other small Syrphinae species carried very little pollen, while large and pilose Eristalinae species carried large pollen loads.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. First data about the preimaginal morphology of Austroscaeva occidentalis (Shannon, 1927) and re‐description of larvae and pupae of Dioprosopa clavata (Fabricius, 1794) (Diptera: Syrphidae).
- Author
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Lillo, Inés, Pérez‐Bañón, Celeste, Arcaya, Evelin, Mengual, Ximo, and Rojo, Santos
- Subjects
- *
PUPAE , *MORPHOLOGY , *DIPTERA , *LARVAE , *SCANNING electron microscopes , *SYRPHIDAE , *BIOLOGICAL rhythms - Abstract
Preimaginal morphology of Austroscaeva occidentalis (Shannon, 1927) is described for the first time, and the morphology of larvae and pupae of Dioprosopa clavata (Fabricius, 1794) is updated based on material obtained from captive rearing of wild females from Argentina and Venezuela, respectively. We describe the morphology of the third instar larva, head skeleton and puparium using optical microscopy, cryo‐scanning and scanning electron microscope. The immature stages of both New World flower fly species are analysed and compared with the known preimaginal morphology of other taxa that belong to the evolutionary lineage of Eupeodes‐Scaeva, where Austroscaeva Láska, Mazánek & Mengual, 2018, and Dioprosopa Hull, 1949, form a Neotropical radiation within, together with the genus Notosyrphus Vockeroth, 1969. Larvae of all members of this lineage have abdominal segments 5 and 6 with the tips of the locomotory prominences facing posteriorly, and the anal segment with a characteristic U‐shaped grasping organ. Two other larval synapomorphies of this group of genera are the presence of metathoracic setae accompanying ventral sensilla, and the abdominal segments 1–7 with an extra lobe on each locomotory prominence. These two last characters cannot be assessed for Macrosyrphus Matsumura, 1917, and Lapposyrphus Dušek & Láska, 1967, based on published information on larval descriptions. Despite a similar colouration pattern of the fully grown larvae, larval morphology of A. occidentalis and D. clavata are quite distinct. The preimaginal morphology of A. occidentalis has a mixture of morphological characters from the taxa Scaeva Fabricius, 1805, Semiscaeva Kuznetzov, 1985, and Dioprosopa. The larvae of D. clavata show several unique diagnostic features, such as the presence of a slightly serrate outline due to the great development of the segmental spines and a pinnate ornamentation of the setae of its dorsal and dorsolateral sensilla. Regarding their biological cycle, the length of the preadult stages of A. occidentalis is almost 5 days longer than the length observed for D. clavata. In addition, new DNA barcodes are provided for A. occidentalis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. New species records of flower flies (Diptera, Syrphidae) for Iran.
- Author
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XIMO MENGUAL, KAZERANI, FARZANEH, and ZAMANI, SEYEDEH MASOUMEH
- Subjects
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DIPTERA , *SYRPHIDAE , *SPECIES , *GENETIC barcoding - Abstract
New records of flower flies (Diptera, Syrphidae) from Iran are reported. The species Criorhina talyshensis (Stackelberg) is reported for the first time from Iran, and a female of Caliprobola aurea Sack from Mazandaran Province represents the second record of the species from this country. DNA barcodes are provided for both species, together with images and an identification key to Caliprobola species. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
6. Life on an island: the phylogenetic placement of Loveridgeana and Afrotropical Sphaerophoria (Diptera: Syrphidae) inferred from molecular characters.
- Author
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Mengual, Ximo, Ståhls, Gunilla, and Skevington, Jeffrey H.
