Prolepsis is an insect genus of mainly neotropical Diptera in the family Asilidae or robber flies.
Prolepsis | |
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Female of Prolepsis lucifer photographed in Reserva Natural Parque San Martin, Cordoba, Argentina | |
Scientific classification | |
Domain: | Eukaryota |
Kingdom: | Animalia |
Phylum: | Arthropoda |
Class: | Insecta |
Order: | Diptera |
Family: | Asilidae |
Subfamily: | Stenopogoninae |
Genus: | Prolepsis Walker, [1851] |
Type species | |
Prolepsis lucifer (Wiedemann, 1828)
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Species | |
about 20, see text | |
Synonyms | |
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Description
editMedium-sized robber flies (14–25 mm) with antennae that have a relatively long third article. Abdomen is rather plump compared to many other asilids. Wings usually extending past the abdomen and often tinted or pigmented along most of their length. Coloration predominantly black to brown or reddish; often mimicking spider wasps. The two sexes can have distinctly different colors. Ventral side of the femur of the middle leg pair often with a thick patch of short and stout spines.[1]
Biology
editAs is typical for robber flies, adults of Prolepsis species are ambush predators, taking off from a resting position on the ground or on branches to intercept other flying insects in mid-air. Prey are probably taken from a wide variety of insect orders: Robert Lavigne's Predator-Prey Database for the family Asilidae[2] has one record for Prolepsis lucifer feeding on the dung beetle Canthidium globulum and four records for Prolepsis tristis feeding on the following identified prey species: the clown beetle Epierus formidolosus, the blister beetle Epicauta trichrus, the hoverfly Eristalis dimidiatus and the Western honeybee Apis mellifera. Herschel Raney's webpage for Prolepsis tristis includes example images of cannibalism and color variation among males. It also illustrates the extreme difference in coloration of both sexes that occurs in this particular species.[3]
Larval stages have received little study to date, but the first instar larvae of P. lucifer are reported to prey voraciously on the subterranean scale insect or ground pearl Eurhizococcus brasiliensis, with possible biocontrol applications for protection of grapevines in Brazil[4][5]
Taxonomy
editThese 20 species belong to the genus Prolepsis:[6][7]
- Prolepsis albifasciatus (Back, 1904)
- Prolepsis bicinctus (Loew, 1866)
- Prolepsis caeroniformis (Schiner, 1867)
- Prolepsis chalcoproctus (Loew, 1866)
- Prolepsis colalao Lamas, 1973
- Prolepsis costaricensis Lamas, 1973
- Prolepsis elotensis (Martin, 1966)
- Prolepsis funebris Lamas, 1973
- Prolepsis huatajata Lamas, 1973
- Prolepsis indecisa Lamas, 1973
- Prolepsis lucasi (Bellardi, 1861)
- Prolepsis lucifer (Wiedemann, 1828)
- Prolepsis martini Lamas, 1973
- Prolepsis phoenicurus (Loew, 1866)
- Prolepsis pilatei (Johnson, 1903)
- Prolepsis pseudopluto Lamas, 1973
- Prolepsis quadrimaculatus (Bellardi, 1861)
- Prolepsis quadrinotatum (Bigot, 1878)
- Prolepsis sandaracus (Martin, 1966)
- Prolepsis tristis (Walker, 1851)
Phylogeny
editCombined analysis of morphological and molecular characters places Prolepsis tristis in a clade corresponding to the subfamily Stenopogoninae, without however providing direct support for monophyly of this subfamily.[8]
References
edit- ^ Lamas m., Gerardo (1973). "Taxonomy and evolution of the "Prolepsis-complex" in the Americas (Diptera, Asilidae)". Arquivos de Zoologia. 24: 1–71. doi:10.11606/issn.2176-7793.v24i1p1-71.
- ^ http://www.geller-grimm.de/catalog/lavigne.htm Predator-Prey Database for the family Asilidae
- ^ http://www.hr-rna.com/RNA/Rfly%20pages/Prolepsis%20page.htm[full citation needed]
- ^ Soria, Saulo de Jesus; de Mello, Rubens Pinto; de Oliveira, Angela Margarita (2004). "Novos registros de Prolepsis lucifer (Wiedemann, 1928) (Diptera, Asilidae) como predador de Eurhizococcus brasiliensis (Hempel in Wille, 1922) (Hemiptera, Margarodidae) em diferentes regiões viticultoras do Rio Grande do Sul, Brasil" [New records on Prolepsis lucifer (Wiedemann, 1928) (Diptera, Asilidae) as a predator of Eurhizococcus brasiliensis (Hempel in Wille, 1922) (Hemiptera, Margarodidae) in field conditions in Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil]. Entomología y Vectores (in Portuguese). 11 (2): 323–31. OCLC 820306686.
- ^ http://www.cnpuv.embrapa.br/publica/sprod/viticultura/perola.html[full citation needed]
- ^ "Prolepsis". GBIF. Retrieved 2024-08-08.
- ^ "Prolepsis Walker, 1851". Catalogue of Life. Retrieved 2024-08-08.
- ^ Dikow, Torsten (2009). "A phylogenetic hypothesis for Asilidae based on a total evidence analysis of morphological and DNA sequence data (Insecta: Diptera: Brachycera: Asiloidea)". Organisms Diversity & Evolution. 9 (3): 165–88. doi:10.1016/j.ode.2009.02.004.