Fossil Sciaroidea (Diptera) in Cretaceous Ambers, Exclusive of Cecidomyiidae, Sciaridae, and Keroplatidae
Author
BLAGODEROV, VLADIMIR
Author
GRIMALDI, DAVID
text
American Museum Novitates
2004
2004-02-27
3433
1
1
76
http://www.bioone.org/perlserv/?request=get-abstract&doi=10.1206%2F0003-0082(2004)433%3C0001%3AFSDICA%3E2.0.CO%3B2
journal article
5822
10.1206/0003-0082(2004)433<0001:FSDICA>2.0.CO;2
51eea930-5f0d-43f6-8e03-3093edf36cd7
0003-0082
4712338
Ectrepesthoneura
Enderlein, 1911
Willistoniella
Meunier, 1904: 74
(preoccupied by Mik, 1895).
Meunieria
Johannsen, 1909: 87
(preoccupied by Kieffer, 1904).
Ectrepesthoneura
Enderlein, 1911: 115
.
DIAGNOSIS: As given by
Chandler (1980)
: Lateral ocelli remote from eye margin; laterotergites bare; Sc ending in R before base of RS; R
4
present; R
1
short, at most twice as long as
rm
; R
5
straight; C prolonged well beyond tip of R
5
; veins of medial and cubital sectors weak and faint; posterior fork sessile. Males with ‘‘sensory pit’’ near the base of mid tibia; hind tibial comb absent.
TYPE
SPECIES:
Tetragoneura hirta
Winnertz, 1846: 19
(orig. designation)
COMMENTS: There are about 10 extant species from the Holarctic region. The genus is very close to
Tetragoneura
Winnertz
(about 100 widespread living species) and is sometimes included in it or treated within the tribe
Gnoristini
(
Tuomikoski, 1966
;
Vaisanen, 1986
). There are two fossil species described from Baltic amber (
Meunier, 1904
) and the Oligocene of Rott,
Germany
(
Statz, 1944
).
Chandler (1999)
suggested that
Ectrepesthoneura
was paraphyletic.