Syritta pipiens
Male
Female
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Insecta
Order: Diptera
Family: Syrphidae
Subfamily: Eristalinae
Tribe: Milesiini
Genus: Syritta
Species:
S. pipiens
Binomial name
Syritta pipiens
Synonyms

Syritta pipiens, sometimes called the thick-legged hoverfly, is one of the most common species in the insect family Syrphidae. This fly originates from Europe and is currently distributed across Eurasia and North America.[5] They are fast and nimble fliers, and their larvae are found in wet, rotting organic matter such as garden compost, manure, and silage.[6][7] The species is also commonly found in human-created environments such as most farmland, gardens, and urban parks, wherever there are flowers.[8] This species is an important part of its native ecosystem as adult Syritta pipiens flies are critical pollinators for a variety of flowering plants and the species supports parasitism by various parasitic wasp species.[9] Thus, they play an important role in environmental functionality, and can serve as bio-indicators, in which their abundance can reflect the health of the environment.[10] Syritta pipiens looks like many predatory hoverfly species, yet is not predatory.[11]

Morphology

The species Syritta pipiens is within the family of Syrphidae, commonly called hover or flower flies. Syrphidae is one of the largest families within the Diptera order[12] and contains about 6,000 known species widely distributed around the world. They are distinctive flies that are often found on flowers, where the adult males primarily feed on nectar and adult females eat protein-rich pollen to produce eggs.[13]

The name "thick-legged hoverfly" comes from the fly's distinctively broad femora. A thick-legged hoverfly has a wing length ranging between 4.25–7 mm (0.167–0.276 in) and a body length between 6.5–9 mm (0.26–0.35 in).[7] Both sexes have apical third of metafemur and a row of spines along the ventral edge. Another distinctive morphological feature is the pair of small white wedge-shaped spots on the fly's thorax directly behind its head.[5] The male femur 3 is strongly thickened. It has no basal protuberance. Tergites 2 and 3 have small, pale marks. Female tergites have similar markings, with ocellar triangle bluish-black, metallic sheen. Side margins of thorax dorsum are dusted. Side and hind margins of tergite 4 are not dusted. See references for determination.[14][15][16][17]

The eyes of Syritta pipiens span over almost the entirety of their heads. Both sexes have similarly sized hemispherical heads, with a diameter of 2 mm. However, the eyes differ among the two sexes in two ways. First, males have holoptic eyes, meaning that their eyes meet in the front, which is a feature common in male syrphid flies.[18] Second, males have enlarged facets (fovea) between the clypeus and ocellar triangle, which are absent in females.[18]

Taxonomy

The family Syrphidae divides into four subfamilies: Eristalinae, Microdontinae, Pipizinae, and Syrphinae. Syritta pipiens belong to the subfamily Eristalinae, closely related to the well-known dronefly, Eristalis tenax.[5]

Distribution and habitat

Syritta pipiens have been found across North American as well as Asia since their first introduction from Europe in 1800s. The species is cosmopolitan except for the Afrotropical realm.[19][20][21] It is found wherever there are flowers, as it feeds on and lives around flowers.[18] It is also anthropophilic, occurring in farmland, suburban gardens, and urban parks. It is found in mid April to mid October in Ontario; in Europe, it flies from March to November, as most records show, but it is also likely that it flies all year round in southern European regions where it is warmer.[7][8] At the larval stage, the species inhabits wetlands that are in proximity to bodies of freshwater such as lakes, ponds, rivers, ditches.[8]

Life history

Syritta pipiens goes through three adolescent stages – eggs, larvae, and puparia – followed by the fourth life stage of the adult. Larvae develop in moist and rotting organic matter, so different stages of the fly have been found variously in the manures of cows, horses, and guinea pigs, in human waste and decaying heaps of vegetable waste, and in garden compost.

