Microdon
Microdon | |
---|---|
Microdon mutabilis | |
Scientific classification | |
Kingdom: | Animalia |
Phylum: | Arthropoda |
Class: | Insecta |
Order: | Diptera |
Family: | Syrphidae |
Subfamily: | Microdontinae |
Genus: | Microdon Meigen, 1803 |
Type species | |
Musca mutabilis | |
Subgenera and species groups[1] | |
| |
Synonyms[1] | |
Hover flies (family Syrphidae) of the genus Microdon are unusual among the Diptera. Like other members of the subfamily, they are myrmecophiles, meaning they inhabit the nests of ants.
There are 249 species known worldwide, with the greatest diversity being from the tropics; 30 species are known from North America, though it is expected that many of these species will be placed in other genera in time, as Microdon has been used as a catch-all for various unrelated species not placed in other genera.[2][3][needs update]
Appearance[]
Microdon adults look more or less like typical flies. Like some other hoverflies, they are generally robust and very hairy, often closely resembling bees. They are between 8 and 15 mm long. The antennae are rather long, with the last (third) segment nearly as long as, or sometimes significantly longer than, the first segment; the antennae are nearly as long as the fly's face. These flies are covered in black or pale (white or golden) hairs, and are themselves either black or metallic green or blue. The scutellum is with apical calcars and wing vein R4+5 with an appendix. They have simple legs and abdomens.[2]
The real oddity of the genus Microdon is in its larvae and pupae. These are dome-shaped and look like stout little slugs. Their appearance originally led scientists to describe them as mollusks and scale insects.[4] They are slow-moving. Most have the spiracles on a peg-like protuberance extending from the end of their abdomens.
Behaviour[]
Adult Microdon flies do not behave like other syrphid flies; they do not hover around flowers, but instead remain very near the ant colonies which serve as larval hosts.
Larvae may be found very deep in ant colonies. Some species actively feed on ant larvae in the colony,[4] others are speculated to be scavengers[citation needed]. Microdon larvae are more or less restricted in their ant host species. Some Microdon species have only ever been found in the colonies of a single ant species, while others are restricted to related ant species or genera. Because these flies have such cryptic life cycles, biological information on most species is limited.
Species[]
Microdon is divided into six subgenera (including Microdon s.s.), plus five species groups and some unplaced species in "Microdon s.l.".[1]
Subgenus Chymophila[]
Subgenus Dimeraspis[]
Subgenus Megodon[]
Subgenus Microdon s.s.[]
Nearctic:
- Thompson, 1981[3]
- Novak, 1977
- Microdon aurulentus (Fabricius, 1805)
- Bigot, 1883
- = Microdon cockerelli Jones, 1922
- Microdon lanceolatus Adams, 1903
- = Microdon coloradensis Cockerell & Andrews, 1916
- = Microdon modestus Knab, 1917
- = Microdon senilis Knab, 1917
- = Microdon similis Jones, 1917
- Microdon manitobensis Curran, 1924
- Microdon megalogaster Snow, 1892
- = Microdon bombiformis Townsend, 1895
- Microdon tristis Loew, 1864
- = Microdon robusta Telford, 1939
- Townsend, 1895
Neotropical:
- Marinoni, 2004
- Hull, 1942
- Curran, 1940
- Lynch Arribalzaga, 1891
- Hull, 1944
- Curran, 1940
- Reemer, 2014[5]
- (Macquart, 1848)
- Curran, 1925
- Lynch Arribalzaga, 1891
- = Aphritis angustus Macquart, 1848 (nec Macquart, 1846)
- = Microdon angustatus Fluke, 1957 (misspelling)
Oriental:
- Keiser, 1952
- Curran, 1931
- Brunetti, 1923
- Shiraki, 1930
- Brunetti, 1923
