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Dolichopodidae

Dolichopodidae, the long-legged flies, are a large, cosmopolitan family of true flies with more than 7,000 described species in about 230 genera. The genus Dolichopus is the most speciose, with some 600 species.

Dolichopodidae generally are small flies with large, prominent eyes and a metallic cast to their appearance, though there is considerable variation among the species. Most have long legs, though some do not. In many species, the males have unusually large genitalia which are taxonomically useful in identifying species. Most adults are predatory on other small animals, though some may scavenge or act as kleptoparasites of spiders or other predators.

An expanded concept of the family (Dolichopodidae sensu lato) includes the subfamilies Parathalassiinae and Microphorinae. The latter of these was formerly placed in the Empididae, and was at one time considered a separate family (Microphoridae).[5] However, some authors propose instead that Dolichopodidae s.l. should be known as the epifamily Dolichopodoidae, containing Dolichopodidae, Microphoridae (restored as a family) and the subfamily Parathalassiinae.[6]

Austrosciapus connexus—a typical example of green Dolichopodidae

Description

For clarification of technical terms see Morphology of Diptera

Dolichopodidae are a family of flies ranging in size from minute to medium-sized (1mm to 9mm). They have characteristically long and slender legs, though their leg length is not as striking as in families such as the Tipulidae. Their posture often is stilt-like standing high on their legs, with the body almost erect. In colour most species have a green-to-blue metallic lustre, but various other species are dull yellow, brown or black.

The frons in both sexes is broad. The eyes are separated on the frons of males, except in some species of Diaphorus and Chrysotus in which eyes touch above the antennal insertion.[7] On the heads of most species the ocellar bristles and outer vertical bristles are well developed. The face of some species is entire; in others it is divided into two sections: the epistoma and the clypeus. The largest antennal segment is the third; in most species it bears a long arista, which is apical in some species, dorsal in others. In most species the mouthparts are short and have a wide aperture as an adaptation for sucking small prey.

The legs are gracile and the tibiae usually bear long bristles. In some genera the legs are raptorial. In some species the tibiae of the males have modifications.

 
Dolichopodidae wing veins. This is one major type, with M1 bent and M2 present, though often incomplete. In another type, M2 is absent and M1 more or less straight
 
Photograph of a Dolichopodidae wing, showing the R4+5 vein[8]

The wings of most species are clear or tinged, but some species have wings that are patterned in strong colours or with distinct spots. There are three radial veins (R1, R2+3, R4+5). The medial vein M1+2 is simple or rarely furcate, as in the genus Sciapus. The anterior cross-vein is in the basal part of the wing. The posterior basal wing cell and the discoidal wing cell are always fused. The anal cell of the wing is always small. There are two veins branching from cross-vein DM-Cu in the direction of the wing margin; the upper one in some species curves strongly or forks into M1 and M2. R4+5 are simple, and costa ends near or at M1/M1+2, or continues along the wing margin. The point of origin of Rs is at or very close to h.[8]

 
Photograph of genetalia of a male Empis vitripennis. Note the asymmetrical tergite 8 on the left side of the epiandrium[8]
 
Condylostylus patibulatus

The abdomen is elongate-conical or flat. The genitalia of the male often are free and borne on a petiole, with tergite 8 being asymmetrical, lying on the left side of the epandrium. They are also rotated dextrally between 90° and 180°, including segment 8 and sometimes segment 7, which makes them distinguishable from the family Hybotidae.[8] Males of most species have well developed gonopods of two or three lobes on the distal margin of the epandrium. The gonopods may fuse with the epandrium in genera such as Hydrophorus, Thrypticus and Argyra, or there may be a suture, as in the genera Porphyrops, Xiphandrium and Rhaphium. In some genera, such as Hypophyllus and Tachytrechus, the surstyli are well-developed as secondary outgrowths of the epandrium. In genera such as Tachytrechus, there are two pairs of surstyli—one proximal and one distal. The hypandrium in most species is a small sclerite, which may be asymmetrical as in the genera Porphyrops and Tachytrechus. Males of many species have highly developed cerci. Development of the phallus varies considerably between genera.

