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1.
Megaselia biarticulata sp.n. is described from Sulawesi. Its distinctly two-segmented palp reinforces the view that a two-segmented palp is part of the ground plan of the family. The tibial hair palisades are also postulated as part of the ground plan and serve to link the Phoridae to the Platypezidae. The median furrow on the frons is considered as part of the ground plan. Furthermore it is postulated that it is homologous with the frontal vitta in the Schizophora, and that its invaginated lower end gave rise to the ptilinum. The Empidoidea cannot be ancestral to the Cyclorrhapha and the case for regarding these two taxa as sister groups seems highly tenuous in the light of the inferred ground plan for the Phoridae.  相似文献   

2.
We examined final‐stage larvae of all currently recognized lower cyclorrhaphan (= Aschiza) families, except Ironomyiidae and Sciadoceridae, and those of the higher cyclorrhaphan (= Schizophora) families Calliphoridae, Conopidae, Lonchaeidae, Muscidae, and Ulidiidae, and compared them with larvae of two out‐group families, Rhagionidae and Dolichopodidae, paying particular attention to structures of the head. A set of 86 morphological characters were analysed phylogenetically. The results show that the lower Cyclorrhapha is paraphyletic in relation to the higher Cyclorrhapha. The monophyly of the Cyclorrhapha is strongly supported. The lower Cyclorrhapha is resolved into two clades, based on the Lonchopteridae. Within the Syrphidae the traditional three‐subfamily system is supported, based on the Microdontinae. Within the lower Cyclorrhapha, the larval head is variable in form and arrangement of components. In Lonchopteridae, the mouth lies at the back of an open trough or furrow, comprising ventrally an elongate labium and laterally the maxilla. This arrangement of components appears to facilitate scooping food in water films. In Platypezoidea there is no furrow, and the dorsolateral lobes bearing the antennae are connected by a dorsal extension of the pseudocephalon. The main food‐gathering structure is the hooked apex of the labium, but in Phoridae the mandibles may also be important. In Eumuscomorpha the mandibles are at the apex of the head skeleton. The pseudocephalon is extended and infolded dorsally to form an oral pocket over the mouth. In the Pipunculidae, and the Microdontinae and Syrphinae of the Syrphidae, ventrally it forms a V‐shaped groove or guide along which the mandibles project. The labium is sclerotized apically, and forms a plate or tapered projection. This arrangement of components facilitates holding, piercing and extracting prey tissues. In Eristalinae the pseudocephalon is attached to the mandibles and is formed into a pair of cirri bearing mandibular lobes that lie either side of the mouth. Furthermore, the epipharynx is produced anteriorly in relation to the hypopharynx, and the labium is attached to the anterior part of the epipharynx to form a cavity or atrium. This arrangement is suited to fragmenting and imbibing solid food in Eristalinae with hooked mandibles, and when the mandibles are reduced and the mandibular lobes are inverted and sclerotized, these structures form a filter for separating fluid‐suspended particulate food. In higher Cyclorrhapha an atrium is present as in Eristalinae, but a connection between the pseudocephalon and the mandibles is absent. Instead, the pseudocephalon is bifurcate dorsally and forms a pair of cephalic lobes that ventrally ensheath each mandible. The surface of the sheath may be coated in cirri and other food‐gathering structures. The cephalic lobes, mandibular sheaths and the head skeleton are maneuverable and retractile to a higher degree than in lower Cyclorrhapha. This arrangement of components facilitates feeding on both solid food, in which the mouthooks may extend from the sheath to break the food up, and particulate and suspended food, in which the food‐gathering structures of the sheath scoop up the food. In many higher Cyclorrhapha, maneuverability is enhanced by a break between the labium and the basal sclerite, to which it is fused in all lower Cyclorrhapha. Intermediate characters and states for the structures of the higher cyclorrhaphan larval head are present in out‐groups, and lower Cyclorrhapha and homologies are discussed. Liquidity of the food is an important factor explaining the structure of the larval head in Cyclorrhapha. © 2008 The Linnean Society of London, Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society, 2008, 153 , 287–323.  相似文献   