- Hull, 1944
- Meijere, 1904
- Wulp, 1892
- Keiser, 1952
Palaearctic:
- Microdon analis (Macquart, 1842)
- = Scutelligera? ammerlandia Spix, 1824
- = Microdon brevicornis Egger, 1862 (nec Loew, 1857)
- = Microdon eggeri Mik, 1897
- = Microdon fuscitarsis Schummel, 1842
- = Microdon latifrons Loew, 1856
- = Buchanania? reticulata Torrez Minguez, 1924
- Coquillett, 1898
- Tian, Huo & Zhang, 2019[6]
- (Linnaeus, 1761)
- = Microdon anthinus Meigen, 1822
- = Stratiomys conica Panzer, 1793
- = Microdon micans Wiedemann in Meigen, 1822
- = Microdon picticornis Mik, 1897
- = Stratiomys pigra Schrank, 1803
- = Musca viridescens Villers, 1789
- Reemer, 2013[1]
- Violovitsh, 1976
- Yano, 1915
- = Microdon jezoensis Matsumura, 1916
- Hironaga & Maruyama, 2004
- Violovitsh, 1976
- Mutin, 1999
- Hironaga & Maruyama, 2004
- Andries, 1912
- Reemer, 2013[1]
- Violovitsh, 1976
- Doczkal & Schmid, 1999
- Hironaga & Maruyama, 2004
- Microdon mutabilis (Linnaeus, 1758)
- = Mulio apiarius Fabricius, 1805
- = Musca apiformis De Geer, 1776
- = Aphritis auropubescens Latreille, 1805
- = Parmula? cocciformis von Heyden, 1825
- = Microdon rhenanus Andries, 1912
- = Microdon scutellatus Schummel, 1842
- Microdon myrmicae Schönrogge, Barr, Wardlaw, Napper, Gardner, Breen, Elmes & Thomas, 2002
- Violovitsh, 1971
- Shiraki, 1930
- Mutin, 2011
- (Schrank, 1776)
- Shiraki, 1930
- Huo, Ren & Zheng, 2007
- Stackelberg, 1926
- Hironaga & Maruyama, 2004
- Reemer, 2013[1]
Subgenus Myiacerapis[]
Subgenus Syrphipogon[]
Microdon s.l. species groups[]
craigheadii-group[]
Nearctic:
- Microdon craigheadii Walton, 1912
erythros-group[]
Afrotropical:
- Bezzi, 1908
- = Microdon erytherus Bezzi, 1921 (misspelling)
- Bezzi, 1915
mirabilis-group[]
Neotropical:
- Bezzi, 1910
- = Microdon arcuata Curran, 1941
tarsalis-group[]
Afrotropical:
- Hervé-Bazin, 1913
- = Microdon bequaerti Curran, 1929
Unplaced species[]
Afrotropical:
- Keiser, 1971
Australian / Oceanian:
- = Microdon pictulipennis Hull, 1944
- Paramonov, 1957
- Ferguson, 1926
Oriental:
References[]
- ^ Jump up to: a b c d e f Reemer, Menno; Ståhls, Gunilla (2013). "Generic revision and species classification of the Microdontinae (Diptera, Syrphidae)". ZooKeys (288): 1–213. doi:10.3897/zookeys.288.4095. PMC 3690914. PMID 23798897.
- ^ Jump up to: a b Cheng, Xin-Yue; Thompson, F. Christian (2008). "A generic conspectus of the Microdontinae (Diptera: Syrphidae) with the description of two new genera from Africa and China" (PDF). Zootaxa. New Zealand: Magnolia Press. 1879: 21–48. doi:10.11646/zootaxa.1879.1.3. ISSN 1175-5334. Retrieved 2009-09-11.
- ^ Jump up to: a b Thompson, F.C (1981). "Revisionary notes on Nearctic Microdon flies (Diptera: Syrphidae)". Proceedings of the Entomological Society of Washington. Washington D.C.: Allen Press. 83: 725–758. ISSN 0013-8797.
- ^ Jump up to: a b Duffield, R.M (1981). "Biology of Microdon fuscipennis (Diptera: Syrphidae) with interpretation of reproductive strategies of Microdon species found north of Mexico". Proceedings of the Entomological Society of Washington. Washington D.C.: Allen Press. 83: 716–724. ISSN 0013-8797.
- ^ Reemer, Menno (2014). "A review of Microdontinae (Diptera: Syrphidae) of Surinam, with a key to the Neotropical genera". Tijdschrift voor Entomologie. 157 (1): 27–57. doi:10.1163/22119434-00002035.
- ^ Tian, Jing; Huo, Ke-Ke; Zhang, Chun-Tian; Ren, Bing-Zhong (2019). "Microdon dentigiganteum sp. nov. and other Microdontinae species (Diptera: Syrphidae) from Northeast China". Zootaxa. 4712 (1): 65–76. doi:10.11646/zootaxa.4712.1.4. PMID 32230696.
- Hoverfly genera
- Myrmecology
- Taxa named by Johann Wilhelm Meigen