Tachiniscidia

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Tachiniscidia
Scientific classification OOjs UI icon edit-ltr.svg
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Insecta
Order: Diptera
Family: Tephritidae
Subfamily: Tachiniscinae
Genus: Tachiniscidia
Type species
Tachiniscidia africana
Malloch, 1931 [1]

Tachiniscidia is a genus of Tephritid or fruit flies in the family Tephritidae. [2] [3] [4] Several species appear like wasps. [5]

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Tephritidae</span> Family of fruit flies

The Tephritidae are one of two fly families referred to as fruit flies, the other family being the Drosophilidae. The family Tephritidae does not include the biological model organisms of the genus Drosophila, which is often called the "common fruit fly". Nearly 5,000 described species of tephritid fruit fly are categorized in almost 500 genera of the Tephritidae. Description, recategorization, and genetic analyses are constantly changing the taxonomy of this family. To distinguish them from the Drosophilidae, the Tephritidae are sometimes called peacock flies, in reference to their elaborate and colorful markings. The name comes from the Greek τεφρος, tephros, meaning "ash grey". They are found in all the biogeographic realms.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Tephritoidea</span> Superfamily of flies

The Tephritoidea are a superfamily of flies. It has over 7,800 species, the majority of them in family Tephritidae.

<i>Ceratitis capitata</i> Species of insect

Ceratitis capitata, commonly known as the Mediterranean fruit fly or medfly, is a yellow-and-brown fly native to sub-Saharan Africa. It has no near relatives in the Western Hemisphere and is considered to be one of the most destructive fruit pests in the world. There have been occasional medfly infestations in California, Florida, and Texas that require extensive eradication efforts to prevent the fly from establishing itself in the United States.

<i>Paracantha</i> Genus of flies

Paracantha is a genus of fruit flies in the family Tephritidae.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Dacinae</span> Subfamily of flies

The Dacinae are a subfamily of the fruit fly family Tephritidae. Its 41 genera are distributed among three tribes:

The Tachiniscinae are a subfamily of the fruit fly family Tephritidae. They are treated by some authorities as a separate family, Tachiniscidae. An undetermined species of the genus Tachiniscidia has been reared from Saturniidae caterpillars in Nigeria.

<i>Bactrocera dorsalis</i> Species of insect

Bactrocera dorsalis, previously known as Dacus dorsalis and commonly referred to as the oriental fruit fly, is a species of tephritid fruit fly that is endemic to Southeast Asia. It is one of the major pest species in the genus Bactrocera with a broad host range of cultivated and wild fruits. Male B. dorsalis respond strongly to methyl eugenol, which is used to monitor and estimate populations, as well as to annihilate males as a form of pest control. They are also important pollinators and visitors of wild orchids, Bulbophyllum cheiri and Bulbophyllum vinaceum in Southeast Asia, which lure the flies using methyl eugenol.

<i>Rhagoletis cerasi</i> Species of fly

Rhagoletis cerasi is a species of fruit fly in the family Tephritidae.

<i>Campiglossa</i> Genus of flies

Campiglossa is a genus of fruit flies in the family Tephritidae. There are at least 190 described species in Campiglossa.

<i>Anastrepha</i> Genus of flies

Anastrepha is the most diverse genus in the American tropics and subtropics. Currently, it comprises more than 300 described species, including nine major pest species, such as the Mexican fruit fly, the South American fruit fly, the West Indian fruit fly, the sapote fruit fly, the Caribbean fruit fly, the American guava fruit fly, and the pumpkin fruit fly, as well as the papaya fruit fly. As some of their names suggest, these pest species are one of the most numerous and damaging groups of insects in their native range, plaguing commercial fruits such as citrus, mango, guava, and papaya.

Hendrella is a genus of tephritid or fruit flies in the family Tephritidae.

Platensina is a genus of tephritid or fruit flies in the family Tephritidae.

<i>Tephritis</i> Genus of flies

Tephritis is a genus of flies. It contains around 170 described species, making it the sixth largest genus in the family Tephritidae. Many more undescribed species are known from specimen collections. Tephritis occur throughout much of the world, but most are Palearctic. They can be found in a wide range of climate types, from hot semidesert to tundra. Most species inhabit the inflorescences of plants from several tribes in the family Asteraceae, and a few species cause galls to form.

<i>Urophora</i> Genus of flies

Urophora is a genus of tephritid or fruit flies in the family Tephritidae.

<i>Anastrepha ludens</i> Species of fly

Anastrepha ludens, the Mexican fruit fly or Mexfly, is a species of fly of the Anastrepha genus in the Tephritidae family. It is closely related to the Caribbean fruit fly Anastrepha suspensa, and the papaya fruit fly Anastrepha curvicauda.

<i>Dioxyna</i> Genus of flies

Dioxyna is a genus of fruit flies in the family Tephritidae. There are about 10 described species in Dioxyna.

Epochrinopsis is a genus of the family Tephritidae, better known as fruit flies.

Ceratitis rosa, the Natal fruit fly or Natal fly, a species from the family Tephritidae of the order Diptera, is a fruit fly. It was described in 1887 from specimens of Delagoa Bay, Mozambique.

<i>Dioxyna picciola</i> Species of fly

Dioxyna picciola is a species of tephritid or fruit flies in the genus Dioxyna of the family Tephritidae. It feeds on a wide variety of Asteraceae.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Terelliini</span> Tribe of flies

Terelliini is a tribe of fruit flies in the family Tephritidae. There are at least six genera and about 104 described species in Terelliini.

References

  1. Malloch, J.R. (1931). "XXXII.— Exotic Muscaridæ ( Diptera ).—XXXII". Annals and Magazine of Natural History. 7 (40): 314–340. doi:10.1080/00222933108673319. ISSN   0374-5481.
  2. "ITIS Standard Report - Error".
  3. "Tachiniscidia - Nomen.at - animals and plants".
  4. "Search".
  5. Aluja, Martin; Norrbom, Allen, eds. (1999-12-20), "Breeding Habits and Sex in Families Closely Related to the Tephritidae: Opportunities for Comparative Studies of the Evolution of Fruit Fly Behavior", Fruit Flies (Tephritidae) (0 ed.), CRC Press, pp. 41–56, doi:10.1201/9781420074468-7, ISBN   978-0-429-12467-9 , retrieved 2022-05-31