Lid slip
Lid slip | ||||||||||
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Blowfly |
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Systematics | ||||||||||
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Scientific name | ||||||||||
Cyclorrhapha | ||||||||||
Sharp , 1894 |
According to the way in which flies hatch from their pupae, they are divided into the subgroups of crevices (Orthorrhapha) and lids (Cyclorrhapha, Greek cyclo- = ring-shaped and raphe = seam). With their forehead bladder (ptilinum), into which they press hemolymph , the hatchers blow off the lid of their barrel doll. It is the most highly developed group of flies, to which the great majority of all two-winged species belong.
They are further subdivided into the group of Aschiza, who lack the forehead bladder (this includes the hover flies ) and the Schizophora, which with the Calyptratae includes groups such as the real flies (including the housefly ), the blowflies and the caterpillar flies , as well as the very large number of families of the Acalyptratae, to which a large number of small to tiny species belong. The Calyptratae differ from the Acalyptratae (among other things) by having a Calypters (a wing scale).
The taxon Cyclorrhapha was replaced by Muscomorpha (see classification of the two-winged species ).
Individual evidence
- ^ Theodor Hiepe, Regina Ribbeck, "Textbook of Parasitology", Vol. 4: "Veterinary Arachno-Entomology". G. Fischer-Verlag, Stuttgart 1982, pp. 274, 304
- ^ R. Lucius, B. Loos-Frank: Biology of Parasites. Berlin, Heidelberg, 2008, ISBN 978-3-540-37707-8 , pp. 485, 499 (online)