Deuterophlebia Personata
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Deuterophlebia Personata
The fly genus ''Deuterophlebia'' is the sole member of the small monogeneric family Deuterophlebiidae or mountain midges. Adults have broad, fan-shaped wings, and males have extremely long antennae which they employ when contesting territories over running water, waiting for females to hatch. Larvae occur in swiftly flowing streams and are easily recognized by their forked antennae and the prolegs on the abdomen. One classification places this family in its own infraorder Deuterophlebiomorpha, but this has not gained wide acceptance. A recent phylogeny of the entire order Diptera places them as the sister group to all other flies. Species Catalogue of Life accepts the following species within ''Deuterophlebia:'' * ''Deuterophlebia bicarinata'' Courtney, 1994 * '' Deuterophlebia blepharis'' Courtney, 1994 * ''Deuterophlebia brachyrhina'' Courtney, 1994 * '' Deuterophlebia coloradensis'' Pennak, 1945 * '' Deuterophlebia inyoensis'' Kennedy, 1960 * '' Deuterophlebia mirabilis ...
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Frederick Wallace Edwards
Frederick Wallace Edwards FRS (28 November 1888 in Fletton, Peterborough – 15 November 1940 in London), was an English entomologist. Edwards was known in the field of entomology for his work on Diptera. Edwards worked in the British Museum (Natural History) which contains his collections made on his expeditions to Norway and Sweden (1923), Switzerland and Austria (1925), Argentina and Chile (1926/27), with Raymond Corbett Shannon, Corsica and USA (1928), the Baltic (1933), Kenya and Uganda (1934), with Ernest Gibbins, and the Pyrenees (1935). He was able to oversee publication of Alwyn M. Evan's monograph on ''The Mosquitoes of the Ethiopian Region'' after her death in 1937. Among the unusual insects that he described was the flightless marine midge ''Pontomyia''. The mosquito genus ''Fredwardsius'' is named to honor his work establishing the generic and subgeneric framework which forms the basis for modern day systematics of the Culicidae Mosquitoes (or mosquitos) ...
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Deuterophlebia Coloradensis
The fly genus ''Deuterophlebia'' is the sole member of the small monogeneric family Deuterophlebiidae or mountain midges. Adults have broad, fan-shaped wings, and males have extremely long antennae which they employ when contesting territories over running water, waiting for females to hatch. Larvae occur in swiftly flowing streams and are easily recognized by their forked antennae and the prolegs on the abdomen. One classification places this family in its own infraorder Deuterophlebiomorpha, but this has not gained wide acceptance. A recent phylogeny of the entire order Diptera places them as the sister group to all other flies. Species Catalogue of Life accepts the following species within ''Deuterophlebia:'' * ''Deuterophlebia bicarinata'' Courtney, 1994 * '' Deuterophlebia blepharis'' Courtney, 1994 * ''Deuterophlebia brachyrhina'' Courtney, 1994 * '' Deuterophlebia coloradensis'' Pennak, 1945 * ''Deuterophlebia inyoensis'' Kennedy, 1960 * ''Deuterophlebia mirabilis'' ...
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Nematocera Genera
The Nematocera (the name means "thread-horns") are a suborder of elongated flies with thin, segmented antennae and mostly aquatic larvae. This group is paraphyletic and contains all flies but species from suborder Brachycera (the name means "short-horns"), which includes more commonly known species as housefly or the common fruit fly. Families in Nematocera include mosquitoes, crane flies, gnats, black flies, and a multiple groups of families described as midges. The Nematocera typically have fairly long, fine, finely-jointed antennae. In many species, such as most mosquitoes, the female antennae are more or less threadlike, but the males have spectacularly plumose antennae. The larvae of most families of Nematocera are aquatic, either free-swimming, rock-dwelling, plant-dwelling, or luticolous. Some families however, are not aquatic; for instance the Tipulidae tend to be soil-dwelling and the Mycetophilidae feed on fungi such as mushrooms. Unlike most of the Brachycera, the l ...