- Subjects
- *
CYTOCHROME oxidase , *SYRPHIDAE , *DIPTERA , *RIBOSOMAL RNA - Abstract
Phylogenetic relationships of the Sphaerophoria lineage (Sphaerophoria Le Peletier & Audinet-Serville and related genera) were inferred based on molecular characters, with the specific aim to infer the phylogenetic placement of the Afrotropical Sphaerophoria species and Loveridgeana beattiei van Doesburg & van Doesburg. Three molecular markers were used, i.e., the mitochondrial protein-coding gene cytochrome c oxidase subunit I (COI) and the nuclear 28S and 18S ribosomal RNA genes. The Sphaerophoria lineage genera Exallandra Vockeroth and Loveridgeana were resolved within the genus Sphaerophoria, and the Indomalayan Eosphaerophoria Frey was placed sister to Citrogramma Vockeroth, both related to a large species radiation from the New World. Fazia Shannon and Allograpta Osten Sacken were recovered as non-monophyletic. Our results recovered two different Fazia clades with dissimilar natural history resulted from our analyses, and Allograpta species were resolved into two clades, one with Nearctic and Neotropical species and a second clade with species from Oceanian, Indomalayan and Afrotropical Regions. Exallandra is considered a subgenus of Sphaerophoria, S. (Exallandra) stat. rev., and Sphaerophoria cinctifacies (Speiser) n. comb. a member of this subgenus together with S. loewii Zetterstedt. A new Sphaerophoria subgenus is designated S. (Loveridgeana) stat. rev. to include S. beattiein. comb. and the South African species, i.e., S. quadrituberculata Bezzi, S. retrocurva Hull, and S. aff. retrocurva. Based on their phylogenetic distinctiveness, functional traits, and ecological relevance we do recommend further ecological study and protection efforts for this Afrotropical group of pollinators. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. The genus Afrosyrphus Curran (Diptera, Syrphidae), with a description of a new species
- Author
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Ximo Mengual, Axel Ssymank, Jeffrey H. Skevington, Menno Reemer, and Gunilla Ståhls
- Subjects
flower flies ,hover flies ,DNA barcoding ,identification key ,Afrotropical Region ,Zoology ,QL1-991 ,Botany ,QK1-989 - Abstract
The flower fly genus Afrosyrphus Curran, 1927 (Diptera, Syrphidae) is revised and a new species, Afrosyrphus schmuttereri sp. nov., from Kenya and Uganda is described. Diagnoses, illustrations, DNA barcodes and known distributional data are provided for the two species of this genus, as well as an identification key. A critical review of the published literature is also provided.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Syrphidae of Southern Illinois: Diversity, floral associations, and preliminary assessment of their efficacy as pollinators.
- Author
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Chisausky, Jacob L., Soley, Nathan M., Kassim, Leila, Bryan, Casey J., Miranda, Gil Felipe Gonçalves, Gage, Karla L., and Sipes, Sedonia D.
- Subjects
SYRPHIDAE ,DIPTERA ,ERISTALIS ,HONEYBEES ,POLLINATORS - Abstract
Syrphid flies (Diptera: Syrphidae) are a cosmopolitan group of flower-visiting insects, though their diversity and importance as pollinators is understudied and often unappreciated. Data on 1,477 Syrphid occurrences and floral associations from three years of pollinator collection (2017-2019) in the Southern Illinois region of Illinois, United States, are here compiled and analyzed. We collected 69 species in 36 genera off of the flowers of 157 plant species. While a richness of 69 species is greater than most other families of flower-visiting insects in our region, a species accumulation curve and regional species pool estimators suggest that at least 33 species are yet uncollected. In order to further the understanding of Syrphidae as pollinators in the Southern Illinois region, we produced a NMDS ordination of floral associations for the most common syrphid species. The NMDS did not sort syrphid species into discrete ecological guilds, and syrphid floral associations generally fit those predicted by traditional pollination syndromes. We also conducted a preliminary analysis of the pollen-carrying capacity of different syrphid taxa, which found several Eristalis species to carry pollen loads comparable to the European Honey Bee, Apis mellifera, and showed significant differences in the pollen-carrying capacity of various syrphid species. Notably, the extremely common genus Toxomerus and other small Syrphinae species carried very little pollen, while large and pilose Eristalinae species carried large pollen loads. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Description of six new large species of Argentinomyia Lynch-Arribálzaga, 1891 and redescription of Talahua fervida (Fluke, 1945) (Diptera, Syrphidae, Syrphinae).
- Author
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Montoya, Augusto L. and Wolff, Marta
- Subjects
- *
SYRPHIDAE , *DIPTERA , *MALE reproductive organs , *SPECIES , *INSECT anatomy , *PLANT morphology , *HEMIPTERA - Abstract
The morphological similarities between five new large Argentinomyia species and Talahua fervida Fluke are characterized and presented. Six new species of Argentinomyia (10-12 mm long) are described: Argentinomyia andina Montoya & Wolff, sp. nov. (Colombia), Argentinomyia choachi Montoya, sp. nov. (Colombia), Argentinomyia quimbaya Montoya & Wolff, sp. nov. (Colombia), Argentinomyia huitepecensis Montoya, sp. nov. (México), Argentinomyia puntarena Montoya, sp. nov. (Costa Rica), and Argentinomyia talamanca Thompson, sp. nov. (Costa Rica). The genus Talahua Fluke is re-diagnosed and, Talahua fervida redescribed. A taxonomic key and a comparison of diagnostic characters are presented. Photographs of head, abdominal and wing maculae patterns, as well as illustrations of male genitalia are provided for species identification. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Checklist of hover flies (Diptera, Syrphidae) of the Republic of Georgia.
