Contributions to A

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Contributions to A Contributions to a MANUAL OF PALAEARCTIC DIPTERA (with special reference to flies of economie importance) Volume 3 Higher Brachycera László Papp and Béla Darvas (Editors) Published by Science Heraid, Budapest 1998 Contents 7 3.0. lntroduction - L. Papp and B. Darvas 13 3.1. Family Lonchopteridae - M. Barták 17 3.2. Family Opetiidae - P. J. Chandler 27 3.3. Family Platypezidae - P. J. Chandler and A. I. Shatalkin 51 3.4. Family Phoridae - R. H. L. Disney 81 3.5. Family Syrphidae - F. C. Thompson and G. Rotheray 141 3.6. Family Pipunculidae - M. Kozánek, M. De Meyer and A. Albrecht 151 3.7. Family Cypselosomatidae - D. K. McAlpine 155 3.8. Family Pseudopomyzidae - D. K. McAlpine and A. I. Shatalkin 165 3.9. Family Tanypezidae - J. Rohácek 173 3.10. Family Strongylophthalmyiidae - M. lwasa 177 3.11. Family Psilidae - M. Iwasa 185 3.12. Family Otitidae - L. Greve 193 3.13. Family Platystomatidae - D. K. McAlpine 201 3.14. Family Pallopteridae - B. Merz 211 3.15. Family Carnidae - L. Papp 219 3.16. Family Clusiidae - M. Sasakawa 227 3.17. Family Acartophthalmidae - L. Papp and A. L. Ozerov 233 3.18. Family Odiniidae - L. Papp 243 3.19. Family T ethinidae - L. Munari 251 3.20. Family Canacidae - W. N. Mathis 259 3.21. Family Opomyzidae - E. Brunel 267 3.22. Family Anthomyzidae - J. Rohácek 279 3.23. Family Aulacigastridae - L. Papp 285 3.24. Family Periscelididae - W. N. Mathis and L. Papp 295 3.25. Family Asteiidae - L. Papp 305 3.26. Family Xenasteiidae - L. Papp 309 3.27. Family Nannodastiidae - L. Papp and W. N. Mathis 315 3.28. Family Milichiidae - L. Papp and T. A. Wheeler 325 3.29. Family Braulidae - L. Papp 331 3.30. Family Teratümyzidae - D. K. McAlpine 335 3.31. Family Coelopidae - D. K. McAlpine 341 3.32. Family Helcomyzidae - D. K. McAlpine 345 3.33. Family Heterocheilidae - D. K. McAlpine 349 3.34. Family Dryomyzidae - A. L. Ozerov 357 3.35. Family Sciomyzidae - R. Rozkosny 377 3.36. Family Phaeomyiidae - R. Rozkosny 383 3.37. Family Lauxaniidae - L. Papp and A. I. Shatalkin 401 3.38. Family Celyphidae - L. Papp 3.39. Family Cremifaniidae - L. Papp 409 415 3.40. Family Chamaemyiidae - I. F. G. McLean 3.41. Families of Heleomyzoidea - L. Papp 425 457 3.42. Family Chyromyidae - T. A. Wheeler 463 3.43. Family Sphaeroceridae - J. Rohácek 497 3.44. Family Curtonotidae - L. Papp 503 3.45. Family Drosophilidae - G. Bächli 6. Family Campichoetidae - P. J. Chandler 515 523 7. Family Diastatidae - P. J. Chandler 8. Family Camillidae - L. Papp 531 9. Family Ephydridae - W. N. Mathis and T. Zatwarnicki 537 O. Family Anthomyiidae - M. Suwa and B. Darvas 571 1. Family Calliphoridae - K. Rognes 617 649 2. Family Sarcophagidae - T. Pape 3. Family Rhinophoridae - T. Pape 679 4. Family Tachinidae - H.-P. Tschorsnig and V. A. Richter 691 5. Family Nycteribiidae - K. Hurka 829 6. Family Streblidae - K. Hurka 839 Index - L. Peregovits and L. Papp 849.