 
Dolichopodidae, cf. genus Medetera, typical of brown species inhabiting bark of damaged trees. Characteristic head-up, stilt-legged posture

Biology

Adults of the Dolichopodidae live largely in grassy places and shrubbery. The flies occur in a wide range of habitats, near water or in meadows, woodland edges and in gardens. Some groups are confined to wet places including sands on the banks of water bodies; examples include genera such as Porphyrops, Tachytrechus, Campsicnemus, and Teuchophorus. No truly aquatic species have been described, but many are semi-aquatic and live in or near water margins. A small number of species develop on the shores of saline inland bodies of water or the intertidal zone of seashores. An example of a species that develop close to water is P. nobilitatus, they can be found congregating around lakes and ponds. Other groups are found on trunks of trees damaged by bark beetles. Adults often are seen in a characteristic predatory posture standing high on their legs on the ground or on vegetation, tree trunks or rocks, and some species walk about on the surface of still water.

The adults are predators, feeding on small invertebrates including Collembola, aphids, and the larvae of Oligochaeta. Species of the genus Dolichopus commonly prey on the larvae of mosquitoes.

The larvae occupy a wide range of habitats. Many are predators of small invertebrates and generally live in moist environments such as soil, moist sand, or rotting organic matter. Genera such as Medetera live as predators under tree bark or in the tunnels of bark beetles. Larvae of the genus Thrypticus are unusual among Dolichopodidae, in that they are phytophagous and live in the stems of reeds and other monocots near water.[citation needed]

Behaviour

Foraging and nuptial behaviour of Poecilobothrus nobilitatus (video, 2m 58s)

Many studies have shown that Dolichopodidae give visual, rather than chemical or other signals during courtship.[9] The males of many species exhibit elaborate secondary sexual characters assumed to aid in species recognition during courtship. These characters include flaglike flattening of the arista and tarsi, strongly modified setae and projections of the tarsi, the prolongation and deformation of podomeres, orientated silvery pruinosity, and maculation or modification of the wings.

Evolution and systematics

Kleptoparasitic Microphor holosericeus (Microphorinae) feeding on captured prey of a spider

Dolichopodids are well represented in amber deposits throughout the world and the group has clearly been well distributed since the Cretaceous at the latest. Together with the Empididae they are the most advanced members of the Empidoidea. They represent the bulk of Empidoidea diversity, and include more than two-thirds of the known species in their superfamily.

Taxonomic interrelationships within the Dolichopodidae, and their delimitation from the Empididae, are not yet satisfactorily resolved. It is likely that many of the subfamilies currently within the Dolichopodidae will undergo drastic revision.[10]

Based on the most recent phylogenetic studies, the relationship between Dolichopodidae and other members of Empidoidea is as follows. The placement of Dolichopodidae is emphasized in bold formatting.

Atelestidae

Atelestinae

Nemedininae

Hybotidae

Bicellariinae

Hybotinae

Oedaleinae

Ocydromiinae

Trichininae

Tachydromiinae

Tachydromiini

Symballaphthalmini

Drapetini

Dolichopodidae

Ragadidae

Iteaphilinae

Ragadinae

Empididae

Clinocerinae

Brachystomatinae

Brachystomatini

Ceratomerini

Trichopezini

Empidinae

Chelipodini

Empidini

Hemerodromiini

Hilarini

Identification

  • Negrobov, P. and Stackelberg, A. A. Family Dolichopodidae in Bei-Bienko, G. Ya, 1988 Keys to the insects of the European Part of the USSR Volume 5 (Diptera) Part 2 English edition. Keys to Palaearctic species but now needs revision.
  • Parent, O., 1938 Diptères Dolichopodidae. Paris: Éditions Faune de France 35.

Species lists

  • Palaearctic species list
  • Nearctic species list
  • Australasian and Oceanian species list
  • Japan species list 2019-05-27 at the Wayback Machine

See also

 
Sciapus sp.