3.
The retinae of the compound eyes of several species of Pipunculidae (Diptera : Cyclorrhapha), belonging to the subfamilies Chalarinae and Pipunculinae, were investigated in semithin sections in both sexes of the representative species. Whereas the boundary of the dorsal and ventral retinular cells in a mirror-image configuration is at the equator in the male, in the female it is situated in the anterior region of the eye at the level of the upper frons, and is located above the equator only in the lateral region. In the frontal view, it constitutes a concave arch to frontofacial region. The facets of the corneal lenses are strikingly enlarged in the anterior region of the eyes, compared with those in the remainder of the eye in the female. This area with the large-faceted ommatidia, was determined in more detail in total views as well as in histological preparations and compared with the eye of the male. In the frontal region, the mirror-image boundary in the retina of the female coincides exactly with the boundary between the large-faceted central and small-faceted peripheral ommatidia.By examining the dichoptic eyes of the Chalarus male, it has been demonstrated that the arcuate mirror-image boundary in the retinae of females is not associated with their dichoptic eye position. This is an example of sexual dimorphism. The retinal pattern of the female described in this paper was not found in other 37 families of the flies investigated till now. This new type of the retina of the suborder Brachycera (including Cyclorrhapha) is to be subsumed under the synapomorphic ground plans of the Pipunculidae. At the same time, it proves to be an autapomorphic characteristic of the family.  相似文献   

4.
5.
The larvae of small Diptera, such as Phoridae, from forensic cases are frequently identified by rearing out the adults. However, parasitoid Hymenoptera are often obtained instead. Rather than discarding these, it is suggested that, with a knowledge of their durations of development, they can be employed as surrogates for their hosts for estimating a minimum postmortem interval. Some data for a forensically important species of Phoridae parasitized by a species of Braconidae are presented.  相似文献   

6.
ABSTRACT. Diplonevra mortimeri sp.nov. and D.watsoni. sp.nov. are described from specimens caught at Nasutitermitinae termite colonies in Sulawesi. The female of both species has a remarkable pre-oviposition behaviour in which she lures a worker termite into following her away from the colony. She then oviposits in the termite's abdomen. Pupation takes place within the remains of the host's abdomen. Both species only mature a single egg at a time. The female probably guards the comatose host termite during the period of larval development. The morphology of the male hypopygia of the new species allows reinterpretation of the peculiar anal tube in typical male Diplonevra. Furthermore the suggested homologies reinforce the view that the epandrium (tergite 9) has not been replaced by a periandrium (fused gonocoxites) in the Cyclorrhapha and consequently the latter cannot be derived from the Empidoidea.  相似文献   

7.
The morphology of the coxa and trochanter was studied in 205 species from 68 fly families to compare these structures with respect to ability to fly in a streamlined posture, with the middle legs pointing forward and pressed to the thorax. Only Brachycera are able to attain this posture. The forward turn of the coxa at this position is hindered by the junction of the coxa with the pleuron. Recovery of mobility is gained in two ways. (1) By reduction of the contact zone between coxa and pleurite, as in Asiloidea, Bombyloidea, and Empidoidea. Within these flies, the streamlined posture was recorded in Bombyliidae and in a robber-fly, Laphria flava . Others fly with their middle legs straddled laterally or trailing backwards. (2) Longitudinal splitting of the coxa into three coxites provides intracoxal mobility in most Tabanoidea and Cyclorrhapha. The hind and medial coxites rotate about the front coxite and change the coxo-trochanteral axis, thus compensating for restricted protraction. Separation of the hind coxite appears in primitive Tabanoidea, and a separate middle coxite was found in several families among the Nematocera. The streamlined posture was recorded in horse-flies, stratiomyids, and in many Cyclorrhapha except Micropezidae and Hippoboscidae. There is morphological evidence for a possible secondary fusion of coxites at least in Dolichopodidae and Opetidae as well as for the origin of Cyclorrhapha from a miniature ancestor.  相似文献   

8.
A first study of the pollination biology of a Mediterranean Aristolochia species in its natural habitat is presented. In all, 183 flowers of Aristolochia pallida Willd. were investigated, which in total contained 73 arthropods, dominated by two groups of Diptera, black fungus gnats (Sciaridae representing 37%) and scuttle flies (Phoridae representing 19%), respectively. However, only Phoridae are regarded as potential pollinators, since pollen has been found exclusively on the body of these insects. All Phoridae belong to the genus Megaselia and are recognised as three morpho-species. The measurements of flower and insect dimensions suggest that size is an important constraint for successful pollination: (a) the insects must have a definitive size for being able to enter the flower and (b) must be able to get in touch with the pollen. Only very few insect groups found in A. pallida fulfil these size requirements. However, size alone is not a sufficient filter as too many fly species of the same size might be trapped but not function as pollinators. Instead, specific attraction is required as otherwise pollen is lost. Since all trapped Phoridae are males, a chemical attraction (pheromones) is proposed as an additional constraint. Since the flowers are protogynous, the record of Megaselia loaded with pollen found in a flower during its female stage proves that this insect must have had visited at least one different flower during its male stage before. Further on, this observation provides strong evidence that the flowers are cross-pollinated. All these factors indicate a highly specialised pollination of A. pallida by Megaselia species.  相似文献   

