Split panties

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Split panties
Common horsefly

Common horsefly

Systematics
Class : Insects (Insecta)
Superordinate : New winged wing (Neoptera)
Order : Fly (Diptera)
Subordination : Flies (Brachycera)
without rank: Split panties
Scientific name
Orthorrhapha
Sharp , 1894

According to the way in which flies hatch from their pupae, they are divided into the subgroups of crevice hatchers (Orthorrhapha, from Greek ὀρθός (orthos) = straight, standing upright and ῥαφή (raphe) = the seam) and lid hatchers (cyclorrhapha). The split knickers slip out of their mummy dolls through a longitudinal or T-shaped gap, similar to the mosquitoes . In other respects, too, this more original group of flies occupies an intermediate position to the mosquitoes, so they have a less strongly reduced wing veining and mostly strong antennae with a relatively long and often curled third limb.

The most famous families of the split panties are the horseflies , predatory flies , bumblebee flies , dance flies and snipe flies .

The split slip (Orthorrhapha) include the sub-orders Asilomorpha , Stratiomyomorpha , Tabanomorpha , Vermileonomorpha and Xylophagomorpha (see systematics of the two-winged ).

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Theodor Hiepe, Regina Ribbeck, "Textbook of Parasitology", Vol. 4: "Veterinary Arachno-Entomology". G. Fischer-Verlag, Stuttgart 1982, pp. 274, 304
  2. ^ R. Lucius, B. Loos-Frank: Biology of Parasites. Berlin, Heidelberg, 2008, ISBN 978-3-540-37707-8 , pp. 485, 499 (online)