Recommended publications
  • Zorotypidae of Fiji (Zoraptera)
    NUMBER 91, 42 pages 15 March 2006 BISHOP MUSEUM OCCASIONAL PAPERS FIJI ARTHROPODS VII NEAL L. EVENHUIS AND DANIEL J. BICKEL, EDITORS 7 BISHOP MUSEUM PRESS HONOLULU Bishop Museum Press has been publishing scholarly books on the natu- RESEARCH ral and cultural history of Hawai‘i and the Pacific since 1892. The Bernice P. Bishop Museum Bulletin series (ISSN 0005-9439) was begun PUBLICATIONS OF in 1922 as a series of monographs presenting the results of research in many scientific fields throughout the Pacific. In 1987, the Bulletin series BISHOP MUSEUM was superceded by the Museum’s five current monographic series, issued irregularly: Bishop Museum Bulletins in Anthropology (ISSN 0893-3111) Bishop Museum Bulletins in Botany (ISSN 0893-3138) Bishop Museum Bulletins in Entomology (ISSN 0893-3146) Bishop Museum Bulletins in Zoology (ISSN 0893-312X) Bishop Museum Bulletins in Cultural and Environmental Studies (ISSN 1548-9620) Bishop Museum Press also publishes Bishop Museum Occasional Papers (ISSN 0893-1348), a series of short papers describing original research in the natural and cultural sciences. To subscribe to any of the above series, or to purchase individual publi- cations, please write to: Bishop Museum Press, 1525 Bernice Street, Honolulu, Hawai‘i 96817-2704, USA. Phone: (808) 848-4135. Email: [email protected]. Institutional libraries interested in exchang- ing publications may also contact the Bishop Museum Press for more information. BISHOP MUSEUM The State Museum of Natural and Cultural History ISSN 0893-1348 1525 Bernice Street Copyright © 2007 by Bishop Museum Honolulu, Hawai‘i 96817-2704, USA FIJI ARTHROPODS Editors’ Preface We are pleased to present the seventh issue of Fiji Arthropods, a series offering rapid pub- lication and devoted to studies of terrestrial arthropods of the Fiji Group and nearby Pacific archipelagos.
    [Show full text]
  • Pseudopomyzidae, Una Nueva Familia De Dípteros Para La Península Ibérica (Insecta, Diptera)
    Boletín de la Sociedad Entomológica Aragonesa (S.E.A.), nº 46 (2010) : 307−310. PSEUDOPOMYZIDAE, UNA NUEVA FAMILIA DE DÍPTEROS PARA LA PENÍNSULA IBÉRICA (INSECTA, DIPTERA) Daniel Ventura Pérez Grup d’Ecologia Funcional i Canvi Global (ECOFUN). Centre Tecnològic Forestal de Catalunya (CTFC). Ctra. Sant Llorenç de Morunys, km. 2 (direcció Port del Comte). E-25280 Solsona (Lleida, España) − [email protected] Resumen: Se cita por primera vez para la Península Ibérica la familia Pseudopomyzidae (Diptera), gracias al hallazgo de la única especie europea conocida, Pseudopomyza atrimana (Meigen, 1830). Palabras clave: Diptera, Pseudopomyzidae, Pseudopomyza atrimana, primera cita, Península Ibérica. Pseudopomyzidae, new to the Iberian Peninsula (Insecta, Diptera) Abstract: The family Pseudopomyzidae is recorded for the first time from the Iberian Peninsula, based on the finding of the only known European species, Pseudopomyza atrimana (Meigen, 1830). Key words: Diptera, Pseudopomyzidae, Pseudopomyza atrimana, first record, Iberian Peninsula. Introducción El conocimiento de la composición faunística de los dípteros A pesar de este ingente esfuerzo, aún quedan familias de la Península Ibérica y Baleares está aún lejos de verse conocidas en Europa pero todavía no encontradas en dicha satisfactoriamente completado. El reciente esfuerzo recopila- área. Estas familias son siempre raras, muy difíciles de locali- torio de la fauna del orden Diptera en los tres países que se zar, por lo que su captura resulta azarosa. Sólo conociendo la incluyen dentro del ámbito iberobalear, España, Portugal y biología y ecología de sus componentes es posible llegar Andorra (Carles-Tolrá Hjorth-Andersen, 2002), ha puesto de incluso a que dejen de ser consideradas raras, aunque sea manifiesto lo mucho que aún es necesario trabajar para llegar localmente.