- Author
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Mengual, Ximo, Bot, Sander, Chkhartishvili, Tinatin, Reimann, André, Thormann, Jana, and von der Mark, Laura
- Subjects
- *
DIPTERA , *SYRPHIDAE , *SOUND recordings , *BAR codes , *SPECIES - Abstract
A checklist of the Syrphidae species of the Republic of Georgia is presented. New hover fly (Diptera: Syrphidae) records from Georgia are provided as a result of field work conducted in 2018. At the same time, published syrphid records for the country are here reviewed and updated. A total of 357 species of hoverflies are now documented from Georgia, 40 of which are reported for the first time. Moreover, DNA barcodes were sequenced for 238 specimens, representing 74 species from this country. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. A world review of reported myiases caused by flower flies (Diptera: Syrphidae), including the first case of human myiasis from Palpada scutellaris (Fabricius, 1805).
- Author
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Pérez-Bañón, Celeste, Rojas, Cecilia, Vargas, Mario, Mengual, Ximo, and Rojo, Santos
- Subjects
- *
SYRPHIDAE , *MYIASIS , *DIPTERA , *MICROSCOPY , *FLIES , *INSECT larvae - Abstract
Rat-tailed larvae of the syrphid species Palpada scutellaris (Fabricius, 1805) are documented causing an enteric human myiasis in Costa Rica. This is the first time that the genus Palpada is recorded as a human myiasis agent. We report a 68-year-old woman with intestinal pain and bloody diarrhea with several live Palpada larvae present in the stool. Using molecular techniques (DNA barcodes) and both electronic and optical microscopy to study the external morphology, the preimaginal stages of the fly were unambiguously identified. An identification key to all syrphid genera actually known as agents of human and animal myiases is provided for larvae, puparia, and adults. Moreover, a critical world review of more than 100 references of Syrphidae as myiasis agents is also given, with emphasis on the species with rat-tailed larvae. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. A new species of Eumerus (Diptera, Syrphidae) from the Kingdom of Bhutan, the easternmost representative of the bactrianus subgroup.
- Author
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Smit, John, Zeegers, Theo, and Dorji, Phurpa
- Subjects
- *
SYRPHIDAE , *DIPTERA , *SPECIES , *PALEARCTIC - Abstract
A new species of Eumerus, Eumerus druk Smit sp. nov., is described from Bhutan. This species belongs to the bactrianus subgroup of the strigatus species group. Seven species are currently known within this subgroup: four European, one of which is also found in the Near East, and three more only known from Tajikistan. The new species extends this disjunct distribution to the east by at least 2,000 km, stretching far beyond the reported Turano-Mediterranean region and into the Himalayas. A diagnosis and a key to all Central and Eastern Palaearctic species of the Eumerus bactrianus subgroup are provided. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. New Syrphidae (Diptera) of North-eastern North America.
- Author
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Skevington, Jeffrey H., Young, Andrew D., Locke, Michelle M., and Moran, Kevin M.
- Subjects
SYRPHIDAE ,SPECIES ,DIPTERA ,INSECTS - Abstract
Background This paper describes 11 of 18 new species recognised in the recent book, "Field Guide to the Flower Flies of Northeastern North America". Four species are omitted as they need to be described in the context of a revision (three Cheilosia and a Palpada species) and three other species (one Neoascia and two Xylota) will be described by F. Christian Thompson in a planned publication. Six of the new species have been recognised for decades and were treated by J. Richard Vockeroth in unpublished notes or by Thompson in his unpublished but widely distributed "A conspectus of the flower flies (Diptera: Syrphidae) of the Nearctic Region". Five of the 11 species were discovered during the preparation of the Field Guide. Eight of the 11 have DNA barcodes available that support the morphology. New information New species treated in this paper include: Anasimyia diffusa Locke, Skevington and Vockeroth (Smooth-legged Swamp Fly), Anasimyia matutina Locke, Skevington and Vockeroth (Small-spotted Swamp Fly), Brachyopa caesariata Moran and Skevington (Plain-winged Sapeater), Brachyopa cummingi Moran and Skevington (Somber Sapeater), Hammerschmidtia sedmani Vockeroth, Moran and Skevington (Pale-bristled Logsitter), Microdon (Microdon) scauros Skevington and Locke (Big-footed Ant Fly), Mixogaster fattigi Locke, Skevington and Greene (Fattig's Ant Fly), Neoascia guttata Skevington and Moran (Spotted Fen Fly), Orthonevra feei Moran and Skevington (Fee's Mucksucker), Psilota klymkoi Locke, Young and Skevington (Black Haireye) and Trichopsomyia litoralis Vockeroth and Young (Coastal Psyllid-killer). Common names follow the "Field Guide to the Flower Flies of Northeastern North America" (Skevington et al. 2019). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. A New Species of Valdiviomyia Vockeroth (Diptera: Syrphidae) from Argentina.
