A world review of the bristle fly parasitoids of webspinners

Dipteran parasitoids of Embioptera (webspinners) are few and extremely rare but known from all biogeographical regions except Australasia/Oceania. All belong to the fly family Tachinidae, a hyperdiverse and widespread clade of parasitoids attacking a variety of arthropod orders. The webspinner-paras...

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Published inBMC zoology Vol. 7; no. 1; p. 37
Main Authors Badano, Davide, Lenzi, Alice, O'Hara, James E, Miller, Kelly B, Di Giulio, Andrea, Di Giovanni, Filippo, Cerretti, Pierfilippo
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published England BioMed Central 04.07.2022
BMC
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Summary:Dipteran parasitoids of Embioptera (webspinners) are few and extremely rare but known from all biogeographical regions except Australasia/Oceania. All belong to the fly family Tachinidae, a hyperdiverse and widespread clade of parasitoids attacking a variety of arthropod orders. The webspinner-parasitizing Diptera are reviewed based mostly on records from the collecting and rearing by Edward S. Ross. A new genus is erected to accommodate a new Afrotropical species, Embiophoneus rossi gen. et sp. nov. The genus Perumyia Arnaud is reviewed and a new species, Perumyia arnaudi sp. nov., is described from Central America while P. embiaphaga Arnaud is redescribed and new host records are given. A new species of Phytomyptera Rondani, P. woodi sp. nov., is described from Myanmar, representing the first report of a member of this genus obtained from webspinners. The genus Rossimyiops Mesnil is reviewed, R. longicornis (Kugler) is redescribed and R. aeratus sp. nov., R. fuscus sp. nov. and R. rutilans sp. nov. are newly described from the Oriental Region, and an updated key to species is given. Webspinners were probably colonized independently at least four times by tachinids shifting from other hosts, most likely Lepidoptera.
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ISSN:2056-3132
2056-3132
DOI:10.1186/s40850-022-00116-x