Adejeania vexatrix

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Adejeania vexatrix
Adejeania vexatrix.jpg
Scientific classification edit
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Insecta
Order: Diptera
Family: Tachinidae
Genus: Adejeania
Species:
A. vexatrix
Binomial name
Adejeania vexatrix
(Osten Sacken, 1877)
Synonyms

Dejeania vexatrix Osten Sacken, 1877

Adejeania vexatrix is a species of fly in the family Tachinidae. It is found in western North America from Mexico to Wyoming and British Columbia.[1] In addition to its bright orange abdomen and prominent, heavy black setae, this species is noted for its greatly elongated palpi, which stick straight forward from under the fly's head. A similar looking tachinid fly, Hystricia abrupta, is found in the eastern United States. It does not have the elongated mouthparts of A. vexatrix.[2] Paradejeania rutilioides also looks similar.[3]

References[]

  1. ^ Arnaud, Paul Henri (1951). "Notes on the range extension of Adejeania vexatrix (Diptera: Tachinidae or Larvaevoridae) into Wyoming and British Columbia" (PDF Adobe Acrobat). Entomological News. American Entomological Society. 62 (6): 192. ISSN 0013-872X. Retrieved 2009-10-12.
  2. ^ Bugguide.net, Hystricia abrupta
  3. ^ Bugguide.net, Paradejeania rutilioides


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