    [Show full text]
  • Checklist of the Families Opetiidae and Platypezidae (Diptera) of Finland
    https://helda.helsinki.fi Checklist of the families Opetiidae and Platypezidae (Diptera) of Finland Ståhls, Gunilla 2014-09-19 Ståhls , G 2014 , ' Checklist of the families Opetiidae and Platypezidae (Diptera) of Finland ' ZooKeys , no. 441 , pp. 209-212 . https://doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.441.7639 http://hdl.handle.net/10138/165337 https://doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.441.7639 Downloaded from Helda, University of Helsinki institutional repository. This is an electronic reprint of the original article. This reprint may differ from the original in pagination and typographic detail. Please cite the original version. A peer-reviewed open-access journal ZooKeys 441: 209–212Checklist (2014) of the families Opetiidae and Platypezidae (Diptera) of Finland 209 doi: 10.3897/zookeys.441.7639 CHECKLIST www.zookeys.org Launched to accelerate biodiversity research Checklist of the families Opetiidae and Platypezidae (Diptera) of Finland Gunilla Ståhls1 1 Finnish Museum of Natural History, Zoology Unit, P.O. Box 17, FI-00014 University of Helsinki, Finland Corresponding author: Gunilla Ståhls ([email protected]) Academic editor: J. Kahanpää | Received 3 April 2014 | Accepted 11 June 2014 | Published 19 September 2014 http://zoobank.org/0FD1FB6E-6B9B-4F42-B8F3-0FDEEA15AE44 Citation: Ståhls G (2014) Checklist of the families Opetiidae and Platypezidae (Diptera) of Finland. In: Kahanpää J, Salmela J (Eds) Checklist of the Diptera of Finland. ZooKeys 441: 209–212. doi: 10.3897/zookeys.441.7639 Abstract A checklist of the Opetiidae and Platypezidae (Diptera) recorded from Finland. Keywords Checklist, Finland, Diptera, Opetiidae, Platypezidae Introduction Opetiidae and Platypezidae are small families of small-sized flies. Platypezidae are prin- cipally forest insects, and all known larvae develop in fungi.
    [Show full text]
  • Chapter 2 Diopsoidea
    Chapter 2 Diopsoidea DiopsoideaTeaching material only, not intended for wider circulation. [email protected] 2:37 Diptera: Acalyptrates DIOPSOI D EA 50: Tanypezidae 53 ------ Base of tarsomere 1 of hind tarsus very slightly projecting ventrally; male with small stout black setae on hind trochanter and posterior base of hind femur. Postocellar bristles strong, at least half as long as upper orbital seta; one dorsocentral and three orbital setae present Tanypeza ----------------------------------------- 55 2 spp.; Maine to Alberta and Georgia; Steyskal 1965 ---------- Base of tarsomere 1 of hind tarsus strongly projecting ventrally, about twice as deep as remainder of tarsomere 1 (Fig. 3); male without special setae on hind trochanter and hind femur. Postocellar bristles weak, less than half as long as upper orbital bristle; one to three dor socentral and zero to two orbital bristles present non-British ------------------------------------------ 54 54 ------ Only one orbital bristle present, situated at top of head; one dorsocentral bristle present --------------------- Scipopeza Enderlein Neotropical ---------- Two or three each of orbital and dorsocentral bristles present ---------------------Neotanypeza Hendel Neotropical Tanypeza Fallén, 1820 One species 55 ------ A black species with a silvery patch on the vertex and each side of front of frons. Tho- rax with notopleural depression silvery and pleurae with silvery patches. Palpi black, prominent and flat. Ocellar bristles small; two pairs of fronto orbital bristles; only one (outer) pair of vertical bristles. Frons slightly narrower in the male than in the female, but not with eyes almost touching). Four scutellar, no sternopleural, two postalar and one supra-alar bristles; (the anterior supra-alar bristle not present). Wings with upcurved discal cell (11) as in members of the Micropezidae.