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Systematic Entomology
''Systematic Entomology'' is a scientific journal covering the field of systematic entomology, published by the Royal Entomological Society of London. Having begun in 1932 as '' Proceedings of the Royal Entomological Society of London, Series B: Taxonomy'', the title was changed to ''Journal of Entomology, Series B: Taxonomy'' in 1971, starting with volume 40. After volume 44 in 1976, the journal became ''Systematic Entomology'', starting again with volume 1. According to the ''Journal Citation Reports'', the journal has a 2020 impact factor of 3.844. It is indexed in the following bibliographic databases: *''Academic Search'' *''AGRICOLA'' *''Aquatic Sciences and Fisheries Abstracts'' *'' BIOBASE'' *''Biological Abstracts'' *''BIOSIS Previews'' *'' CAB Direct'' *'' CSA Biological Sciences Database'' *'' CSA Environmental Sciences & Pollution Management Database'' *''Current Contents'' *''Embiology'' *'' IBIDS'' *'' InfoTrac'' *''Journal Citation Reports'' *''Science Citation In ...
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Journal Of Natural History
The ''Journal of Natural History'' is a scientific journal published by Taylor & Francis focusing on entomology and zoology. The journal was established in 1841 under the name ''Annals and Magazine of Natural History'' (''Ann. Mag. Nat. Hist.'') and obtained its current title in 1967. The journal was formed by the merger of the ''Magazine of Natural History'' (1828–1840) and the ''Annals of Natural History'' (1838–1840; previously the ''Magazine of Zoology and Botany'', 1836–1838) and '' Loudon and Charlesworth's Magazine of Natural History''. In September 1855, the ''Annals and Magazine of Natural History'' published "On the Law which has Regulated the Introduction of New Species", a paper which Alfred Russel Wallace had written while working in the state of Sarawak on the island of Borneo in February of that year.
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Deuterophlebia Vernalis
The fly genus ''Deuterophlebia'' is the sole member of the small monogeneric family Deuterophlebiidae or mountain midges. Adults have broad, fan-shaped wings, and males have extremely long antennae which they employ when contesting territories over running water, waiting for females to hatch. Larvae occur in swiftly flowing streams and are easily recognized by their forked antennae and the prolegs on the abdomen. One classification places this family in its own infraorder Deuterophlebiomorpha, but this has not gained wide acceptance. A recent phylogeny of the entire order Diptera places them as the sister group to all other flies. Species Catalogue of Life accepts the following species within ''Deuterophlebia:'' * ''Deuterophlebia bicarinata'' Courtney, 1994 * '' Deuterophlebia blepharis'' Courtney, 1994 * ''Deuterophlebia brachyrhina The fly genus ''Deuterophlebia'' is the sole member of the small monogeneric family Deuterophlebiidae or mountain midges. Adults have br ...
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Deuterophlebia Tyosenensis
The fly genus ''Deuterophlebia'' is the sole member of the small monogeneric family Deuterophlebiidae or mountain midges. Adults have broad, fan-shaped wings, and males have extremely long antennae which they employ when contesting territories over running water, waiting for females to hatch. Larvae occur in swiftly flowing streams and are easily recognized by their forked antennae and the prolegs on the abdomen. One classification places this family in its own infraorder Deuterophlebiomorpha, but this has not gained wide acceptance. A recent phylogeny of the entire order Diptera places them as the sister group to all other flies. Species Catalogue of Life accepts the following species within ''Deuterophlebia:'' * ''Deuterophlebia bicarinata'' Courtney, 1994 * '' Deuterophlebia blepharis'' Courtney, 1994 * ''Deuterophlebia brachyrhina'' Courtney, 1994 * '' Deuterophlebia coloradensis'' Pennak, 1945 * '' Deuterophlebia inyoensis'' Kennedy, 1960 * '' Deuterophlebia mirabilis ...
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Deuterophlebia Shasta
''Deuterophlebia shasta'' is a species of mountain midge in the family Deuterophlebiidae. References Further reading * * External links * Nematocera Articles created by Qbugbot {{nematocera-stub ...