- Author
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Mengual, Ximo
- Abstract
Valdiviomyia pucara new species is described from Neuquén Province, Argentina. A description of the new species is provided, as is a key for identifying the species of the genus. Type material of all known species, i.e. V. camrasi (Sedman), V. darwini (Shannon), V. edwardsi (Shannon and Aubertin), V. nigra (Shannon), V. ruficauda (Shannon), and holotype of Ocyptamus albimanus Bigot [= V. valdiviana (Philippi)], was studied. Morphological characters of the genus and the subgeneric groupings are discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Life on an island: the phylogenetic placement ofLoveridgeanaand AfrotropicalSphaerophoria(Diptera: Syrphidae) inferred from molecular characters
- Author
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Jeffrey H. Skevington, Ximo Mengual, Gunilla Ståhls, Gunilla Ståhls-Mäkelä / Principal Investigator, Zoology, and Finnish Museum of Natural History
- Subjects
28S ,0106 biological sciences ,0301 basic medicine ,Systematics ,ALLOGRAPTA DIPTERA ,SPHAEROPHORIA ,Lineage (evolution) ,CONSERVATION ,18S ,Plant Science ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,hover flies ,SPECIES DIPTERA ,COI ,flower flies ,FUNCTIONAL DIVERSITY ,03 medical and health sciences ,Functional diversity ,GENUS ,FLOWER FLIES DIPTERA ,Genus ,Loveridgeana ,rRNA ,systematics ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Sphaerophoria ,SECONDARY STRUCTURE ,Phylogenetic tree ,biology ,ST-HELENA ,15. Life on land ,Ribosomal RNA ,biology.organism_classification ,Afrotropical ,030104 developmental biology ,Evolutionary biology ,1181 Ecology, evolutionary biology ,COMMUNITIES - Abstract
Phylogenetic relationships of theSphaerophorialineage (SphaerophoriaLe Peletier & Audinet-Serville and related genera) were inferred based on molecular characters, with the specific aim to infer the phylogenetic placement of the AfrotropicalSphaerophoriaspecies andLoveridgeana beattieivan Doesburg & van Doesburg. Three molecular markers were used, i.e., the mitochondrial protein-coding gene cytochrome c oxidase subunit I (COI) and the nuclear 28S and 18S ribosomal RNA genes. TheSphaerophorialineage generaExallandraVockeroth andLoveridgeanawere resolved within the genusSphaerophoria, and the IndomalayanEosphaerophoriaFrey was placed sister toCitrogrammaVockeroth, both related to a large species radiation from the New World.FaziaShannon andAllograptaOsten Sacken were recovered as non-monophyletic. Our results recovered two differentFaziaclades with dissimilar natural history resulted from our analyses, andAllograptaspecies were resolved into two clades, one with Nearctic and Neotropical species and a second clade with species from Oceanian, Indomalayan and Afrotropical Regions.Exallandrais considered a subgenus ofSphaerophoria,S. (Exallandra)stat. rev.,andSphaerophoria cinctifacies(Speiser)n. comb.a member of this subgenus together withS. loewiiZetterstedt. A newSphaerophoriasubgenus is designatedS.(Loveridgeana)stat. rev.to includeS. beattiein. comb.and the South African species, i.e.,S. quadrituberculataBezzi,S. retrocurvaHull, andS. aff.retrocurva. Based on their phylogenetic distinctiveness, functional traits, and ecological relevance we do recommend further ecological study and protection efforts for this Afrotropical group of pollinators.