Footnotes

  1. ^ Grootaert, P; Meuffels, H.J.G. (1997). "Dolichopodidae (Diptera) from Papua New Guinea. XV. Scepastopyga gen. nov. and the establishment of a new subfamily, the Achalcinae". J. Nat. Hist. 31 (10): 1587–1600. doi:10.1080/00222939700770841.
  2. ^ a b Yang, D.; Zhu, Y.; Wang, M.; Zhang, L. (2006). World Catalog of Dolichopodidae (Insecta: Diptera). Beijing: China Agricultural University Press. pp. 1–704. ISBN 9787811171020.
  3. ^ Bickel, D. J. (1987). "Babindellinae, a new subfamily of Dolichopodidae (Diptera) from Australia, with a discussion of symmetry in the dipteran male postabdomen". Entomologica Scandinavica. 18: 97–103. doi:10.1163/187631287X00061. ISSN 1399-560X.
  4. ^ Grichanov, I.Ya. (2018). "A new subfamily of Dolichopodidae (Diptera) for Tenuopus Curran, 1924 with description of new species from Tropical Africa" (PDF). Far Eastern Entomologist. 365: 1–25. doi:10.25221/fee.365.1.
  5. ^ Sinclair, Bradley J.; Cumming, Jeffrey M. (2006). The morphology, higher-level phylogeny and classification of the Empidoidea (Diptera) (PDF). Zootaxa. Vol. 1180. pp. 1–172. doi:10.11646/zootaxa.1180.1.1. ISBN 978-1-877407-80-2. Retrieved 20 December 2011.
  6. ^ Grichanov, I. Ya. (2011). "An illustrated synopsis and keys to afrotropical genera of the epifamily Dolichopodoidae (Diptera: Empidoidea)". Priamus Supplement (24): 1–98.
  7. ^ Robinson, H. and JR Vockeroth. Dolichopodidae. JF McAlpine Manual of Nearctic Diptera vol. 1 1981. 625-639. Research Branch Agriculture Canada Monograph 27 Ottawa.
  8. ^ a b c d Wahlberg, Emma; Johanson, Kjell Arne (2018). "Molecular phylogenetics reveals novel relationships within Empidoidea (Diptera)". Systematic Entomology. 43 (4): 619–636. doi:10.1111/syen.12297. ISSN 1365-3113.
  9. ^ E.g. Zimmer et al. (2003), Irwin (2007), Vikhrev (2007)
  10. ^ Sinclair and Cumming (2006), Moulton and Wiegmann (2007)

References

  • Moulton, J.K.; Wiegmann, B.M. (2007). "The phylogenetic relationships of flies in the superfamily Empidoidea (Insecta: Diptera)". Mol. Phylogenet. Evol. 43 (3): 701–713. doi:10.1016/j.ympev.2007.02.029. PMID 17468014.
  • Irwin, Tony (2007): Neurigona courtship. Version of 2007-JUN-18. Retrieved 2008-JUL-30.
  • Sinclair, B.J.; Cumming, J.M. (2006). "The morphology, higher-level phylogeny and classification of the Empidoidea (Diptera)" (PDF). Zootaxa. 1180: 1–172. doi:10.11646/zootaxa.1180.1.1. ISBN 1-877407-80-1.
  • Vikhrev, Nikita (2007): Observations on Medetera jacula (Fallén, 1823). Version of 2007-JAN-22. Retrieved 2008-JUL-30.
  • Wahlberg, E.; Johanson, K.A. (2018). "Molecular phylogenetics reveals novel relationships within Empidoidea (Diptera)". Systematic Entomology. 43 (4): 619–636. doi:10.1111/syen.12297.
  • Zimmer, Martin; Diestelhorst, Olaf; Lunau, Klaus (2003). "Courtship in long-legged flies (Diptera: Dolichopodidae): function and evolution of signals". Behavioral Ecology. 14 (4): 526–530. doi:10.1093/beheco/arg028.

