Stylogaster
{{Short description|Genus of flies}}
{{Automatic taxobox
| image = Stylogaster (from PZSL1850PlateAnnulosa19).png
| image_caption = Stylogaster leonum
| taxon = Stylogaster
| authority = Macquart, 1835
| subdivision_ranks = Species
| subdivision = Many
}}
File:Stylogaster on self heal.jpg flower]]
The conopid genus Stylogaster is a group of unusual flies. It is the only genus in the subfamily Stylogastrinae, which some authorities have historically treated as a separate family Stylogastridae (or Stylogasteridae).
Biology
Stylogastrines are obligate associates of cockroaches, Orthoptera, some Diptera and ants.{{cite journal | last = Couri | first = Marcia S. |author2=Pont, Adrian C. | year = 2006 | title = Eggs of Stylogaster Macquart (Diptera: Conopidae) on Madagascan muscids (Diptera: Muscidae) | journal = Proceedings of the California Academy of Sciences | volume = 57 | issue = 16 | series = 4 |pages=473–478 | publisher = California Academy of Sciences | url = http://researcharchive.calacademy.org/research/scipubs/pdfs/v57/proccas_v57_n16.pdf }}Couri, M.S., Pont, A.C. & Kirk-Spriggs, A.H. 2013. New Muscidae (Diptera) hosts of Stylogaster Macquart (Diptera: Conopidae) from the Afrotropical Region. African Invertebrates 54 (2): 401–408.{{usurped|1=[https://web.archive.org/web/20131113235553/http://africaninvertebrates.org/ojs/index.php/AI/article/view/286]}}
These flies typically use army ants' raiding columns to flush out their prey, ground-dwelling Orthoptera and/or roaches. Stylogastrines are somewhat atypical for conopids, in that the egg itself is shaped somewhat like a harpoon, with a rigid barbed tip, and the egg is forcibly jabbed into the host. The female of some species waits for army ants to flush out a target, then she dives in and jabs an egg into the host. The Stylogaster larvae then develop as endoparasitoids. This is a remarkably high-risk behavior, in that many hosts are captured and killed by the ants after a female has laid an egg in it, so many eggs are lost.
Adults can occasionally be found at flowers, feeding on nectar with their proboscis, which is longer than the body when unfolded. The female's abdomen is also folded under the body, and is the derivation of the generic name (Stylogaster = "needle-tail").
Distribution
Stylogastrines can be found from the Neotropics to Canada, South America, Africa south of the Sahara, and parts of Southern Asia, including the Philippines and New Guinea.
Selected species
- Stylogaster biannulata (Say, 1823)
- Stylogaster camrasi Stuckenberg, 1963
- Stylogaster ctenitarsa Camras & Parrillo, 1996{{cite journal | last = Camras | first = Sydney |author2=Parrillo, Philip P. | year = 1996 | title = New Stylogaster and ranges of Conopidae (Diptera) from the Brazilian and Bolivian Amazonia | journal = Acta Amazonica | volume = 25 | issue = 3/4 | pages = 221–234 | publisher = Instituto Nacional de Pesquisas da Amazônia | location = Manaus, Brasil | doi = 10.1590/1809-43921995253234 | issn = 0044-5967 | url = http://acta.inpa.gov.br/fasciculos/25-4/PDF/v25n4a07.pdf }}
- Stylogaster malgachensis Camras, 1962
- Stylogaster neglecta Williston, 1883
- Stylogaster pauliani Curran, 1962
- Stylogaster rafaeli Camras & Parrillo, 1996
- Stylogaster seguyi Camras, 1962
- Stylogaster seyrigi Séguy, 1932
- Stylogaster sinaloae Camras, 1989
- Stylogaster smithiana Lopes, 1971
- Stylogaster souzai Monteiro, 1960
- Stylogaster souzalopesi Camras, 1990
{{incomplete list|date=February 2011}}
References
{{Reflist}}
Stuke, J.-H. 2012. A revision of Afrotropical species of Stylogaster Macquart (Diptera: Conopidae), with descriptions of twenty-one new species and an identification key. African Invertebrates 53 (1): 267–354. {{usurped|1=[https://web.archive.org/web/20120723052113/http://www.africaninvertebrates.org.za/Stuke_2012_53_1_563.aspx]}}
External links
- [http://www.boldsystems.org/index.php/TaxBrowser_Taxonpage?taxid=271375 Images] at Consortium for the Barcode of Life.
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