Ceriana (fly)
Ceriana is a genus of hoverfly. All species are wasp mimics.
- Ceriana_conopsoides
- Frontal prominence
- antennae
- Ceriana_ornata
- Ceriana_ornata
- Ceriana ancoralis
- Ceriana vespiformis
- Ceriana wing veins
Ceriana | |
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Ceriana vespiformis | |
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Genus: | Ceriana Rafinesque, 1815 |
Systematics
Species include:
- C. abbreviata Loew, 1864
- C. alboseta (Ferguson, 1926)[1]
- C. ancoralis (Coquillett, 1902)
- C. annulifera (Walker , 1861)
- C.antipoda (Bigot 1860)[2]
- C.apicalis (Ferguson 1926)[1]
- C.aurata (Curran 1927)
- C.australis (Macquart 1850)
- C.brevis (Brunetti , 1923)[3]
- C. brunettii (Shannon, 1927)[4]
- C. brunettii (Shannon 1927)
- C. brunnea (Hull , 1944)
- C. cacica (Walker , 1860)
- C. caesarea (Stackelberg, 1928)[4]
- C. caucasica (Paramonov, 1927)[4]
- C. chekiangensis (Ôuchi, 1943)
- C. chiefengensis (Ôuchi, 1943)
- C. compacta (Brunetti , 1907)
- C. conopsoides (Linnaeus, 1758)
- C. cylindrica (Curran, 1921)
- C. dilatipes (Brunetti , 1929)
- C. dimidiatipennis (Brunetti , 1923)[3]
- C. dirickxi (Thompson, 2013)
- C. divisa (Walker , 1857)
- C. durani (Davidson, 1925)
- C. euphara (Riek, 1954)[5]
- C. formosensis (Shiraki, 1930)
- C. gibbosa Violovitsh, 1980
- C. glaebosa (Steenis, Ricartean Steenis, Ricarte, Vujic, Birtele & Speight, 2016)
- C. hungkingi (Shannon , 1927)
- C. ismayi (Thompson, 2015)
- C. lypra (Riek, 1954)[5]
- C. macquarti Shannon, 1925
- C. mellivora (Shannon , 1927)
- C. mime (Hull, 1935)
- C. naja Violovitsh, 1974
- C. oceanica (Hull , 1944)[3]
- C. optata (Riek, 1954)[5]
- C. opuntiae (Ferguson, 1926)[1]
- C. ornata (Saunders 1845)
- C. opuntiae (Ferguson, 1926)[1]
- C. ornatifrons (Brunetti , 1915)
- C. pedicellata (Williston, 1887)
- C. pictula (Loew, 1853)
- C. platypus (Ferguson, 1926)[1]
- C. ponti (Thompson, 2013)
- C. relictura (Walker , 1858)
- C. rieki (Goot, 1964)[5]
- C. sartorum Smirnov, 1924[4]
- C. saundersi (Shannon , 1925)
- C. skevingtoni (Steenis, Ricartean Steenis, Ricarte, Vujic, Birtele & Speight, 2016)
- C. smaragdina (Walker , 1858)
- C. snowi (Adams, 1904)
- C. sphenotoma (Riek, 1954)[5]
- C. tridens (Loew, 1872)
- C. vespiformis (Latreille, 1804)
- C. wyatti (Thompson, 2015)
References
- Ferguson, E.W. (1926). "Revision of Australian Syrphidae". Proceedings of the Linnean Society of New South Wales. 51: 137–183.
- Bigot, J.M.F. (1860). "Dipteres exotiques nouveaux". Ann. Soc. Entomol. Fr. 8 (3): 219–228.
- Brunetti, E (1923). The Fauna of British India, Diptera. Vol. Iii. Pipunculidae. Syrphidae, Conopidae, Oestridae. London: Secretary of State for India in Council. p. 424.
- Barkalov, A.V. "Syrphidae collection of Siberian Zoological Museum". Novosibirsk, Russia: the Institute of Animal Systematics and Ecology, Siberian Branch of the Russian Academy of Sciences. Archived from the original on 20 October 2008. Retrieved 28 July 2009.
- Riek, E.F. (1954). "The Australian syrphid flies of the subfamily Cerioidinae (Diptera, Syrphidae): systematics and wing folding". Australian Journal of Zoology. 2: 100–130. doi:10.1071/ZO9540100.
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