Larva

The larva has a length of 10 mm, a width of 2.75 mm, and a height of 2 mm.[8] The body is dim yellow and tapers at both ends, at the false head and more narrowly at the posterior end, where the broadest part of the body is from the fifth to the ninth segment.[8] A false head is a feature of the insect used to deflect predators' attack from its head. It is usually on the insect's tail, or the opposite end from its head. Moreover, the larva has white, microscopic hairs covered over its entire body.[8] It also has three pairs of posterior fleshy processes, among which the first is the shortest and the last the longest, as well as seven pairs of prolegs, each of which has two dozen hooklets.[8]

Puparium

The puparium has a length of 6.8 mm, a width of 2.95 mm, and a height of 2.68 mm.[8] It is of colours yellowish white and dull brown, with an elongated oval body shape. It maintains remnants of the three pairs of posterior fleshy processes from the larval stage; however, the prolegs disappear.[8]

Food resources

Larval forms of Syritta pipiens feed on decaying organic matter.[5]

Adult flies feed on the flowers of water-willow (Dianthera americana L.), white vervain (Verbena urticifolia L.), American pokeweed (Phytolacca decandra L.), and candyleaf (Stevia rebaudiana).[22][23] They pollinate bluebell flowers (Campanula rotundifolia L.), which is a perennial herbaceous plant, with blue flowers.[22][24]


List of flowers they also visit: Achillea, Allium, Aster, Calluna, Cardamine, Cirsium palustre, Convolvulus, Crataegus, Epilobium, Euphorbia, Galium, Jasione montana, Leontodon, Polygonum cuspidatum, Potentilla erecta, Prunus laurocerasus, Ranunculus, Rosa canina, Senecio jacobaea, Sorbus aucuparia, Tussilago.[8]

Enemies

Predators

Syritta pipiens is eaten by Pennsylvania ambush bug (Phymata pennsylvanica).[22] It is also suspected to be a prey of willow flycatchers, as the flies have been found in the birds' fecal samples.[13] Flower flies are likely to be a prey of flycatchers, because they occur in high abundance across seasons and are active in early mornings when flycatchers like to feed.[13]

Parasites

Syrphids experience parasitism at the larval stage of development. Nearly 60% of parasitism in syrphid larvae are by parasitic wasps such as Diplazon sp. and Pachyneuron sp., which oviposit their eggs into the larval bodies.[11]

Social behavior

Flight

Syritta pipiens flies at a very low height, rarely more than 1 m (3 ft 3 in) above ground.[8] Adult flies sometimes cruise around ignoring other flies, but males sometimes turn towards other flies, circle around them and make sudden darts if they are females, attempting to force copulations with them.[18] More specifically, males point their heads at the target and move rapidly in an arc centered around the target fly they are tracking, even when the target fly settles.[18] When the target fly is another male, the two males may oscillate sideways while both try to track the other fly; they may also signal to other male fly that they are of the same sex by meeting them head on in flight.[18]

Mating

Syritta pipiens couple

Males' tracking behavior in flight potentially serves as a function for mating, as such behavior often ends with a sharp dart towards the target fly after it has settled.[18] During those rapid movements, the male fly maintains an acceleration rate at about 500 cm/s2 until just before it lands and is prepared for copulation.[18] In this way, males accurately track females, aiming to attempt forced copulation.[18] Males Syritta pipiens also use motion camouflage when they approach female, so as to remain cryptic and become more successful in forcing copulation.

Relation to humans

Flower flies (the family Syrphidae) are critical and one of the most common bio-control agents of plant pests because their larvae feed on aphids.[9] As one of the exceptions, Syritta pipiens specializes in organic waste, leaving the predation to other members of the family.[11]

They are also recyclers of plant and animal debris, important pollinators a variety of common plants, as well as pests for certain ornamental plants.[10] Because they play an important role in supporting the functionality of the environment, flower flies also serve as bio-indicators of environmental health, demonstrating the effects of climate change on pollinators.[10] Their abundance is closely linked to agricultural landscapes and arable lands and is contingent upon the density of flowering plants available. Thus, landscape changes can very easily have an impact on the organism's density, and result in further cascades of consequences.[25]