External links

  • Bug Guide images
  • Diptera.info images
  • Family Dolichopodidae at EOL images
  • Dolichopodidae in Italian
  • Igor Grichanov Dolichopodidae home page
  • Family description
  • University of Lille Multi-imaged site. Whole specimens and parts.
  • Video of sciapodine of Texas

dolichopodidae, long, legged, flies, large, cosmopolitan, family, true, flies, with, more, than, described, species, about, genera, genus, dolichopus, most, speciose, with, some, species, temporal, range, cretaceous, recent, preꞒ, nchrysosoma, scientific, clas. Dolichopodidae the long legged flies are a large cosmopolitan family of true flies with more than 7 000 described species in about 230 genera The genus Dolichopus is the most speciose with some 600 species DolichopodidaeTemporal range Cretaceous Recent PreꞒ Ꞓ O S D C P T J K Pg NChrysosoma sp Scientific classificationKingdom AnimaliaPhylum ArthropodaClass InsectaOrder DipteraInfraorder AsilomorphaSuperfamily EmpidoideaFamily DolichopodidaeLatreille 1809Subfamiliessensu stricto Achalcinae 1 Antyxinae 2 Babindellinae 3 Diaphorinae Dolichopodinae Enliniinae Eodolichopoditinae Hydrophorinae Kowmunginae 2 Medeterinae Neurigoninae Peloropeodinae Plagioneurinae Rhaphiinae Sciapodinae Stolidosomatinae Sympycninae Tenuopodinae 4 Xanthochlorinaesensu lato Microphorinae ParathalassiinaeDiversityAbout 230 genera more than 7 000 speciesSynonymsDolichopidaeDolichopodidae generally are small flies with large prominent eyes and a metallic cast to their appearance though there is considerable variation among the species Most have long legs though some do not In many species the males have unusually large genitalia which are taxonomically useful in identifying species Most adults are predatory on other small animals though some may scavenge or act as kleptoparasites of spiders or other predators An expanded concept of the family Dolichopodidae sensu lato includes the subfamilies Parathalassiinae and Microphorinae The latter of these was formerly placed in the Empididae and was at one time considered a separate family Microphoridae 5 However some authors propose instead that Dolichopodidae s l should be known as the epifamily Dolichopodoidae containing Dolichopodidae Microphoridae restored as a family and the subfamily Parathalassiinae 6 Austrosciapus connexus a typical example of green Dolichopodidae Contents 1 Description 2 Biology 3 Behaviour 4 Evolution and systematics 5 Identification 6 Species lists 7 See also 8 Footnotes 9 References 10 External linksDescription EditFor clarification of technical terms see Morphology of DipteraDolichopodidae are a family of flies ranging in size from minute to medium sized 1mm to 9mm They have characteristically long and slender legs though their leg length is not as striking as in families such as the Tipulidae Their posture often is stilt like standing high on their legs with the body almost erect In colour most species have a green to blue metallic lustre but various other species are dull yellow brown or black The frons in both sexes is broad The eyes are separated on the frons of males except in some species of Diaphorus and Chrysotus in which eyes touch above the antennal insertion 7 On the heads of most species the ocellar bristles and outer vertical bristles are well developed The face of some species is entire in others it is divided into two sections the epistoma and the clypeus The largest antennal segment is the third in most species it bears a long arista which is apical in some species dorsal in others In most species the mouthparts are short and have a wide aperture as an adaptation for sucking small prey The legs are gracile and the tibiae usually bear long bristles In some genera the legs are raptorial In some species the tibiae of the males have modifications Dolichopodidae wing veins This is one major type with M1 bent and M2 present though often incomplete In another type M2 is absent and M1 more or less straight Photograph of a Dolichopodidae wing showing the R4 5 vein 8 The wings of most species are clear or tinged but some species have wings that are patterned in strong colours or with distinct spots There are three radial veins R1 R2 3 R4 5 The medial vein M1 2 is simple or rarely furcate as in the genus Sciapus The anterior cross vein is in the basal part of the wing The posterior basal wing cell and the discoidal wing cell are always fused The anal cell of the wing is always