    [Show full text]
  • Insecta Diptera) in Freshwater (Excluding Simulidae, Culicidae, Chironomidae, Tipulidae and Tabanidae) Rüdiger Wagner University of Kassel
    Entomology Publications Entomology 2008 Global diversity of dipteran families (Insecta Diptera) in freshwater (excluding Simulidae, Culicidae, Chironomidae, Tipulidae and Tabanidae) Rüdiger Wagner University of Kassel Miroslav Barták Czech University of Agriculture Art Borkent Salmon Arm Gregory W. Courtney Iowa State University, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: http://lib.dr.iastate.edu/ent_pubs BoudewPart ofijn the GoBddeeiodivrisersity Commons, Biology Commons, Entomology Commons, and the TRoyerarle Bestrlgiialan a Indnstit Aquaute of Nticat uErcaol Scienlogyce Cs ommons TheSee nex tompc page forle addte bitioniblaiol agruthorapshic information for this item can be found at http://lib.dr.iastate.edu/ ent_pubs/41. For information on how to cite this item, please visit http://lib.dr.iastate.edu/ howtocite.html. This Book Chapter is brought to you for free and open access by the Entomology at Iowa State University Digital Repository. It has been accepted for inclusion in Entomology Publications by an authorized administrator of Iowa State University Digital Repository. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Global diversity of dipteran families (Insecta Diptera) in freshwater (excluding Simulidae, Culicidae, Chironomidae, Tipulidae and Tabanidae) Abstract Today’s knowledge of worldwide species diversity of 19 families of aquatic Diptera in Continental Waters is presented. Nevertheless, we have to face for certain in most groups a restricted knowledge about distribution, ecology and systematic,
    [Show full text]
  • First Record of Curtonotum Similetsacas, 1977 (Diptera: Curtonotidae) on Rabbit Carcass from Jeddah, Kingdom of Saudi Arabia
    Life Science Journal 2016;13(12) http://www.lifesciencesite.com First record of Curtonotum simileTsacas, 1977 (Diptera: Curtonotidae) on rabbit carcass from Jeddah, Kingdom of Saudi Arabia Layla A.H. Al-Shareef Faculty of Science-Al Faisaliah, King Abdulaziz University, Ministry of Education, Kingdom of Saudi Arabia [email protected] Abstract: Adult of acalyptrate fly Curtonotum simile, were collected from rabbit carcass in desert area in Jeddah city, west region of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia. The fly was obtained at autumn season. The details of morphological characters were detected and photographed. This knowledge is essential to build up database about dipteran diversity in Jeddah biogeoclimatic zone. [Layla A.H. Al-Shareef. First record of Curtonotum simile Tsacas, 1977 (Diptera: Curtonotidae) on rabbit carcass from Jeddah, Kingdom of Saudi Arabia Life Sci J 2016;13(12):34-40]. ISSN: 1097-8135 (Print) / ISSN: 2372-613X (Online).http://www.lifesciencesite.com. 6. doi:10.7537/marslsj131216.06. Keywords: Curtonotidae, Curtonotum simile, Diptera, Jeddah. 1. Introduction stage. This study is essential to build up database Curtonotidae is a family of acalyptrate flies in about dipteran diversity in the kingdom of Saudi the Ephydroidea, a superfamily that also includes Arabia particularly in Jeddah biogeoclimatic zone. the Drosophilidae. Curtonotids superficially resembling drosophilids and previously treated as a 2. Materials and Methods subfamily of Drosophilidae by Hendel (1917, 1928, Fly specimens for this study were collected 1932), Sturtevant (1921), Malloch (1930) and from domestic rabbit carcass placedin desert area in Curran (1933, 1934a,b). Although, Enderlein Jeddah city at December 2015. Jeddah city is (1914, 1917) treated this group as a subfamily of located on the west coast of the Kingdom of Saudi Ephydridae, but Duda (1924) and Okada (1960, Arabia, at the middle of the eastern shore of the 1966) treated Curtonotum Macquart and related Red Sea.
