Dioctria bicincta

Dioctria bicincta is a species of robber fly classified in the subfamily Dasypogoninae of the family Asilidae.[2]

Dioctria bicincta
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Insecta
Order: Diptera
Family: Asilidae
Genus: Dioctria
Species:
D. bicincta
Binomial name
Dioctria bicincta
Meigen, 1820
Synonyms[1]

Dioctria infuscata Meigen, 1820

Distribution

This species can be found in most of Europe (Austria, Belgium, Croatia, France, Germany, Greece, Italy, Poland, Spain, Switzerland, Netherlands and former Yugoslavia). It is not present in the British Islands.[3][4]

Description

Dioctria bicincta can reach a body length of about 7–9 mm (0.28–0.35 in).[4] These robber flies have a more or less shiny black thorax. Also the abdomen is usually black, sometimes with partly reddish marks on the middle tergites. In males the hind metatarsi are very swollen.[5] The front and middle tibia and femora are mainly yellowish. This species is rather similar to Dioctria linearis (drawing of the abdomen and color of the legs are almost identical)[5] and to Dioctria gracilis (females of these two species cannot be easily separated).[6][7]

Biology

Adults can be found from the end of May to mid-July.[5] These insects are predators on other insects that they hunt from leaves of bushes and trees.[5]

gollark: I'm going to make the second computer, which right now just adds queens, gather summary population statistics.
gollark: Correction, 90.
gollark: It's 256 kilobees/singularity and there are only something like 150 apiaries.
gollark: Zero. We don't have many excess bees.
gollark: Excess bees are compacted into singularities.

References

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