small There are two veins branching from cross vein DM Cu in the direction of the wing margin the upper one in some species curves strongly or forks into M1 and M2 R4 5 are simple and costa ends near or at M1 M1 2 or continues along the wing margin The point of origin of Rs is at or very close to h 8 Photograph of genetalia of a male Empis vitripennis Note the asymmetrical tergite 8 on the left side of the epiandrium 8 Condylostylus patibulatus The abdomen is elongate conical or flat The genitalia of the male often are free and borne on a petiole with tergite 8 being asymmetrical lying on the left side of the epandrium They are also rotated dextrally between 90 and 180 including segment 8 and sometimes segment 7 which makes them distinguishable from the family Hybotidae 8 Males of most species have well developed gonopods of two or three lobes on the distal margin of the epandrium The gonopods may fuse with the epandrium in genera such as Hydrophorus Thrypticus and Argyra or there may be a suture as in the genera Porphyrops Xiphandrium and Rhaphium In some genera such as Hypophyllus and Tachytrechus the surstyli are well developed as secondary outgrowths of the epandrium In genera such as Tachytrechus there are two pairs of surstyli one proximal and one distal The hypandrium in most species is a small sclerite which may be asymmetrical as in the genera Porphyrops and Tachytrechus Males of many species have highly developed cerci Development of the phallus varies considerably between genera Dolichopodidae cf genus Medetera typical of brown species inhabiting bark of damaged trees Characteristic head up stilt legged postureBiology EditAdults of the Dolichopodidae live largely in grassy places and shrubbery The flies occur in a wide range of habitats near water or in meadows woodland edges and in gardens Some groups are confined to wet places including sands on the banks of water bodies examples include genera such as Porphyrops Tachytrechus Campsicnemus and Teuchophorus No truly aquatic species have been described but many are semi aquatic and live in or near water margins A small number of species develop on the shores of saline inland bodies of water or the intertidal zone of seashores An example of a species that develop close to water is P nobilitatus they can be found congregating around lakes and ponds Other groups are found on trunks of trees damaged by bark beetles Adults often are seen in a characteristic predatory posture standing high on their legs on the ground or on vegetation tree trunks or rocks and some species walk about on the surface of still water The adults are predators feeding on small invertebrates including Collembola aphids and the larvae of Oligochaeta Species of the genus Dolichopus commonly prey on the larvae of mosquitoes The larvae occupy a wide range of habitats Many are predators of small invertebrates and generally live in moist environments such as soil moist sand or rotting organic matter Genera such as Medetera live as predators under tree bark or in the tunnels of bark beetles Larvae of the genus Thrypticus are unusual among Dolichopodidae in that they are phytophagous and live in the stems of reeds and other monocots near water citation needed Behaviour Edit source source source source source source source source source source Foraging and nuptial behaviour of Poecilobothrus nobilitatus video 2m 58s Many studies have shown that Dolichopodidae give visual rather than chemical or other signals during courtship 9 The males of many species exhibit elaborate secondary sexual characters assumed to aid in species recognition during courtship These characters include flaglike flattening of the arista and tarsi strongly modified setae and projections of the tarsi the prolongation and deformation of podomeres orientated silvery pruinosity and maculation or modification of the wings Evolution and systematics Edit source source source source source source source source source source source source Kleptoparasitic Microphor holosericeus Microphorinae feeding on captured prey of a spider Dolichopodids are well represented in amber deposits throughout the world and the group has clearly been well distributed since the Cretaceous at the latest Together with the Empididae they are the most advanced members of the Empidoidea They represent the bulk of Empidoidea diversity and include more than two thirds of the known species in their superfamily Taxonomic