    [Show full text]
  • Catalogue of Neotropical Curtonotidae (Diptera, Ephydroidea)
    Catalogue of Neotropical Curtonotidae (Diptera, Ephydroidea) Ramon Luciano Mello¹ & Alessandre Pereira-Colavite² ¹ Universidade Federal de Mato Grosso do Sul (UFMS), Instituto de Biociências (INBIO), Laboratório de Sistemática de Diptera (LSD). Campo Grande, MS, Brasil. ORCID: 0000-0002-1914-5766. E-mail: [email protected] ² Universidade Federal da Paraíba (UFPB), Centro de Ciências Exatas e da Natureza (CCEN), Departamento de Sistemática e Ecologia (DSE). João Pessoa, PB, Brasil. ORCID: 0000-0002-7660-8384. E-mail: [email protected] Abstract. The Neotropical species of Curtonotidae are updated and catalogued. A total of 33 species names are listed, including two fossil taxa and one nomem dubium. Valid and invalid names and synonyms are presented, totaling 45 names. Bibliographic references are given to all listed species, including information about name, author, year of publication, page number, type species and type locality. Lectotype and paralectotypes are designated to Curtonotum punctithorax (Fischer, 1933). Curtonotum simplex Schiner, 1868 stat. rev. is recognized as a valid name. Key-Words. Acalyptratae; Curtonotum; Hunchbacked flies; Lectotype; Paralectotype; Schizophora; Type material. INTRODUCTION ventral rays; (4) wing pigmentation varying from hyaline to lightly fumose or boldly patterned; Curtonotidae, also called hunchbacked flies (5) subcostal vein complete, with cell cup present or quasimodo flies, is a small family of dipter- and cells dm and bm confluent; (6) costal vein ous Acalyptratae with worldwide distribution. with humeral and subcostal breaks; and (7) with Although the family might be found in all biogeo- several spinelike bristles between apices of R₁ and graphic regions, they occur mainly in the tropical R₂ ₃ veins (Marshall et al., 2010).
    [Show full text]
  • Is the Diversity of the Beach Flies Adequately Known? Some Reflections on the State of the Art of Current Knowledge (Diptera: Canacidae)
    BOLL. SOC. ENTOMOL. ITAL., 147 (3): 99-111, ISSN 0373-3491 15 DICEMBRE 2015 Lorenzo MuNarI* Is the diversity of the Beach Flies adequately known? Some reflections on the state of the art of current knowledge (Diptera: Canacidae) Riassunto: La diversità delle Beach Flies é adeguatamente conosciuta? Alcune riflessioni sullo stato dell’arte delle attuali conoscenze (Diptera: Canacidae). Viene fornita una panoramica delle maggiori lacune zoogeografiche nella conoscenza dei canacidi appartenenti alle sottofamiglie apetaeninae, Horaismopterinae, Pelomyiinae e Tethininae (tutte conosciute come Beach Flies). Le aree identificate trattate in questo lavoro sono le seguenti: la subartica Beringia, le isole circum-antartiche del Sudamerica, la regione Neotropicale a sud dell’equatore, la maggior parte delle coste marine dell’africa occidentale, l’immensa area che va dall’India, attraverso il Golfo del Bengala, alle isole di Sumatra e Giava, nonché gran parte dell’australia. ad eccezione delle zone inospitali più settentrionali e più meridionali del pianeta, che sono caratterizzate da una reale bio- diversità assai scarsa, le restanti vaste aree trattate in questo lavoro soffrono dolorosamente di una drammatica scarsità di raccolte sul campo, come pure di materiali raccolti nel passato e conservati in istituzioni scientifiche. Ciò potrebbe sembrare un’ovvietà che, pur tuttavia, deve essere enfatizzata allo scopo di identificare in maniera inequivocabile le aree geografiche che richiedono di essere ulteriormente indagate. alla fine della trattazione viene fornita la distribuzione mondiale di tutte le specie citate nel lavoro. Abstract: an overview of the major zoogeographical gaps in our knowledge of the world beach flies (subfamilies apetaeninae, Horaismopteri- nae, Pelomyiinae, and Tethininae) is provided.