References

  1. Stubbs, Alan E.; Falk, Steven J. (1983). British Hoverflies: An Illustrated Identification Guide. British Entomological & Natural History Society. pp. 253, xvpp.
  2. Fourcroy, A.F. de (1785). Entomologia parisiensis. Parisiis [=Paris]: Aedibus Serpentineis. pp. viii + 544 pp.
  3. Dzhafarova, F.S. (1974). "Novye vidy zhurchalok iz raionov Malogo Kavkaza". Uchen. Zap. Azerbaid. Univ., Ser. Biol. Nauk. Baku. 1: 40–43.
  4. Say, T. (1824). American entomology, or descriptions of the insects of North America. [Vol. 1]. Philadelphia. pp. 101 pp.], pls. 1-18. Retrieved 9 July 2021.
  5. 1 2 3 4 "Species Syritta pipiens". BugGuide. Archived from the original on 26 February 2020. Retrieved 30 July 2023.
  6. Van Veen, M.P. (2004). Hoverflies of Northwest Europe, Identification Keys to the Syrphidae (hardback). Utrecht: KNNV Publishing. p. 254. ISBN 90-5011-199-8.
  7. 1 2 3 "Field Guide to the Flower Flies of Ontario". Canadian National Collection of Insect, Arachnids and Nematodes. 2005.
  8. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 "Syritta pipiens (Linnaeus, 1758)". www.gbif.org. Retrieved 1 October 2019.
  9. 1 2 "Hover flies pollinate flowers and eat aphids". Honey Bee Suite. 30 June 2010. Retrieved 1 October 2019.
  10. 1 2 3 "Syrphidae Community Website".
  11. 1 2 3 Bugg, Robert (May 2008). "Flower Flies (Syrphidae) and Other Biological Control Agents for Aphids in Vegetable Crops" (PDF). University of California Division of Agriculture and Natural Resources. Publication 8285.
  12. "Key to the Genera of Nearctic Syrphidae". Biological Survey of Canada. 2013.
  13. 1 2 3 Wiesenborn, W. D.; Heydon, S. L.; Lorenzen, K. (2008). "Pollen Loads on Adult Insects from Tamarisk Flowers and Inferences about Larval Habitats at Topock Marsh, Arizona". Journal of the Kansas Entomological Society. 81 (1): 50–60. doi:10.2317/JKES-705-15.1. ISSN 0022-8567. JSTOR 25086416. S2CID 85622070.
  14. Van Veen, M. (2004). Hoverflies of Northwest Europe: identification keys to the Syrphidae. 256pp. KNNV Publishing, Utrecht.addendum
  15. Van der Goot, V.S. (1981). De zweefvliegen van Noordwest - Europa en Europees Rusland, in het bijzonder van de Benelux. KNNV, Uitgave no. 32: 275pp. Amsterdam.
  16. Bei-Bienko, G.Y. & Steyskal, G.C. (1988). Keys to the Insects of the European Part of the USSR, Volume V: Diptera and Siphonaptera, Part I. Amerind Publishing Co., New Delhi. ISBN 81-205-0080-6.
  17. Coe, R.L. (1953). "Diptera: Syrphidae". Handbks. Ident. Br. Insects 10(1): 1-98. R. Ent. Soc. London. pdf
  18. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Collett, T. S.; Land, M. F. (1 March 1975). "Visual control of flight behaviour in the hoverfly Syritta pipiens L.". Journal of Comparative Physiology. 99 (1): 1–66. doi:10.1007/BF01464710. ISSN 1432-1351. S2CID 26421454.
  19. "Syritta pipiens (Linnaeus, 1758)", Fauna Europaea
  20. Peck, L.V. (1988). "Syrphidae". In: Soos, A. & Papp, L. (eds.). Catalogue of Palaearctic Diptera 8: 11-230. Akad. Kiado, Budapest.
  21. Vockeroth, J.R. (1992). The Flower Flies of the Subfamily Syrphinae of Canada, Alaska, and Greenland (Diptera: Syrphidae). Part 18. The Insects and Arachnids of Canada. Ottawa, Ontario: Canadian Government Pub Centre. pp. 1–456. ISBN 0-660-13830-1.
  22. 1 2 3 "Syritta pipiens (Linnaeus 1758) - Encyclopedia of Life". eol.org. Retrieved 1 October 2019.
  23. Robertson, Charles (1892). "Flowers and Insects. VII". Botanical Gazette. 17 (3): 65–71. doi:10.1086/326766. ISSN 0006-8071. JSTOR 2994590. S2CID 84084592.
  24. "bluebell bellflower - Encyclopedia of Life". eol.org. Retrieved 1 October 2019.
  25. Haenke, Sebastian; Scheid, Barbara; Schaefer, Matthias; Tscharntke, Teja; Thies, Carsten (2009). "Increasing Syrphid Fly Diversity and Density in Sown Flower Strips within Simple vs. Complex Landscapes". Journal of Applied Ecology. 46 (5): 1106–1114. doi:10.1111/j.1365-2664.2009.01685.x. ISSN 0021-8901. JSTOR 25623092.
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