- Published
- 2020
16. Description of six new large species of Argentinomyia Lynch-Arribálzaga, 1891 and redescription of Talahua fervida (Fluke, 1945) (Diptera, Syrphidae, Syrphinae)
- Author
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Augusto L. Montoya and Marta Wolff
- Subjects
0106 biological sciences ,Insecta ,Mesoamerica ,Male genitalia ,Carbotriplurida ,01 natural sciences ,hover flies ,Rhinoprosopa ,flower flies ,Genus ,lcsh:Zoology ,Bilateria ,Species identification ,lcsh:QL1-991 ,Invertebrata ,Argentinomyia ,Pterygota ,biology ,Hexapoda ,Cephalornis ,Circumscriptional names ,Boltonocostidae ,Geography ,Central America and the Caribbean ,Circumscriptional name ,Taxonomic key ,Research Article ,Endemism ,Coelenterata ,Talahua fervida ,Arthropoda ,Origoasilidae ,Nephrozoa ,010607 zoology ,Protostomia ,Basal ,Zoology ,Talahua ,Circumscriptional names of the taxon under ,010603 evolutionary biology ,Cyclorrhapha ,Muscomorpha ,Systematics ,Hennigmatidae ,Syrphinae ,Biodiversity & Conservation ,Panorpida ,Animalia ,Eumetabola ,Syrphidae ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Syrphoidea ,Tropical Andes ,Diptera ,South America ,Strashila incredibilis ,biology.organism_classification ,Brachycera ,Neotropical diversity ,Notchia ,Ecdysozoa ,Antliophora ,Endemism flower flies hover flies Neotropical diversity Mesoamerica Tropical Andes ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Americas ,Platypezoidea - Abstract
The morphological similarities between five new large Argentinomyia species and Talahua fervida Fluke are characterized and presented. Six new species of Argentinomyia (10–12 mm long) are described: Argentinomyia andina Montoya & Wolff, sp. nov. (Colombia), Argentinomyia choachi Montoya, sp. nov. (Colombia), Argentinomyia quimbaya Montoya & Wolff, sp. nov. (Colombia), Argentinomyia huitepecensis Montoya, sp. nov. (México), Argentinomyia puntarena Montoya, sp. nov. (Costa Rica), and Argentinomyia talamanca Thompson, sp. nov. (Costa Rica). The genus Talahua Fluke is re-diagnosed and, Talahua fervida redescribed. A taxonomic key and a comparison of diagnostic characters are presented. Photographs of head, abdominal and wing maculae patterns, as well as illustrations of male genitalia are provided for species identification.
- Published
- 2020
17. First data about the preimaginal morphology of Austroscaeva occidentalis (Shannon, 1927) and re-description of larvae and pupae of Dioprosopa clavata (Fabricius, 1794) (Diptera: Syrphidae)
- Author
-
Evelín Arcaya, Ximo Mengual, Inés Lillo, Santos Rojo, Celeste Pérez-Bañón, Universidad de Alicante. Departamento de Ciencias Ambientales y Recursos Naturales, and Bionomía, Sistemática e Investigación Aplicada de Insectos Dípteros e Himenópteros
- Subjects
Larva ,Neotropical Syrphinae ,Ecology ,Flower flies ,Chaetotaxy ,Zoology ,Morphology (biology) ,Biology ,DNA barcoding ,Pupa ,Head skeleton ,Insect Science ,Hover flies ,Zoología ,Agronomy and Crop Science ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
Preimaginal morphology of Austroscaeva occidentalis (Shannon, 1927) is described for the first time, and the morphology of larvae and pupae of Dioprosopa clavata (Fabricius, 1794) is updated based on material obtained from captive rearing of wild females from Argentina and Venezuela, respectively. We describe the morphology of the third instar larva, head skeleton and puparium using optical microscopy, cryo-scanning and scanning electron microscope. The immature stages of both New World flower fly species are analysed and compared with the known preimaginal morphology of other taxa that belong to the evolutionary lineage of Eupeodes-Scaeva, where Austroscaeva Láska, Mazánek & Mengual, 2018, and Dioprosopa Hull, 1949, form a Neotropical radiation within, together with the genus Notosyrphus Vockeroth, 1969. Larvae of all members of this lineage have abdominal segments 5 and 6 with the tips of the locomotory prominences facing posteriorly, and the anal segment with a characteristic U-shaped grasping organ. Two other larval synapomorphies of this group of genera are the presence of metathoracic setae accompanying ventral sensilla, and the abdominal segments 1–7 with an extra lobe on each locomotory prominence. These two last characters cannot be assessed for Macrosyrphus Matsumura, 1917, and Lapposyrphus Dušek & Láska, 1967, based on published information on larval descriptions. Despite a similar colouration pattern of the fully grown larvae, larval morphology of A. occidentalis and D. clavata are quite distinct. The preimaginal morphology of A. occidentalis has a mixture of morphological characters from the taxa Scaeva Fabricius, 1805, Semiscaeva Kuznetzov, 1985, and Dioprosopa. The larvae of D. clavata show several unique diagnostic features, such as the presence of a slightly serrate outline due to the great development of the segmental spines and a pinnate ornamentation of the setae of its dorsal and dorsolateral sensilla. Regarding their biological cycle, the length of the preadult stages of A. occidentalis is almost 5 days longer than the length observed for D. clavata. In addition, new DNA barcodes are provided for A. occidentalis. Financial support was provided by the programme ‘Doctorar en el extranjero’ of the National University of Cuyo, Mendoza, Argentina.
