Sargus bipunctatus

Sargus bipunctatus, the twin-spot centurion, is a European species of soldier fly. [1]

Sargus bipunctatus
Scientific classification
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S. bipunctatus
Binomial name
Sargus bipunctatus
(Scopoli, 1763)
Synonyms

Description

Body length 10 to 14 mm. Frons less broad than in Sargus cuprarius. The mesonotum is metallic green; the abdomen brown, with a violet metallic tinge. Females have a broader build than the slender males with the base of the abdomen extensively reddish and a blackish tip bearing blue reflections. Wings slightly ye1low. Red legs, tarsi brown at the apex. [2][3][4] [5]

Biology

Found in open and wooded habitats, sunbathing on foliage in sheltered spots. The flight period is from July to November. Females lay eggs on fresh dung, manure or in close by soil where the larvae develop. The larvae have been reared from cow dung, compost, rotting vegetation and decaying fungi. Larvae have been found in egg pods of locusts (Dociostaurus maroccanus Shnb.).

Distribution

Trans-Caucasus Central belt and South of Western Europe.

gollark: THEY AREN'T COMPRESSED BY THE FORMAT, AS FAR AS I KNOW
gollark: GIFs are worse.
gollark: Otherwise there would be more bandwidth-reducing optimizations.
gollark: I, too, bet it is not.
gollark: *ponders AR-blasting them when they're at 4d1h*

See also

  • List of soldierflies and allies recorded in Britain

References

  1. Stubbs, A. & Drake, M. (2001). British Soldierflies and Their Allies: A Field Guide to the Larger British Brachycera. British Entomological & Natural History Society. pp. 512 pp. ISBN 1-899935-04-5.
  2. Seguy. E. Faune de France Faune n° 13 1926. Diptères Brachycères.308 p., 685 fig.
  3. George Henry VerrallStratiomyidae and succeeding families of the Diptera Brachycera of Great Britain- British flies (1909) BHL Full text with illustrations
  4. E. P. Narchuk in Bei-Bienko, G. Ya, 1988 Keys to the insects of the European Part of the USSR Volume 5 (Diptera) Part 2 English edition. Keys to Palaearctic species but now needs revision.
  5. William Lundbeck Diptera Danica. Genera and species of flies Hitherto found in Denmark. Copenhagen & London, 1902-1927. 7 vols This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
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