    [Show full text]
  • Grzegorz Dubiel, Cezary Bystrowski , Andrzej Józef Woźnica
    Polskie Towarzystwo Entomologiczne ISSN 1895 - 4464 Tom 37(02): 362-398 DIPTERON Akceptacja: 26.02.2021 Wrocław 31 III 2021 Polish Entomological Society ZRÓŻNICOWANIE STRATEGII ŻYCIOWYCH MUCHÓWEK THE DIVERSITY OF LIFE STRATEGIES OF DIPTERA DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.4642887 1 2 GRZEGORZ DUBIEL, CEZARY BYSTROWSKI , ANDRZEJ JÓZEF WOŹNICA 1 Instytut Badawczy Leśnictwa, Zakład Ochrony Lasu, Sękocin Stary, ul. Braci Leśnej 3, 05-090 Raszyn, e-mail: [email protected] 2 Instytut Biologii Środowiskowej, Uniwersytet Przyrodniczy we Wrocławiu, ul. Kożuchowska 5b, 51-631 Wrocław, e-mail: [email protected] ABSTRACT. Our paper is a brief review of the diverse life strategies of Diptera. We discuss the lifestyle of adult dipterans and the importance of immature stages as saprophages, mycetophages, phytophages and parasites on the examples of selected taxa and their specific adaptations to life and survival in various biotopes, including other living organisms, pointing to both their immense role in the circulation and decomposition of organic matter and the still insufficient knowledge on their ecology, biology and systematics. KEYWORDS: Diptera, adults, immature stages, life strategies, biodiversity, review WSTĘP Jeśli za miarę sukcesu ewolucyjnego uznać zróżnicowanie gatunkowe, największy sukces wśród owadów odniosły chrząszcze (Coleoptera), motyle (Lepidoptera), błonkówki (Hymenoptera) i muchówki (Diptera). Spośród nich muchówki charakteryzują się największym zróżnicowaniem ekologicznym, co szczególnie widoczne jest w porównaniu z motylami, u których wielka różnorodność opiera się w przeważającej części na eksploatacji jednej strategii jaką jest fitofagia oraz błonkówkami, wśród których 78% znanych gatunków prowadzi pasożytniczy tryb życia (Eggleton & Belhsaw 1992). W zależności od ujęcia Diptera podzielone zostały na około 180 rodzin obejmujących 160 000 opisanych gatunków.
    [Show full text]
  • Diptera – Brachycera
    Biodiversity Data Journal 3: e4187 doi: 10.3897/BDJ.3.e4187 Data Paper Fauna Europaea: Diptera – Brachycera Thomas Pape‡§, Paul Beuk , Adrian Charles Pont|, Anatole I. Shatalkin¶, Andrey L. Ozerov¶, Andrzej J. Woźnica#, Bernhard Merz¤, Cezary Bystrowski«», Chris Raper , Christer Bergström˄, Christian Kehlmaier˅, David K. Clements¦, David Greathead†,ˀ, Elena Petrovna Kamenevaˁ, Emilia Nartshuk₵, Frederik T. Petersenℓ, Gisela Weber ₰, Gerhard Bächli₱, Fritz Geller-Grimm₳, Guy Van de Weyer₴, Hans-Peter Tschorsnig₣, Herman de Jong₮, Jan-Willem van Zuijlen₦, Jaromír Vaňhara₭, Jindřich Roháček₲, Joachim Ziegler‽, József Majer ₩, Karel Hůrka†,₸, Kevin Holston ‡‡, Knut Rognes§§, Lita Greve-Jensen||, Lorenzo Munari¶¶, Marc de Meyer##, Marc Pollet ¤¤, Martin C. D. Speight««, Martin John Ebejer»», Michel Martinez˄˄, Miguel Carles-Tolrá˅˅, Mihály Földvári¦¦, Milan Chvála ₸, Miroslav Bartákˀˀ, Neal L. Evenhuisˁˁ, Peter J. Chandler₵₵, Pierfilippo Cerrettiℓℓ, Rudolf Meier ₰₰, Rudolf Rozkosny₭, Sabine Prescher₰, Stephen D. Gaimari₱₱, Tadeusz Zatwarnicki₳₳, Theo Zeegers₴₴, Torsten Dikow₣₣, Valery A. Korneyevˁ, Vera Andreevna Richter†,₵, Verner Michelsen‡, Vitali N. Tanasijtshuk₵, Wayne N. Mathis₣₣, Zdravko Hubenov₮₮, Yde de Jong ₦₦,₭₭ ‡ Natural History Museum of Denmark, Copenhagen, Denmark § Natural History Museum Maastricht / Diptera.info, Maastricht, Netherlands | Oxford University Museum of Natural History, Oxford, United Kingdom ¶ Zoological Museum, Moscow State University, Moscow, Russia # Wrocław University of Environmental and Life Sciences, Wrocław,
    [Show full text]