- Published
- 2021
18. Syrphidae of Southern Illinois: Diversity, floral associations, and preliminary assessment of their efficacy as pollinators
- Author
-
Casey J Bryan, Sedonia D. Sipes, Nathan M. Soley, Jacob L Chisausky, Karla L. Gage, Gil Felipe Gonçalves Miranda, and Leila Kassim
- Subjects
0106 biological sciences ,Insecta ,Pollination ,Arthropoda ,species accumulation curve ,Species discovery curve ,Biology ,medicine.disease_cause ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,hover flies ,pollen load ,flower flies ,Pollinator ,Genus ,Pollen ,medicine ,Animalia ,Syrphidae ,lcsh:QH301-705.5 ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Ecology ,syrphid rich ,Southern Illinois ,Diptera ,Toxomerus ,biology.organism_classification ,syrphid richness ,010602 entomology ,Eristalinae ,lcsh:Biology (General) ,Species richness ,pollinators ,Research Article - Abstract
Syrphid flies (Diptera: Syrphidae) are a cosmopolitan group of flower-visiting insects, though their diversity and importance as pollinators is understudied and often unappreciated. Data on 1,477 Syrphid occurrences and floral associations from three years of pollinator collection (2017-2019) in the Southern Illinois region of Illinois, United States, are here compiled and analyzed. We collected 69 species in 36 genera off of the flowers of 157 plant species. While a richness of 69 species is greater than most other families of flower-visiting insects in our region, a species accumulation curve and regional species pool estimators suggest that at least 33 species are yet uncollected. In order to further the understanding of Syrphidae as pollinators in the Southern Illinois region, we produced a NMDS ordination of floral associations for the most common syrphid species. The NMDS did not sort syrphid species into discrete ecological guilds, and syrphid floral associations generally fit those predicted by traditional pollination syndromes. We also conducted a preliminary analysis of the pollen-carrying capacity of different syrphid taxa, which found severalEristalisspecies to carry pollen loads comparable to the European Honey Bee,Apis mellifera, and showed significant differences in the pollen-carrying capacity of various syrphid species. Notably, the extremely common genusToxomerusand other small Syrphinae species carried very little pollen, while large and pilose Eristalinae species carried large pollen loads.
- Published
- 2020
19. Checklist of hover flies (Diptera, Syrphidae) of the Republic of Georgia
- Author
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André Reimann, Sander Bot, Jana Thormann, Tinatin Chkhartishvili, Ximo Mengual, and Laura von der Mark
- Subjects
0106 biological sciences ,Georgia ,Insecta ,Arthropoda ,DNA barcoding faunistics first record flower flies hover flies new record species list ,010607 zoology ,species list ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,DNA barcoding ,hover flies ,Faunistics & Distribution ,flower flies ,Central Asia ,Systematics ,lcsh:Zoology ,faunistics ,Animalia ,new record ,lcsh:QL1-991 ,Syrphidae ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Diptera ,Hexapoda ,Archaeology ,Checklist ,Geography ,Brachycera ,Dna barcodes ,Animal Science and Zoology ,first record ,Catalogues and Checklists - Abstract
A checklist of the Syrphidae species of the Republic of Georgia is presented. New hover fly (Diptera: Syrphidae) records from Georgia are provided as a result of field work conducted in 2018. At the same time, published syrphid records for the country are here reviewed and updated. A total of 357 species of hoverflies are now documented from Georgia, 40 of which are reported for the first time. Moreover, DNA barcodes were sequenced for 238 specimens, representing 74 species from this country.