9.
Abstract— The higher flies, infraorder Cyclorrhapha [=Muscomorpha (McAlpine, 1989)], have undergone enormous radiation since the Cretaceous (∼100 Myr). Rapid morphological evolution in cyclorrhaphans has made their phylogenetic placement with respect to more primitive clades a long-standing problem in dipteran systematics. Of the two most plausible hypotheses, one treats the Cyclorrhapha as sister group to the orthorrhaphous superfamily Empidoidea [=Empidiformia (Hennig, 1948), Orthogenya (Brauer, 1883)], while the other places them within the empidoids. The debate over cyclorrhaphan origin has heretofore focused on homology interpretations for a few character systems, particularly the male genitalia. We provide the first attempt to assemble and quantify all of the available morphological evidence. By cladistic analysis of these data under alternative codings of genitalic features reflecting opposing homology theories, and then excluding these features altogether, we sought to judge which genitalic theory is better supported by the evidence as a whole, and how much the debate matters to resolving cyclorrhaphan origins. Using the analog of a factorial design, we also measured the effect of alternative transformation series in several other controversial characters, of outgroup choice and of successive weighting. Under all manipulations, including both genitalic codings, the Cyclorrhapha originate within the Empidoidea, near the family Atelestidae. However, trees in which the Empidoidea are constrained to be monophyletic are only 1-6 steps longer (out of ∼150), a fit not significantly worse under a permutation test for monophyly. Adult morphological data may not suffice to settle either the placement of Cyclorrhapha or the debate over genitalic homology. Moreover, the issue of genitalic homology does not appear critical to that of cyclorrhaphan origin.  相似文献   

10.
Different laboratory cultures of the acarine tick Rhipicephalus (Boophilus) microplus (Canestrini, 1888) (Ixodida: Ixodidae) were infested by small Megaselia scalaris (Loew, 1866) (Diptera: Phoridae) flies. Larvae of this species exhibited opportunistic parasitism predominantly on engorged female ticks, causing severe damage to their cuticle through which the flies were able to reach R. microplus internal organs, on which they fed until developing into pupae in the tick's remains. The flies were kept by continuous propagation on fresh ticks over six generations during which the same parasitoid behaviour was observed. Here we report on an ixodid tick laboratory culture used for rearing M. scalaris.  相似文献   

11.
The female reproductive system of the humpbacked fly Megaselia scalaris Loew (Diptera : Phoridae) was examined in whole mount preparations and serial sections. The system includes 2 ovaries, paired lateral oviducts, a common oviduct, and a genital chamber, opening externally through a gonopore, anteriad and ventrad to the anus. The ducts of the 2 accessory glands open independently into the dorsal region of the genital chamber. The terminal duct of a 2-armed spermatheca joins the right posterior and ventral wall of the genital chamber, immediately inside the gonopore. Passing dorally, the spermathecal duct lies immediately ventral to the duct of the right accessory gland. A short distance posteriad, it divides into two branches, each supplying an arm of the spermatheca. The genital chamber extends both anteriorly and posteriorly from its junction with the common oviduct, creating anterior and posterior compartments. In the right lateral wall of the genital chamber, a distinctive loop-shaped thickening (plate) resembles a darkened thread when it is observed through the integument. Features likely to have taxonomic utility include the posterior and ventral location of the terminal portion of the spermathecal duct; and the asymmetrically arranged, loop-shaped plate.  相似文献   

