Xylomya terminalis | |
---|---|
Scientific classification | |
Kingdom: | Animalia |
Phylum: | Arthropoda |
Class: | Insecta |
Order: | Diptera |
Family: | Xylomyidae |
Genus: | Xylomya |
Species: | X. terminalis |
Binomial name | |
Xylomya terminalis Vasey, 1977 [1] | |
Xylomya terminalis is a species of fly in the family Xylomyidae. [2]
Sphaeroceridae are a family of true flies in the order Diptera, often called small dung flies, lesser dung flies or lesser corpse flies due to their saprophagous habits. They belong to the typical fly suborder Brachycera as can be seen by their short antennae, and more precisely they are members of the section Schizophora. There are over 1,300 species and about 125 genera accepted as valid today, but new taxa are still being described.
The soldier flies are a family of flies. The family contains over 2,700 species in over 380 extant genera worldwide. Adults are found near larval habitats, which are found in a wide array of locations, mostly in wetlands, damp places in soil, sod, under bark, in animal excrement, and in decaying organic matter. The Stratiomyinae are a different subgroup that tends to have an affinity to aquatic environments. They are diverse in size and shape, though they commonly are partly or wholly metallic green, or somewhat wasplike mimics, marked with black and yellow or green and sometimes metallic. They are often rather inactive flies which typically rest with their wings placed one above the other over the abdomen.
The Brachyceran family Vermileonidae is a small family of uncertain affinities and unusual biology. It includes fewer than 80 described species, most of them rare and with restricted distribution, in 10 genera. Historically the vermileonids had been regarded as belonging to the family Rhagionidae, possibly in a subfamily Vermileoninae. Their biology and morphology are so markedly distinct from the main Rhagionidae sensu stricto however, that the placement as a separate family has been widely accepted.
Xylomyidae is a family of flies known commonly as the wood soldier flies. They are xylophagous and are associated with dead or dying wood.
Canacidae, incorrectly Canaceidae, or beach flies, surf or surge flies, is a family of Diptera. There are 113 species in 12 genera. The family now includes Tethininae as a subfamily.
Apsilocephalidae is a family of flies in the superfamily Asiloidea. It was historically treated as a subfamily within Therevidae, but placed in a separate family in 1991, and subsequently recognized as more distantly related. The family contains three extant genera and at least five extinct genera described from the fossil record.
Actina chalybea is a species of 'soldier flies' belonging to the family Stratiomyidae subfamily Beridinae.
Oxycera analis, the dark-winged soldier, is a species of soldier fly.
Brian Roy Stuckenberg (1930–2009) was a South African entomologist who specialised in Diptera.
Solva is a fly genus in the family Xylomyidae, the "wood soldier flies".
Xylomya is a fly genus in the family Xylomyidae, the "wood soldier flies".
Xylomya tenthredinoides is a species of fly in the family Xylomyidae.
Xylomya americana is a species of fly in the family Xylomyidae.
Xylomya parens is a species of fly in the family Xylomyidae.
Solva pallipes is a species of fly in the family Xylomyidae. It is found throughout most of North America.
Xylomya pallidifemur is a species of fly in the family Xylomyidae.
Xylomya simillima is a species of fly in the family Xylomyidae.
Arthropeina fulva is a species of fly in the family Xylomyidae, the "wood soldier flies".
Arthropeina is a fly genus in the family Xylomyidae, the "wood soldier flies".
Coenomyiodes edwardsi is a species of Fly in the family Xylomyidae, the "wood soldier flies".