- Published
- 2020
20. A new species of Eumerus (Diptera, Syrphidae) from the Kingdom of Bhutan, the easternmost representative of the bactrianus subgroup
- Author
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J.T. Smit, Phurpa Dorji, and Theo Zeegers
- Subjects
0106 biological sciences ,Insecta ,Arthropoda ,Central Palaearctic ,Himalaya ,Identification key ,Zoology ,Eumerus ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,hover flies ,flower flies ,Kingdom ,identification key ,lcsh:Zoology ,Species group ,Animalia ,lcsh:QL1-991 ,Syrphidae ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,biology ,Diptera ,Disjunct distribution ,Eastern Palaearctic ,biology.organism_classification ,010602 entomology ,Geography ,Key (lock) ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Central Palaearctic Eastern Palaearctic flower flies hover flies Himalaya identification key - Abstract
A new species of Eumerus, Eumerus druk Smit sp. nov., is described from Bhutan. This species belongs to the bactrianus subgroup of the strigatus species group. Seven species are currently known within this subgroup: four European, one of which is also found in the Near East, and three more only known from Tajikistan. The new species extends this disjunct distribution to the east by at least 2,000 km, stretching far beyond the reported Turano-Mediterranean region and into the Himalayas. A diagnosis and a key to all Central and Eastern Palaearctic species of the Eumerus bactrianus subgroup are provided.
- Published
- 2020
21. Review of Indian species of Monoceromyia Shannon (Diptera: Syrphidae) with description of two new species.
- Author
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Sankararaman, H., Anooj, S.S., and Mengual, Ximo
- Abstract
[Display omitted] • Indian species of the genus Monoceromyia Shannon (Diptera: Syrphidae) are revised. • Two new species are described: M. flavoscutata sp. nov. and M. nigra sp. nov. • Monoceromyia multipunctata is synonymized under M. polistoides. • Lectotypes are designated for Ceria patricia and Ceria tredecimpunctata. • An identification key to Indian species of Monoceromyia is provided. Flower fly species of the genus Monoceromyia Shannon (Diptera: Syrphidae) in India are reviewed and two new species, M. flavoscutata Sankararaman, Anooj and Mengual, sp. nov. and M. nigra Sankararaman, Anooj and Mengual, sp. nov. , are described from Tamil Nadu and Arunachal Pradesh (India), respectively. A new synonym is proposed: M. multipunctata (Hull, 1941) is synonymised under M. polistoides (Brunetti, 1923). Moreover, lectotypes are designated for Ceria patricia Brunetti, 1923 and Ceria tredecimpunctata Brunetti, 1923. An identification key to the Indian Monoceromyia species is also provided. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. A new species of
- Author
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John, Smit, Theo, Zeegers, and Phurpa, Dorji
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flower flies ,Insecta ,Asia ,identification key ,Diptera ,Systematics ,Central Palaearctic ,Himalaya ,Animalia ,Syrphidae ,Eastern Palaearctic ,hover flies ,Research Article - Abstract
A new species of Eumerus, Eumerus druk Smit sp. nov., is described from Bhutan. This species belongs to the bactrianus subgroup of the strigatus species group. Seven species are currently known within this subgroup: four European, one of which is also found in the Near East, and three more only known from Tajikistan. The new species extends this disjunct distribution to the east by at least 2,000 km, stretching far beyond the reported Turano-Mediterranean region and into the Himalayas. A diagnosis and a key to all Central and Eastern Palaearctic species of the Eumerus bactrianus subgroup are provided.
