Asteromyia Clarkei
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Asteromyia Clarkei
''Asteromyia'' is a genus of gall midges in the family Cecidomyiidae. There are about nine described species in ''Asteromyia''. Species These nine species belong to the genus ''Asteromyia'': * '' Asteromyia carbonifera'' (Osten Sacken, 1862) * ''Asteromyia chrysothamni'' Felt, 1918 * '' Asteromyia clarkei'' (Felt, 1909) * '' Asteromyia euthamiae'' Gagne, 1968 * '' Asteromyia gutierreziae'' Felt, 1916 * '' Asteromyia laeviana'' (Felt, 1907) * ''Asteromyia modesta'' (Felt, 1907) * ''Asteromyia tumifica ''Asteromyia tumifica'' is a species of gall midges in the family Cecidomyiidae. This fly causes blister galls on green stems at the base of goldenrod stems. It has a fungal symbiont responseible for forming a black, hard cast around full-gro ...'' (Beutenmuller, 1907) * '' Asteromyia urostigmatis'' (Tavares, 1917) References Further reading * * * * * Cecidomyiinae Articles created by Qbugbot Cecidomyiidae genera Taxa named by Ephraim Porter Felt {{Bibi ...
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Gall Midge
Cecidomyiidae is a family of flies known as gall midges or gall gnats. As the name implies, the larvae of most gall midges feed within plant tissue, creating abnormal plant growths called galls. Cecidomyiidae are very fragile small insects usually only in length; many are less than long. They are characterised by hairy wings, unusual in the order Diptera, and have long antennae. Some Cecidomyiids are also known for the strange phenomenon of paedogenesis in which the larval stage reproduces without maturing first. In some species, the daughter larvae consume the mother, while in others, reproduction occurs later on in the egg or pupa. More than 6,650 species and 830 genera are described worldwide, though this is certainly an underestimate of the actual diversity of this family. A DNA barcoding study published in 2016 estimated the fauna of Canada alone to be in excess of 16,000 species, hinting at a staggering global count of over 1 million cecidomyiid species that have yet ...
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