Strauzia longipennis

Strauzia longipennis is a large species of tephritid fruit fly known by the common name sunflower maggot fly. It is a minor pest being a plant miner of sunflowers and related plants, damage within flower receptacle from larval feeding on spongy tissue is usually light.

Strauzia longipennis
Scientific classification
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S. longipennis
Binomial name
Strauzia longipennis
([[[Christian Rudolph Wilhelm Wiedemann|Wiedemann]], 1830])
Synonyms
  • Strauzia armata Robineau-Desvoidy, 1830
  • Strauzia inermis Robineau-Desvoidy, 1830
  • Tephritis trimaculata Macquart, 1843
  • Trypeta cornifera Walker, 1849
  • Trypeta cornigera Walker, 1849
  • Trypeta longipennis Wiedemann, 1830
  • Trypeta longipennis var. confluens Loew, 1873
  • Trypeta longipennis var. typica Loew, 1873
  • Trypeta sepentaria Harris, 1835
  • Trypeta septenaria Osten Sacken, 1858
  • Trypeta serpentaria Johnson, 1925

Adults are about 6 mm long and a wing length of approximately 7 mm. (reasonably large for a Tephritid) The body is creamy-white and the wings have a mottled yellowish-brown appearance, with distinct F shaped marking near the wing tips. The larvae are yellowish-white in colour reaching a length of about 5 mm and spend around 30 days feeding within the host plant before overwintering in the soil as pupae. Adults are found from mid-July through to August.

There are two other species of Tephritid fly known as Sunflower Maggot, these are Gymnocarena diffusa which feeds on stem pith and Neotephritis finalis which feeds on the sunflower seeds.

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