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| DIPTERA, Dolichopodidae (Leach 1819) --  <Images>
  & <Juveniles>   Please
  refer also to the following link for details on this group:   Dolichopodidae = Link 1   Description & Statistics  The immatures and adults of
  Dolichopodidae are predators on other insects.  The adults are often found on foliage in shaded areas.  Larvae occur in wet or muddy soil, under
  bark, in decaying organic matter and in water.  Adults of some species are able to skim over the water
  surface.  The females move quickly and
  often have a crab-like manner of locomotion. 
  Williams (1933) noted that the adults of a few species of Campsicnemus are active on the surface
  of water pools in Hawaii and that they feed extensively on the collembolan, Salina maculata Fols.  It was
  also observed that the adults of Hydrophorus
  pacificus V.D. pulled Chironomus larvae out of shallow water
  along muddy shores and in marshes.   In the genus Medetera, the hosts of which are mainly the larvae, pupae and
  adults of bark beetles, M. signaticornis Lw. is predaceous on larvae
  and adults of Scolytidae (Hubault 1925). 
  M. aldrichii Wh. De Leon (1935a) found it to be an important natural
  enemy of the mountain pine beetle, Dendroctonus
  monticolae Hopk. in western North
  America.  The eggs are laid beneath
  bark scales or in crevices, and young larvae work their way into the inner
  bark for immature host stages.  They
  also feed on dead larvae and various other insects that they find in the
  burrows.  Pupation occurs in a cell in
  the bark, which is lined with a silk-like substance.  The larvae of several species are aquatic
  and feed on a variety of aquatic animals (Clausen 1940/62).   Dolichopodidae is a large,
  cosmopolitan family with more than 2,502 species known by 2000.  Diagnostic characters include a
  3-segmented antenna, usually with a dorsal arista; branches of R-s usually do
  not branch further; vein M-2 atrophied or absent; male genitalia complex,
  turned under remainder of abdomen. 
  The body is small, often a bright or dull metallic green.  The legs are long, somewhat bristled.  In the male the forelegs are may have
  tufts of hair.     References:   Please refer
  to  <biology.ref.htm>, [Additional
  references may be found at:  MELVYL Library]   Becker,
  T.  1922.  Zool.-Bot. Gess. Wien, Abhandl. 13:  1-394   Cole, F.
  R.  1969. 
  The Flies of Western North America. 
  Univ. Calif. Press, Berkeley & Los Angeles.  693 p.   Wirth, W. W. & A. Stone.  1956. 
  Aquatic Insects of California, with Keys to North American Genera and
  California Species.  R. L. Usinger,
  ed.  Berkeley,
  CA.  508 p.     |