12.
Abstract. Based on outgroup comparison, the various components of the larval mandible of the Brachycera and their homologies are described. The final instar larval mandible of the Brachycera ground plan is comprised of a distal pointed hook and an inverted 'U'-shaped basal sclerite. The phylogenetic implications of the larval mandibular homologies and associated mouthpart structures for the current cladistic hypotheses of the Nematocera (Wood & Borkent, 1989) and orthorrhaphous Brachycera (Woodley, 1989) are evaluated.
A cladistic analysis of larval mouthpart characters largely supports the hypotheses of Wood & Borkent and Woodley. The presence of a pharyngeal filter is tentatively proposed as a synapomorphy of the Diptera exclusive of the Tipulomorpha and Bibionomorpha. Evidence is presented supporting a sister-group relationship between the Psychodomorpha ( sensu Wood & Borkent, 1989) and the Brachycera. The placement of the Pantophthalmidae in the Stratiomyomorpha is supported by the apomorphic development of the mandibular-maxillary complex and pharyngeal filter with posterior grinding mill. Additional larval mouthpart characters are proposed supporting the concept of the Eremoneura (Empidoidea + Cyclorrhapha). The ground plan of the Empidoidea appears to be characterized by the apomorphic development of a four-component mandible, in which the basal sclerite is subdivided into two connecting sclerites and a ventral sclerite. Morphological evidence is presented supporting the mandibular origin of the mouthhooks of the Cyclorrhapha.  相似文献   

13.
We studied the developmental performance of the large morph of Pseudacteon nocens Borgmeier (Diptera: Phoridae), a prospective biological control agent of imported fire ants (Hymenoptera: Formicidae). We measured selected life history traits of this parasitoid as a function of 1) host species (Solenopsis invicta Buren versus Solenopsis richteri Forel), 2) temperature (22 versus 28 degrees C), 3) source population of the fly (Corrientes and Santiago del Estero, Argentina), and 4) varied size distributions of offered host ants. Developmental periods were influenced by host species, although the populations responded in opposing manners. Developmental times, however, were most strongly influenced by temperature with total developmental periods lengthened by 17-32% at 22 degrees C. Pupal mortality was also significantly lower at this temperature. Although numbers of progeny per female were significantly higher for the Corrientes population, we found no significant differences in progeny per female according to host species. Interestingly, we found that females were larger than males, and flies from Corrientes were larger than those from Santiago del Estero, even after statistical adjustments for host size. The modal frequency of host size elected in all treatment combinations tested was identical (0.6 mm), a size that represented the apparent threshold for producing female progeny. These laboratory and additional field observations demonstrate considerable interpopulational variation in P. nocens and lend further support to the applied approach focusing at the population, as opposed to the species level, with respect to both source and target areas for classical biological control introductions of Pseudacteon flies.  相似文献   

14.
The nematode Steinernema feltiae (Nematoda: Steinemematidae) was tested for its ability to control two main mushroom pests i.e. the sciarid Lycoriella auripila (Diptera: Sciaridae) and the phorid Megaselia halterata (Diptera: Phoridae) in growing-rooms filled with spawned compost. A clear difference between female and male sciarid control was observed. A nematode application 1 day after casing preceded by an application 1 day before casing on the compost caused an almost complete control (97%) of the F1-generation of female sciarids. The F2-generation of females was similarly controlled (95%) by an application 7 days after casing. A dosage of 1 × 106nematodes m-2was found to be equally effective as higher dosages. Diflubenzuron remained active throughout entire the cropping period with high sciarid mortality rates varying from 72% to 99%. Phorid control was variable and seemed to depend on the presence of sciarids. In one occasion the control rate of F2-generation phorid larvae was 75% and was possibly caused by the presence of new infective juvenile nematodes recycled in F2-generation sciarid larvae. Diflubenzuron did not significantly reduce phorid numbers.  相似文献   

15.
MultiLure traps were deployed in a Hawaiian orchard to compare the attraction of economically important fruit flies and nontarget insects to the three-component BioLure and torula yeast food lures. Either water or a 20% propylene glycol solution was used to dissolve the torula yeast or as capture fluid in BioLure traps. Torula yeast in water was more attractive than BioLure for male and female Bactrocera cucurbitae (Coquillett) and Bactrocera dorsalis (Hendel) and as attractive for Ceratitis capitata (Wiedemann), and the addition of propylene glycol significantly inhibited the attractiveness of torula yeast. The known synergistic effect of propylene glycol with BioLure, resulting in increased captures of Anastrepha flies, was not observed with Bactrocera. Nontarget Drosophilidae, Neriidae, Phoridae, Calliphoridae, Sarcophagidae, and Muscidae were more strongly attracted to BioLure, and both lures collected Chloropidae equally. As with fruit flies, propylene glycol in torula yeast significantly decreased nontarget captures. The results therefore suggest that torula yeast in water is a more effective attractant than BioLure for pest Bactrocera while minimizing nontarget captures.  相似文献   

