A confirmed feeding attempt by the haematophagous horse fly Philoliche (Philoliche) rondani (Bertoloni, 1861) (Diptera: Tabanidae) on fresh carrion
Author
Miller, Benjamin
https://orcid.org/0000-0002-1409-690X
Rhodes University, Makhanda, South Africa
Author
Villet, Martin
https://orcid.org/0000-0002-4335-5667
Rhodes University, Makhanda, South Africa & Southern African Forensic Entomology Research Laboratory, Makhanda, South Africa
Author
Midgley, John Mark
https://orcid.org/0000-0003-1203-3750
KwaZulu-Natal Museum, Pietermaritzburg, South Africa & Rhodes University, Makhanda, South Africa
johnmidge@gmail.com
text
Biodiversity Data Journal
2022
2022-03-31
10
77507
77507
http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/BDJ.10.e77507
journal article
http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/BDJ.10.e77507
1314-2828-10-e77507
288453A2ADDD579F99B5A7DA74ADC6BF
Philoliche (Philoliche) rondani (Bertoloni, 1861)
Materials
Type status:
Other material
.
Occurrence
:
individualCount:
1
; sex:
female
; lifeStage:
adult
; behavior: feeding; occurrenceStatus: present; preparations: photograph;
Taxon
:
scientificName:
Philoliche
rondani; acceptedNameUsage:
Philoliche
rondani; parentNameUsage:
Tabanidae
; kingdom:
Animalia
; phylum:
Arthropoda
; class:
Insecta
; order:
Diptera
; family:
Tabanidae
; genus:
Philoliche
; specificEpithet: rondani; taxonRank: species; scientificNameAuthorship: (Bertoloni, 1861); nomenclaturalCode: ICZN; taxonomicStatus: accepted;
Location
:
higherGeographyID: 7017573; higherGeography:
Africa
:
South Africa
:
Limpopo
:
Mookgophong
: ASDIA
Wild Game Farm
; continent:
Africa
; country:
South Africa
; countryCode: ZA; stateProvince:
Limpopo
; locality:
ASDIA
Wild Game Farm
; verbatimLocality: ASDIA
Wild Game Farm
,
Mookgophong region
; locationAccordingTo:
Getty Thesaurus of Geographic Names
; verbatimCoordinates:
24°26'S
28°25'E
; verbatimLatitude:
24°26'S
; verbatimLongitude:
28°25'E
; verbatimCoordinateSystem: degrees minutes; decimalLatitude:
-24.43333
; decimalLongitude:
28.41666
;
Identification:
identifiedBy:
John Chainey
;
Event:
eventDate: 2014-12; startDayOfYear: 334; endDayOfYear: 365; year: 2014; month: 12; verbatimEventDate:
December 2014
; habitat: savanna; eventRemarks: about 18 hours post mortem;
Record Level
:
type:
StillImage
; modified: 2014-12; rights:
Content
licensed under
Creative Commons Attribution
4.0
International
; rightsHolder:
R Boon
; basisOfRecord:
HumanObservation
Ecology
At the ASDIA Wild Game Farm (
24°26'S
,
28°25'E
) in the Mookgophong area of Limpopo, South Africa, a female of
Philoliche (Philoliche) rondani
(Bertoloni, 1861) was photographed visiting the carcass of a blue wildebeest (
Connochaetes taurinus
(Burchell, 1823)) cow that had died during calving (Fig.
1
). An additional specimen was observed, but not photographed. No specimens were collected. The incident occurred during December 2014 (austral summer). The flies' activity was located primarily on the lower part of the soft abdominal region of the carcass, closer to the ground. The flies were observed on the morning following the death, about 18 h post mortem. Accurate meteorological data is not available, but typical weather for December is warm, average minumum temperature is 17.4°C and average maximum 22.8°C. The flies were active when the observers arrived at the carcass and continued to visit the carcass for approximately five minutes. There was no obvious evidence of the animal being fed on by mammalian scavengers during the night, except that the calf had been dragged away from the remains of the mother. Adult blow flies already had a strong presence on other parts of the carcass.
Notes
A random selection of
P. (P.) rondani
specimens was taken from the KwaZulu-Natal Museum entomology collection (n = 15) and the average ratio of proboscis length (oral margin to tip of proboscis) to head height (vertex to oral margin) was measured using vernier calipers.
Measurements of preserved specimens found the ratio of proboscis to head height to be 1.59:1 (n = 15). The minimum observed ratio was 1.15:1. In Fig.
1
, the ratio of visible length of the proboscis to head height is 1.10:1, indicating that the labellae have penetrated into the tissue to obtain a blood meal. This represents the first record of intrusive feeding on a post mortem host by
Tabanidae
.