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2. Identity, larva and distribution of the Oriental soldier fly, Odontomyia ochropa (Diptera: Stratiomyidae)
- Creator:
- Nerudová-Horsáková, Jana, Kovac, Damir, and Rozkošný, Rudolf
- Type:
- article, model:article, and TEXT
- Subject:
- Stratiomyidae, Odontomyia ochropa, adults, larvae, Oriental region, taxonomy, and morphology
- Language:
- English
- Description:
- Odontomyia ochropa Thomson, 1869, is redescribed and found to be identical with O. dorsoangulata Brunetti, 1920, which is proposed as a new synonym. The female holotype of O. ochropa from the Philippines was examined and compared with specimens from India, Thailand and Singapore. Terminalia and other diagnostic characters of both sexes are illustrated. The larva of O. ochropa is described in detail. The larval characters are in accordance with the characters of O. dorsoangulata mentioned by Brunetti (1920). The larva of O. ochropa is compared with that of O. cyanea described by Mathur (1933). Cuticular structures and diagnostic characters of both larvae are documented by drawings and SEM micrographs. A new identification key to larvae of Odontomyia known from the Oriental Region is provided.
- Rights:
- http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/mark/1.0/ and policy:public
3. Larval descriptions of five Oriental bamboo-inhabiting Acroceratitis species (Diptera: Tephritidae: Dacinae) with notes on their biology
- Creator:
- Schneider, Alexander, Kovac, Damir, Steck, Gary J, and Freidberg, Amnon
- Format:
- print, počítač, and online zdroj
- Type:
- model:article and TEXT
- Subject:
- Zoologie, vrtulovití, housenice, morfologie (biologie), biologie, lipnicovité, bambus, Tephritidae, larvae, morphology (biology), biology, Poaceae, Bamboo, Thajsko, Thailand, Gastrozonini, Acroceratitis, first description, 2, and 59
- Language:
- English
- Description:
- Third instar larvae of the genus Acroceratitis Hendel from North Thailand are described for the first time. They belong to A. ceratitina (Bezzi), A. distincta (Zia), A. histrionica (de Meijere), A. incompleta Hardy, and A. septemmaculata Hardy. Short descriptions of eggs, empty egg shells, and puparia are also presented. Acroceratitis larvae infest shoots of bamboo (Poaceae). Larval host plants of the studied species are Bambusa polymorpha Munro, Cephalostachyum pergracile Munro, Dendrocalamus hamiltoni Nees and Arnott ex Munro, D. strictus (Roxbourgh), Dendrocalamus sp. (unidentified) and Pseudoxytenanthera albociliata (Munro). The morphological characters of Acroceratitis larvae are compared with those of other Gastrozonini described so far. A key to Acroceratitis larvae is provided. Acroceratitis ceratitina, A. incompleta and A. septemmaculata are morphologically similar and clearly differentiated from A. distincta and A. histrionica by the lack of additional papillar sensilla on the labial lobe, the arrangement of the spinules on the creeping welts and other characters. The morphological differences between the two groups coincide with the type of substrate utilized by their larvae: A. ceratitina, A. incompleta and A. septemmaculata larvae feed in young and soft internode walls, while A. distincta and A. histrionica utilize harder bamboo tissue of already elongated bamboo shoot internodes. Acroceratitis histrionica larvae are special within the Gastrozonini, because they develop exclusively in cavities formed by the internode surface and the protecting culm sheath. Factors influencing spatial utilization of larval resources, preference for upright shoots as breeding substrate, larval behavior, types of bamboo damage caused by different species and attraction to sweat and urine in the adults are discussed., Alexander Schneider, Damir Kovac, Gary J. Steck, Amnon Freidberg., and Obsahuje bibliografii
- Rights:
- http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/mark/1.0/ and policy:public
4. Transition from bamboo sap to water: Aquatic habits in the sap beetle Amphicrossus japonicus (Coleoptera: Cucujoidea: Nitidulidae)
- Creator:
- Kovac, Damir, Jelínek, Josef, Hashim, Rosli, and Wiwatwitaya, Decha
- Type:
- article, model:article, and TEXT
- Subject:
- Nitidulidae, Amphicrossus, aquatic beetles, Culicidae, bamboo, tree sap, phytotelm, hydrofuge hairs, Oriental Region, Malaysia, and Thailand
- Language:
- English
- Description:
- Amphicrossus japonicus is the first known facultatively aquatic nitidulid. The adult beetles breed in bamboo sap and subsequently enter water-filled bamboo culms. In water they breathe via a ventral air sheath held by hydrofuge pubescence. The beetles are facultative predators and hunt mosquito larvae, which they grab with their forelegs. The trend to facultative predation in Cucujoidea and the transition for beetles in general from semi-liquid decaying organic matter into water is discussed.
- Rights:
- http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/mark/1.0/ and policy:public