Showing posts with label Robber Flies. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Robber Flies. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 3, 2013

Promachella pilosa, a new genus and species for BugGuide and the UAIC

Every morning during breakfast on the patio we sneeze at all the pollen that drift over from blooming Creosote and Brittle Bushes. We both have been in Arizona long enough to develop pollen allergies. While Randy so far just sneezes, I experience the whole spectrum from itchy eyes to sinus problems. But eventually I will jump up with my camera that sits always next to my coffee cup to get even closer to the flowers (I very much appreciate that my point and shoot camera has no view finder. While this seemed to be a serious draw-back at first, it now saves me from getting my face right into the blooming bushes.)
Most of the insects are arriving to either collect pollen and/or nectar, find mates, eat parts of the flowers or leafy parts or deposit their eggs so their off-spring can do so. A few spread their eggs so their off-spring can hitch rides on other flower visitors to  become a parasitic guest in their nurseries.
And of course this aggregation of spring insects also draws some predators.


Promachella pilosa female
 Yesterday I observed a robberfly that was feeding on a small bee. She was busy and easy to approach so I got some good photos. In shape and coloring she reminded of the genus Promachus, but at less than 15 mm she seemed small.


Promachella pilosa male
 Not much later I found a similar, but even smaller male. He was shyer and kept landing among the branches of a Creosote bush, so his portrait didn't turn out quite as well.
On BugGuide Dr. Eric M. Fisher a Diptera specialist with special interest in Asilidae identified
my patio robbers as Promachella pilosa. I am rather proud to say that this added a new Genus and species to Bugguide. Checking the online species data base of the UAIC, I found that there are no (identified) specimens in the collection either.
While it is nice to photograph something new and special (I found no other photos on the web) there is not much information out there either. I have no access right now to Willcox original 1937 paper. So all I know so far is that this is a fly that is only known from Arizona and from neighboring Sonora, Mexico. 
But since the appearance is so similar to that of the widespread genus Promachus, and the female is lacking the dagger-like ovipositor of some genera that stick their eggs into plant material, I guess that the females of the genus Promachella deposit their eggs into the soil. 

Tuesday, June 14, 2011

'Raubritter' among Insects

Stenopogon inquinatus male
The German word 'Raubritter' has no good English translation that I know of. In lawless medieval times rogue knights were sitting in their fortified castles along European trading routes, ready to capture, rob and often slay passing travelers. Similarly, robber flies perch by day on objects near the ground, watching every movement in clearly binocular vision, always ready to fly up and strike at any insect prey that passes by in the air.


Stenopogon inquinatus female
Last week on our trip to Mount Lemmon, the highest peak of the Catalina Mountains, Eric Eaton and I  found some exceptionally large specimens. The one in the picture above had just caught a grass hopper of the species Trimerotropis modesta.  The fly had grabbed it, injected its paralyzing digestive juices through its pointed proboscis and then sucked out the dissolved tissue of the grasshopper. After the robber fly had finished its meal, the exoskeleton of the grass hopper seemed mainly intact.

Trimerotropis modesta
The robber fly below has caught a honey bee by grabbing it by the thorax and holding it in the firm grasp of its bristly legs so the bee had no chance to sting. The bristles at the tip of the female's abdomen, called acanthophorites, help her to push the abdomen into the soil to lay her eggs.

Stenopogon inquinatus female
There are nearly 1000 species of robber flies (Asilidae) in North America, and most of them live in the hot, arid Southwest.The family has members of all sizes from 3 mm up to 5 cm.

It seems understandable that we found several very large species on Mount Lemmon: Like many  insects robber flies stake out  territories on local high points (hill tops) of the terrain, and size and strength are great advantages in the constantly whipping wind on Mount Lemmon that could easily rip any hunter or courting male off its exposed perch.

Laphria engelhardti
Around Tucson, bumble bees occur only in the higher elevations. They share the mountain habitat along the Meadow Trail with  Laphria engelhardti, one of the many bumble bee mimics in the genus Laphria. When startled, it flies only for a few feet, very low over the ground, so the strong wind can't catch it.

Eccritosia zamon
I photographed this pair at the end of August 2009 on a hill top along the north side of Sabino Canyon.
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As with many powerful predators, the male has to take quite a risk when he approaches the female to mate. Usually they seem to approach from above and behind and grab the female before she can go on the attack. Asilid males haven't come up with the gift-bearing trick that some other relatives in the fly family use, but it doesn't hurt to find the female already busy with prey. In this case the mating couple devoured the yellow jacket together.


Wyelia midas






The sting of an asilid fly is supposedly very painful, but obviously it doesn't hurt to advertise this by wearing the colors of another famously pain-inducing stinger, the Tarantula-Hawk Wasp (Muellerian mimicry). At the same time, this robber fly evokes in color and sluggish flight very much a harmless Midas Fly which also finds protection from predators in its similarity to the wasp's appearance (Batesian mimicry). So the robber fly, like a wolf in sheep closing, maybe fooling its prey as well as its predators.
Archilestris magnificus

The largest of our robber flies  I have not found in the high  Catalinas, but in lower areas further south along the Santa Cruz River in Amado, in the grassland of lower Madera Canyon and along Highway 90 towards Sierra Vista. There, several times I had the chance to watch two of these guys pursuing each other for whatever reasons - an impressive aerial dance. Dr Scarborough pointed out that the identification of this species may not be quiet certain - so I'll call it Archilestris near magnificus.


Thank you to Prof. emerit. A. Scarborough for his help with the identifications.