Oedoparena glauca

Oedoparena glauca is a common coastal fly from the family Dryomyzidae. It is the only known dipterous predator of barnacles.[1]

Oedoparena glauca
Scientific classification
Kingdom:
Phylum:
Class:
Order:
Family:
Genus:
Species:
O. glauca
Binomial name
Oedoparena glauca

Distribution

This is a Nearctic fly occurring from Central California to Alaska.[1][2]

Ecology

Eggs are deposited on the operculum of barnacle and fly larvae consume several barnacles during their development. Pupariation then tacks place in an empty barnacle shell. The adult flies emerge during the morning low tide.[1] It is possible that other members of the genus Oedoparena may have a similar lifestyle.[3]

gollark: The best part of fibre optic is that it has ***LASERS***, but with that approach the lasers are boring and far away.
gollark: It's fibre-to-nearby-box-then-copper.
gollark: BT's offering is in fact not proper fibre.
gollark: That's not fibre.
gollark: I haven't really looked at symmetric encryption algorithms available in CC much.

References

  1. Burger, J.F.; Anderson, J.R.; Knudsen, M.F. (1980). "The habits and life history of Oedoparena glauca (Diptera: Dryomyzidae), a predator of barnacles". Proe. Entomol. Soc. Wash. (Print). 82: 360–377.
  2. Mathis, W.N.; Steyskal, G.C. (1980). "A revision of the genus Oedoparena Curran (Diptera: Dryomyzidae; Dryomyzinae)". Proe. Entomol. Soc. Wash. (Print). 82: 349–359.
  3. Suwa, Masaaki (1981). "Description of a new Japanese species of Oedoparena, an Asio-American dipterous genus (Dryomyzidae)" (pdf). Insecta Matsumurana. New Series. 20: 29–35.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.