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Deuterophlebia Sajanica
The fly genus ''Deuterophlebia'' is the sole member of the small monogeneric family Deuterophlebiidae or mountain midges. Adults have broad, fan-shaped wings, and males have extremely long antennae which they employ when contesting territories over running water, waiting for females to hatch. Larvae occur in swiftly flowing streams and are easily recognized by their forked antennae and the prolegs on the abdomen. One classification places this family in its own infraorder Deuterophlebiomorpha, but this has not gained wide acceptance. A recent phylogeny of the entire order Diptera places them as the sister group to all other flies. Species Catalogue of Life accepts the following species within ''Deuterophlebia:'' * ''Deuterophlebia bicarinata'' Courtney, 1994 * '' Deuterophlebia blepharis'' Courtney, 1994 * ''Deuterophlebia brachyrhina'' Courtney, 1994 * '' Deuterophlebia coloradensis'' Pennak, 1945 * '' Deuterophlebia inyoensis'' Kennedy, 1960 * '' Deuterophlebia mirabilis ...
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Deuterophlebia Personata
The fly genus ''Deuterophlebia'' is the sole member of the small monogeneric family Deuterophlebiidae or mountain midges. Adults have broad, fan-shaped wings, and males have extremely long antennae which they employ when contesting territories over running water, waiting for females to hatch. Larvae occur in swiftly flowing streams and are easily recognized by their forked antennae and the prolegs on the abdomen. One classification places this family in its own infraorder Deuterophlebiomorpha, but this has not gained wide acceptance. A recent phylogeny of the entire order Diptera places them as the sister group to all other flies. Species Catalogue of Life accepts the following species within ''Deuterophlebia:'' * ''Deuterophlebia bicarinata'' Courtney, 1994 * '' Deuterophlebia blepharis'' Courtney, 1994 * ''Deuterophlebia brachyrhina'' Courtney, 1994 * '' Deuterophlebia coloradensis'' Pennak, 1945 * '' Deuterophlebia inyoensis'' Kennedy, 1960 * '' Deuterophlebia mirabilis ...
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Deuterophlebia Oporina
The fly genus ''Deuterophlebia'' is the sole member of the small monogeneric family Deuterophlebiidae or mountain midges. Adults have broad, fan-shaped wings, and males have extremely long antennae which they employ when contesting territories over running water, waiting for females to hatch. Larvae occur in swiftly flowing streams and are easily recognized by their forked antennae and the prolegs on the abdomen. One classification places this family in its own infraorder Deuterophlebiomorpha, but this has not gained wide acceptance. A recent phylogeny of the entire order Diptera places them as the sister group to all other flies. Species Catalogue of Life accepts the following species within ''Deuterophlebia:'' * ''Deuterophlebia bicarinata'' Courtney, 1994 * '' Deuterophlebia blepharis'' Courtney, 1994 * ''Deuterophlebia brachyrhina'' Courtney, 1994 * '' Deuterophlebia coloradensis'' Pennak, 1945 * '' Deuterophlebia inyoensis'' Kennedy, 1960 * '' Deuterophlebia mirabilis ...
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Deuterophlebia Nipponica
The fly genus ''Deuterophlebia'' is the sole member of the small monogeneric family Deuterophlebiidae or mountain midges. Adults have broad, fan-shaped wings, and males have extremely long antennae which they employ when contesting territories over running water, waiting for females to hatch. Larvae occur in swiftly flowing streams and are easily recognized by their forked antennae and the prolegs on the abdomen. One classification places this family in its own infraorder Deuterophlebiomorpha, but this has not gained wide acceptance. A recent phylogeny of the entire order Diptera places them as the sister group to all other flies. Species Catalogue of Life accepts the following species within ''Deuterophlebia:'' * ''Deuterophlebia bicarinata'' Courtney, 1994 * '' Deuterophlebia blepharis'' Courtney, 1994 * ''Deuterophlebia brachyrhina'' Courtney, 1994 * '' Deuterophlebia coloradensis'' Pennak, 1945 * '' Deuterophlebia inyoensis'' Kennedy, 1960 * '' Deuterophlebia mirabilis ...
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