16.
Echidnophora dondroi sp.nov. is described from females collected in the fungus gardens of a nest of the termite Odontotermes takensis in North Sumatra. Resemblances between Echidnophora and Termitoxeniinae are discussed and interpreted as examples of convergence. The peculiarly modified basal sockets of some major abdominal bristles in many Termitoxeniinae are illustrated and discussed. The hypothesis is advanced that these modified sockets are the sites from which exudates attractive to termite workers are discharged. It is further postulated that these exudates are primarily lipid material. Furthermore, the abdominal bristles of the Termitoxeniinae examined are smooth, in contrast to the fluted bristles characteristic of Echidnophora , other Phoridae, and those of workers of termite hosts of the Termitoxeniinae. This is probably an adaptation that renders the bristles more pliant, and thus less liable to being broken off when stroked by a termite worker. Enlarged collars, arising from the basal sockets and embracing the bases of the bristles, probably serve as an additional protection.  相似文献   

17.
Order Diptera of class insecta is of immense importance for the public and animal health and hygiene. Many dipteran flies are potential vectors of dreadful diseases. Therefore, it is required to have a simple characterization method and identification key for the field workers and entomologists. The present study fulfill the need and focus on the identification to generate a base line data with the help of original photographs. Nine families with 16 species of dipteran flies (other than mosquitoes) from Jeddah region of Saudi Arabia are included in this work. Major families which are more prevalent and common in this region are Muscidae, Calliphoridae, Sarcophagidae and Phoridae.  相似文献   

18.
The 60 000 described species of Cyclorrhapha are characterized by an unusual diversity in larval life‐history traits, which range from saprophagy over phytophagy to parasitism and predation. However, the direction of evolutionary change between the different modes remains unclear. Here, we use the Scathophagidae (Diptera) for reconstructing the direction of change in this relatively small family (≈ 250 spp.) whose larval habits mirror the diversity in natural history found in Cyclorrhapha. We subjected a molecular data set for 63 species (22 genera) and DNA sequences from seven genes (12S, 16S, Cytb, COI, 28S, Ef1‐alfa, Pol II) to an extensive sensitivity analysis and compare the performance of three different alignment strategies (manual, Clustal, POY). We find that the default Clustal alignment performs worst as judged by character incongruence, topological congruence and branch support. For this alignment, scoring indels as a fifth character state worsens character incongruence and topological congruence. However, manual alignment and direct optimization perform similarly well and yield near‐identical trees, although branch support is lower for the direct‐optimization trees. All three alignment techniques favor the upweighting of transversion. We furthermore confirm the independence of the concepts “node support” and “node stability” by documenting several cases of poorly supported nodes being very stable and cases of well supported nodes being unstable. We confirm the monophyly of the Scathophagidae, its two constituent subfamilies, and most genera. We demonstrate that phytophagy in the form of leaf mining is the ancestral larval feeding habit for Scathophagidae. From phytophagy, two shifts to saprophagy and one shift to predation has occurred while a second origin of predation is from a saprophagous ancestor. © The Willi Hennig Society 2006.  相似文献   

19.
1. Lysozyme is absent from tissues other than the midgut in the drug-feeding larvae of Musca domestica (Diptera, Cyclorrhapha, Muscidae) and in the fruit-feeding larvae of Anastrepha fraterculus (Diptera, Cyclorrhapha, Tephritidae), whereas in the detritus-feeding larvae of Trichosia pubescens (Diptera, Nematocera, Sciaridae) lysozyme is only found in the hemolymph and in the fat body. 2. A. fraterculus larvae have a midgut region with a luminal pH of 3.4, and display a pepstatin-inhibited acid proteolytic activity which has a spec. act. (7.2 U/mg protein) similar to that of M. domestica. 3. The midgut lysozyme from M. domestica and A. fraterculus is more active (high ionic strength) at pH 3.5 than at pH 6.0, the contrary being true for a midgut chitinase. 4. The results suggest that the adaptations to digest bacteria in insects are similar to those in vertebrate foregut fermenters, and that these characteristics were probably present in the Cyclorrhapha ancestor, but not in the Diptera ancestor.  相似文献   

20.
A synopsis of 20 species of Diptera Cyclorrhapha from 10 families occurring in bird nests is presented. Some species were found for the first time in bird nests. The roles of each fly species in the bird nest consortia, the mode of larval life, associations with nestlings or nest substrate are discussed. Most flies are widely distributed, the possible explanations for which are proposed.  相似文献   

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