interrelationships within the Dolichopodidae and their delimitation from the Empididae are not yet satisfactorily resolved It is likely that many of the subfamilies currently within the Dolichopodidae will undergo drastic revision 10 Based on the most recent phylogenetic studies the relationship between Dolichopodidae and other members of Empidoidea is as follows The placement of Dolichopodidae is emphasized in bold formatting Atelestidae AtelestinaeNemedininaeHybotidae BicellariinaeHybotinaeOedaleinaeOcydromiinaeTrichininaeTachydromiinae TachydromiiniSymballaphthalminiDrapetiniDolichopodidaeRagadidae IteaphilinaeRagadinaeEmpididae ClinocerinaeBrachystomatinae BrachystomatiniCeratomeriniTrichopeziniEmpidinae ChelipodiniEmpidiniHemerodromiiniHilarini Dolichopus ungulatusIdentification EditNegrobov P and Stackelberg A A Family Dolichopodidae in Bei Bienko G Ya 1988 Keys to the insects of the European Part of the USSR Volume 5 Diptera Part 2 English edition Keys to Palaearctic species but now needs revision Parent O 1938 Dipteres Dolichopodidae Paris Editions Faune de France 35 virtuelle numeriqueSpecies lists EditPalaearctic species list Nearctic species list Australasian and Oceanian species list Japan species list Archived 2019 05 27 at the Wayback MachineSee also EditList of dolichopodid genera Sciapus sp Footnotes Edit Grootaert P Meuffels H J G 1997 Dolichopodidae Diptera from Papua New Guinea XV Scepastopyga gen nov and the establishment of a new subfamily the Achalcinae J Nat Hist 31 10 1587 1600 doi 10 1080 00222939700770841 a b Yang D Zhu Y Wang M Zhang L 2006 World Catalog of Dolichopodidae Insecta Diptera Beijing China Agricultural University Press pp 1 704 ISBN 9787811171020 Bickel D J 1987 Babindellinae a new subfamily of Dolichopodidae Diptera from Australia with a discussion of symmetry in the dipteran male postabdomen Entomologica Scandinavica 18 97 103 doi 10 1163 187631287X00061 ISSN 1399 560X Grichanov I Ya 2018 A new subfamily of Dolichopodidae Diptera for Tenuopus Curran 1924 with description of new species from Tropical Africa PDF Far Eastern Entomologist 365 1 25 doi 10 25221 fee 365 1 Sinclair Bradley J Cumming Jeffrey M 2006 The morphology higher level phylogeny and classification of the Empidoidea Diptera PDF Zootaxa Vol 1180 pp 1 172 doi 10 11646 zootaxa 1180 1 1 ISBN 978 1 877407 80 2 Retrieved 20 December 2011 Grichanov I Ya 2011 An illustrated synopsis and keys to afrotropical genera of the epifamily Dolichopodoidae Diptera Empidoidea Priamus Supplement 24 1 98 Robinson H and JR Vockeroth Dolichopodidae JF McAlpine Manual of Nearctic Diptera vol 1 1981 625 639 Research Branch Agriculture Canada Monograph 27 Ottawa a b c d Wahlberg Emma Johanson Kjell Arne 2018 Molecular phylogenetics reveals novel relationships within Empidoidea Diptera Systematic Entomology 43 4 619 636 doi 10 1111 syen 12297 ISSN 1365 3113 E g Zimmer et al 2003 Irwin 2007 Vikhrev 2007 Sinclair and Cumming 2006 Moulton and Wiegmann 2007 References EditMoulton J K Wiegmann B M 2007 The phylogenetic relationships of flies in the superfamily Empidoidea Insecta Diptera Mol Phylogenet Evol 43 3 701 713 doi 10 1016 j ympev 2007 02 029 PMID 17468014 Irwin Tony 2007 Neurigona courtship Version of 2007 JUN 18 Retrieved 2008 JUL 30 Sinclair B J Cumming J M 2006 The morphology higher level phylogeny and classification of the Empidoidea Diptera PDF Zootaxa 1180 1 172 doi 10 11646 zootaxa 1180 1 1 ISBN 1 877407 80 1 Vikhrev Nikita 2007 Observations on Medetera jacula Fallen 1823 Version of 2007 JAN 22 Retrieved 2008 JUL 30 Wahlberg E Johanson K A 2018 Molecular phylogenetics reveals novel relationships within Empidoidea Diptera Systematic Entomology 43 4 619 636 doi 10 1111 syen 12297 Zimmer Martin Diestelhorst Olaf Lunau Klaus 2003 Courtship in long legged flies Diptera Dolichopodidae function and evolution of signals Behavioral Ecology 14 4 526 530 doi 10 1093 beheco arg028 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Dolichopodidae Bug Guide images Diptera info images Family Dolichopodidae at EOL images Dolichopodidae in Italian Igor Grichanov Dolichopodidae home page Family description Family description University of Lille Multi imaged site Whole specimens and parts Video of sciapodine of Texas Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Dolichopodidae amp oldid 1118329980, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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