Phasia hemiptera

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Phasia hemiptera
Phasia hemiptera bl.JPG
Phasia hemiptera. Male
Scientific classification
Kingdom:
Animalia
Phylum:
Arthropoda
Class:
Insecta
Order:
Diptera
Family:
Subfamily:
Tribe:
Genus:
Species:
P. hemiptera
Binomial name
Phasia hemiptera
(Fabricius, 1794)
Synonyms
List
  • Alophora daimio Matsumura, 1916
  • Alophora eximia Girschner, 1887
  • Alophora obscura Girschner, 1887
  • Alophora obscuripennis Meigen, 1838
  • Alophora orthoptera Rondani, 1861
  • Alophora vittata Girschner, 1887
  • Musca tristis Herbst, 1787
  • Phasia affinis (Fabricius, 1794)
  • Phasia subcoleoptrata (Fabricius, 1775) non (Linnaeus, 1767)
  • Syrphus affinis Fabricius, 1794
  • Syrphus affinis Fabricius, 1794
  • Syrphus hemipterus Fabricius, 1794
  • Syrphus subcoleoptratus Fabricius, 1775 non Linnaeus, 1767

Phasia hemiptera is a fly belonging to the family tachinid.[1]

Distribution[]

This species can be found throughout Northern and Southern Europe, to the east it reaches as far as Russia, Siberia and Japan.[2][3]

Description[]

Female

Phasia hemiptera can reach a body length of 10–11 millimetres (0.39–0.43 in). In these flies the thorax is usually dark brown, the middle of the very flattened abdomen is dark brown or black, while the sides are hairy orange-brown. The hind legs are generally reddish yellow. These flies are strongly sexually dimorphic. The males are more colourful and have broad curved patterned wings with markings of various colors. Sometimes wings show an iridescent blue-black band starting from the front edge, but they may also be or completely dark. Females have narrower and more transparent wings without markings, also their bodies are narrower.[4]

Biology[]

Adults are visible from April to September feeding on pollen of many flowering plants, especially on umbellifers Apiaceae and Asteraceae. There are two generations per year, as this species is bivoltine. The first generation appears from mid-April to mid-June, the second from mid-July to the end of September. Like most tachinid flies, the female lays her eggs on other insects, the larvae then develop inside the living host, devouring it and eventually killing it (case of endoparasitism). Its main hosts are the forest bug Pentatoma rufipes in the spring, and the green shield bug Palomena prasina in the autumn. The pupation occurs after about two weeks. The adults hatch after two and a half to four weeks, with the males appearing earlier than the females. Males live for a maximum of 31 days, females only 21.[4][5][6]

Female on flowers (Video, 1m 15s)

Bibliography[]

  • Erika Lutovinas et al.: "A Supplement to the Diptera Fauna of Lithuania" Acta Zoologica Lituanica, 2003, Vol. 13, Num. 4; ISSN 1648-6919
  • H.-P. Tschorsnig & B. Hertnig: Die Raupenfliegen (Diptera: Tachinidae) Mitteleuropas: Bestimmungstabellen und Angaben zur Ökologie und Verbreitung der einzelnen Arten. Stuttgarter Beiträge zur Naturkunde, Serie A (Biologie) 506, 1994: 170 pp
  • Michael Chinery, Insectes de France et d'Europe occidentale, Paris, Flammarion, 2012, 320 p. (ISBN 978-2-0812-8823-2), p. 212-213.
  • T.O. Markova New Host and Distribution Data of Tachnid Flies of Subfamils Phasiinae in Siberia and Russian Far East Far Eastern Entomologist Number 75: 1–8 ISSN 1026-051X July 1999

References[]

  1. ^ Biolib
  2. ^ Bisby F.A., Roskov Y.R., Orrell T.M., Nicolson D., Paglinawan L.E., Bailly N., Kirk P.M., Bourgoin T., Baillargeon G., Ouvrard D. Catalogue oe life.
  3. ^ Fauna europaea
  4. ^ a b Øivind Gammelmo & Bjørn Sagvolden: The tachinid fly Phasia hemiptera in Norway. Norw. J. Entomol. 54, May 2007: S. 51–54 (online: PDF)
  5. ^ Belshaw, Robert (1993). "Tachinid Flies Diptera Tachinidae". Royal Entomological Society Handbooks. Royal Entomological Society of London. 10 (4ai): 170.
  6. ^ van Emden, F.I. (1954). "Ditera Cyclorrhapha Calyptrata (I) Section (a) Tachinidae & Calliphoridae". Royal Entomological Society Handbooks. Royal Entomological Society of London. 10 (4a): 133.

External links[]


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