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- 2019
23. New Syrphidae (Diptera) of North-eastern North America
- Author
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Jeffrey H. Skevington, Michelle M. Locke, Andrew D. Young, and Kevin M. Moran
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0106 biological sciences ,Nearctic ,Insecta ,Arthropoda ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,Swamp ,hover flies ,Anasimyia ,flower flies ,taxonomy ,Neoascia ,Nearctic ecozone ,hover flie ,Animalia ,Syrphidae ,lcsh:QH301-705.5 ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,new species ,geography ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,Ecology ,biology ,Diptera ,Xylota ,Cheilosia ,biology.organism_classification ,Archaeology ,Microdon ,010602 entomology ,lcsh:Biology (General) ,Taxonomy (biology) ,Taxonomic Paper - Abstract
This paper describes 11 of 18 new species recognised in the recent book, "Field Guide to the Flower Flies of Northeastern North America". Four species are omitted as they need to be described in the context of a revision (three Cheilosia and a Palpada species) and three other species (one Neoascia and two Xylota) will be described by F. Christian Thompson in a planned publication. Six of the new species have been recognised for decades and were treated by J. Richard Vockeroth in unpublished notes or by Thompson in his unpublished but widely distributed "A conspectus of the flower flies (Diptera: Syrphidae) of the Nearctic Region". Five of the 11 species were discovered during the preparation of the Field Guide. Eight of the 11 have DNA barcodes available that support the morphology. New species treated in this paper include: Anasimyia diffusa Locke, Skevington and Vockeroth (Smooth-legged Swamp Fly), Anasimyia matutina Locke, Skevington and Vockeroth (Small-spotted Swamp Fly), Brachyopa caesariata Moran and Skevington (Plain-winged Sapeater), Brachyopa cummingi Moran and Skevington (Somber Sapeater), Hammerschmidtia sedmani Vockeroth, Moran and Skevington (Pale-bristled Logsitter), Microdon (Microdon) scauros Skevington and Locke (Big-footed Ant Fly), Mixogaster fattigi Locke, Skevington and Greene (Fattig's Ant Fly), Neoascia guttata Skevington and Moran (Spotted Fen Fly), Orthonevra feei Moran and Skevington (Fee's Mucksucker), Psilota klymkoi Locke, Young and Skevington (Black Haireye) and Trichopsomyia litoralis Vockeroth and Young (Coastal Psyllid-killer). Common names follow the "Field Guide to the Flower Flies of Northeastern North America" (Skevington et al. 2019).
- Published
- 2019
24. A world review of reported myiases caused by flower flies (Diptera: Syrphidae), including the first case of human myiasis from Palpada scutellaris (Fabricius, 1805)
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Mario Vargas, Cecilia Rojas, Celeste Pérez-Bañón, Ximo Mengual, Santos Rojo, Universidad de Alicante. Departamento de Ciencias Ambientales y Recursos Naturales, and Bionomía, Sistemática e Investigación Aplicada de Insectos Dípteros e Himenópteros
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Costa Rica ,animal structures ,Zoology ,Identification key ,Biology ,Feces ,Myiasis ,Genus ,Hover flies ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,Zoología ,Syrphidae ,Larva ,General Veterinary ,Flower flies ,Diptera ,fungi ,Rat-tailed maggots ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Palpada ,Infectious Diseases ,Dna barcodes ,Insect Science ,Hoverflies ,Parasitology ,Bloody diarrhea ,Female - Abstract
Rat-tailed larvae of the syrphid species Palpada scutellaris (Fabricius, 1805) are documented causing an enteric human myiasis in Costa Rica. This is the first time that the genus Palpada is recorded as a human myiasis agent. We report a 68-year-old woman with intestinal pain and bloody diarrhea with several live Palpada larvae present in the stool. Using molecular techniques (DNA barcodes) and both electronic and optical microscopy to study the external morphology, the preimaginal stages of the fly were unambiguously identified. An identification key to all syrphid genera actually known as agents of human and animal myiases is provided for larvae, puparia, and adults. Moreover, a critical world review of more than 100 references of Syrphidae as myiasis agents is also given, with emphasis on the species with rat-tailed larvae.
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- 2019
25. Preimaginal morphology of the genera Salpingogaster Schiner, 1868 and Eosalpingogaster Hull, 1949 (Diptera: Syrphidae), with its systematic implications
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Pérez-Bañón, Celeste, Arcaya, Evelin, Mengual Sanchis, Ximo, Rojo, Santos, Universidad de Alicante. Departamento de Ciencias Ambientales y Recursos Naturales, Universidad de Alicante. Centro Iberoamericano de la Biodiversidad, and Bionomía, Sistemática e Investigación Aplicada de Insectos Dípteros e Himenópteros
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Immature stages ,Insecta ,Arthropoda ,Flower flies ,Diptera ,Description ,Hover flies ,Animalia ,Zoología ,Biodiversity ,Syrphidae ,Puparium ,Taxonomy - Abstract
The puparium of Salpingogaster nigra and Eosalpingogaster umbra are described, and diagnosis and illustrations are provided. The morphology of immature stages of the genera Salpingogaster and Eosalpingogaster are studied and compared for the first time. The results are in agreement with previous molecular analyses that recognise both genera as valid. We found two different puparium morphotypes for E. umbra and discuss the improbability of immature sexual dimorphism in this species. An identification key is also provided for all species with known puparia. This paper was partially funded by grant of Consejo de Desarrollo Científico, Humanístico y Tecnológico (CDCHT) de la UCLA (Universidad Centroccidental “Lisandro Alvarado”) awarded to E. Arcaya PhD project.
- Published
- 2013
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