Date: October 5, 2016
Source: Pensoft Publishers
Spider flies
are usually a rarely encountered group of insects, except in Western North
America, where the North American jewelled spider flies (the Eulonchus
genus) can be locally abundant in mountainous areas such as the Sierra Nevada
of California. The brilliantly coloured adults (also known as 'sapphires' and
'emeralds') are important pollinators of flowers.
The North
American jewelled spider flies typically have large rounded bodies covered with
dense hairs and metallic green to blue or even purple colouration, giving them
a jewel-like appearance. Together, the elongated mouthparts, the metallic
coloration and the eyes, covered with soft hairs, immediately set these flies
apart from any other group of tarantula fly. The mouthparts are greatly
elongated to help them feed on nectar from the flowers of more than 25
different plant families and 80 species.
However,
their larvae are more insidious, seeking out and inserting themselves into
tarantula hosts and slowly eating away their insides until they mature and
burst out of the abdomen, killing the spider, and leaving behind only the skin.
Once they have emerged from the host, they pupate to develop into adults.
In the
present study, published in the open access journal ZooKeys, six species
of the genus are recognized in North America, including one from the Smokey
Mountains, and five from the West, ranging from Mexico to Canada. Drs
Christopher J. Borkent and Shaun L. Winterton, and PhD student Jessica P.
Gillung, all affiliated with the California State Collection of Arthropods,
USA, have redescribed all of them using cybertaxonomic methods of natural
language description. A phylogenetic tree of the relationships among the
species is also presented.
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