  • F. Christian Thompson Neal L. Evenhuis and Curtis W. Sabrosky Bibliography of the Family-Group Names of Diptera
    F. Christian Thompson Neal L. Evenhuis and Curtis W. Sabrosky Bibliography of the Family-Group Names of Diptera Bibliography Thompson, F. C, Evenhuis, N. L. & Sabrosky, C. W. The following bibliography gives full references to 2,982 works cited in the catalog as well as additional ones cited within the bibliography. A concerted effort was made to examine as many of the cited references as possible in order to ensure accurate citation of authorship, date, title, and pagination. References are listed alphabetically by author and chronologically for multiple articles with the same authorship. In cases where more than one article was published by an author(s) in a particular year, a suffix letter follows the year (letters are listed alphabetically according to publication chronology). Authors' names: Names of authors are cited in the bibliography the same as they are in the text for proper association of literature citations with entries in the catalog. Because of the differing treatments of names, especially those containing articles such as "de," "del," "van," "Le," etc., these names are cross-indexed in the bibliography under the various ways in which they may be treated elsewhere. For Russian and other names in Cyrillic and other non-Latin character sets, we follow the spelling used by the authors themselves. Dates of publication: Dating of these works was obtained through various methods in order to obtain as accurate a date of publication as possible for purposes of priority in nomenclature. Dates found in the original works or by outside evidence are placed in brackets after the literature citation.
    [Show full text]
  • Manual of Nearctic Diptera
    539 The history of dipterology at the Canadian National Collection of Insects, with special reference to the Manual of Nearctic Diptera Jeffrey M. Cumming, Bradley J. Sinclair, Scott E. Brooks, James E. O’Hara, Jeffrey H. Skevington Abstract*The history of Diptera research at the Canadian National Collection of Insects is briefly outlined. Short biographic sketches of the coordinators of the Manual of Nearctic Diptera are given and the development of the Manual project is presented to provide background on their achievements. Lists of publications by each of the coordinators and of patronyms honouring them are provided. This Festschrift honours the remarkable contributions of the coordinators, J. Frank McAlpine, Bobbie V. Peterson, Guy E. Shewell, Herbert J. Teskey, J. Richard Vockeroth, and D. Monty Wood. Re´sume´*On de´crit brie`vement l’histoire de la recherche en dipte`re a` la Collection nationale canadienne d’insectes. On pre´sente de courtes biographies des coordonnateurs du Manuel de dipte`res ne´arctiques, ainsi que le de´veloppement du projet du manuel pour fournir de l’information sur leurs re´alisations. On fourni des listes de re´fe´rences publie´es par chaque coordinateur et des noms patronymiques en leur honneur. Ce nume´ro est en l’honneur des contributions remarquables des coordinateurs J. Frank McAlpine, Bobbie V. Peterson, Guy E. Shewell, Herbert J. Teskey, J. Richard Vockeroth, et D. Monty Wood. Introduction been taken from personal accounts, archived sources housed in the Diptera Unit, and This historical review treats the development publications on the history of systematic of the Diptera collection at the Canadian research in Canada and publications from the National Collection of Insects, Arachnids Research Branch of AAFC, including Gibson and Nematodes (CNC) and the individuals and McSwaine (1920), McDunnough (1926), responsible for its growth and curation.
    [Show full text]