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Sciomyzinae

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7-462: Sciomyzinae is a subfamily of flies in the family Sciomyzidae . This article related to members of the muscomorph flies superfamily Sciomyzoidea is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . Sciomyzidae Sciomyzinae Huttonininae (disputed) Phaeomyiinae (disputed) Salticellinae (disputed) Huttoninidae (disputed) Phaeomyiidae (disputed) Tetanoceridae The family Sciomyzidae belongs to

14-539: Is clear or with conspicuous markings. The costa is continuous and the subcosta is complete. Crossvein BM-Cu is present and the anal cell (cell cup) is closed. Tibiae almost always have a dorsal preapical bristle. Marsh flies are common along the edges of ponds and rivers, and in marshy areas. The adults drink dew and nectar . The larvae prey on or become parasites of gastropods (slugs and snails). The occasional sciomyzid attacks snail eggs or fingernail clams . Very little

21-411: Is known about the complete life cycle of these flies but most of the known larvae are semi-aquatic and some are aquatic. Other species have terrestrial larvae. Larvae mainly prey on non-operculate snails. Some species which prey on bivalves have larvae adapted to breathing under water. In some terrestrial species the penultimate larval instar emerges from the snail or slug it developed in. The last instar

28-507: Is semispherical or round. The antennae are usually elongate and the arista is pubescent or has shorter or longer hairs. Ocelli and ocellar bristles are present (absent in Sepedon ). The postvertical bristles are divergent or parallel. There are one or two pairs of frontal bristles which curve backward (the lower pair sometimes curving inward) Interfrontal bristles are absent but interfrontal setulae are sometimes present. Vibrissae are absent. The wing

35-602: The Helosciomyzidae which were also once included in the Sciomyzidae. Sciomyzidae are found in all the biogeographic realms but are poorly represented in the Australasian and Oceanian realms . Sciomyzidae are small or medium-sized (2–14 mm), usually slender flies with predominantly dull grey, brown, reddish or yellow body, rarely black-lustrous. Wings hyaline, often with dark spots or dark reticulate pattern. The head

42-574: The former two are very small lineages that may or may not stand outside the family and are provisionally ranked as subfamilies here. Whether the Salticellinae and the group around Sepedon warrant recognition as additional subfamilies or are better included in the Sciomyzinae proper is likewise not yet entirely clear. Altogether, the main point of contention is the relationship between the "Huttoninidae", "Phaeomyiidae", Sciomyzidae sensu stricto , and

49-492: The typical flies ( Brachycera ) of the order Diptera . They are commonly called marsh flies , and in some cases snail-killing flies due to the food of their larvae . Here, the Huttoninidae , Phaeomyiidae and Tetanoceridae are provisionally included in the Sciomyzidae. Particularly the latter seem to be an unequivocal part of this group and are ranked as tribe of subfamily Sciomyzinae by most modern authors, while

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