Archytas apicifer

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Archytas apicifer
Archytas fly.jpg
Archytas sp. resting on flowers.
Scientific classification
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A. apicifer
Binomial name
Archytas apicifer
(Walker, 1849)[1]
Synonyms[2]
  • Tachina apicifer Walker, 1849
  • Archytas vulgaris Curran, 1928

Archytas apicifer is a medium to large sized (approximately 10-15 mm) Nearctic tachinid fly. The species name was authored by the German entomologist Johann Friedrich Jaennicke (1867) and presumably named after the Greek classical philosopher and mathematician Archytas. The larvae are parasites of several caterpillar species.

Behavior and morphology[]

The family Tachinidae is considered the second-largest in terms of number of species among all the diverse families of Diptera (two-winged true flies).[3] There are about 10,000 species worldwide. Many tachinid flies are economically important parasites of other arthropods. Several genera are robust and brightly patterned and many possess conspicuous bristles on the head or on the 4th to 6th abdominal segments.

Diet[]

Archytas apicifer adults feed on flower nectar, and are also known to be pollinators of some flowers. [4] Like many other tachinid flies, A. apicifer larvae are internal parasitoids of the Forest tent caterpillars and fall webworms in addition to the tomato fruitworm, corn earworm, and cutworms.[5]

References[]

  1. ^ "Archytas apicifer (Walker, 1849)". Integrated Taxonomic Information System. Retrieved 4 July 2012.
  2. ^ James E. O'Hara (2009). "Taxonomic and Host Catalogue of the Tachinidae of America North of Mexico". North American Dipterists Society. Archived from the original on 29 September 2012. Retrieved 1 October 2012.
  3. ^ "Family Tachinidae - Parasitic Flies".
  4. ^ https://journals.iupui.edu/index.php/ias/article/download/6555/6586.
  5. ^ Paul Henri Arnaud; United States. Science and Education Administration; California Academy of Sciences (1978). A Host-parasite Catalog of North American Tachinidae (Diptera). Department of Agriculture, Science and Education Administration. pp. 677–.

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