identifier	taxonID	type	CVterm	format	language	title	description	additionalInformationURL	UsageTerms	rights	Owner	contributor	creator	bibliographicCitation
03AB00440F60F31BFF51C085FA63FCD1.text	03AB00440F60F31BFF51C085FA63FCD1.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Sarcophaginae	<div><p>Key to species of Sarcophaginae known from Buenos Aires Province, Argentina</p><p>Species names in square brackets are included on the basis of male specimens only. Blaesoxipha (Acanthodotheca) diloboderi Pape is excluded from the key because its external morphology is unknown. Blaesoxipha (A.) denieri (Blanchard) and Engelimyia bosqui (Blanchard) are excluded from the key because their females are still unknown (only brief notes on male are provided).</p><p>1 Gena narrow, at most 1/5 of eye height. Coxopleural streak present. Hind coxa bare on posterior margin .................. ............................................................................. MILTOGRAMMINAE [Genus Metopia Meigen, see Pape (1987)]</p><p>- Gena broad, more than 1/5 of eye height. Coxopleural streak absent. Hind coxa hairy on posterior margin................ .............................................................................................................................................. SARCOPHAGINAE ... 2</p><p>2 Arista bare or pubescent with trichiae at most 1–1.5x as long as the largest diameter of arista (Fig. 1) ..................... 3</p><p>- Arista plumose with trichiae 2– 5 x as long as the largest diameter of arista (Fig. 2)................................................... 8</p><p>3 Wing with vein R1 dorsally bare .................................................................................................................................. 5</p><p>- Wing with vein R1 dorsally setose ............................................................................................................................... 4</p><p>4 Parafacial and lower half of fronto-orbital plate with golden microtomentum. Male with epandrium black or dark brown ...................................................................................................................... Microcerella chaetosa (Townsend)</p><p>- Parafacial and fronto-orbital plate with silvery microtomentum. Male with epandrium reddish................................... ................................................................................................................................... Microcerella austrohartigia Pape</p><p>5 Gena with golden microtomentum (Fig. 28). Two postsutural dorsocentral setae ......................................................... ................................................................................................................................ Microcerella asymmetrica sp. nov.</p><p>- Gena with silvery-gray microtomentum. Three postsutural dorsocentral setae .......................................................... 6</p><p>6 Male with epandrium black. Abdominal ST 2–4 with tuft of setae (Fig. 5). Female abdominal T 6 black on posterior margin. Abdominal ST 7+8 black on basal half ....................................................... Microcerella muehni (Blanchard)</p><p>- Male with epandrium reddish. Abdominal ST 2–4 without tuft of setae. Female abdominal T 6 orange on posterior margin. Abdominal ST 7+8 orange on basal half ......................................................................................................... 7</p><p>7 Male with syntergosternite 7+8 shining black with grey microtomentum. Female abdominal ST 6 orange brown. Abdominal ST 7+8, with a hump at distal part (ST 8) (Fig. 6) .......................... Microcerella acrydiorum Weyenbergh</p><p>- Male with syntergosternite 7+8 shining black or brown without microtomentum. Female abdominal ST 6 black. Abdominal ST 7+8, without a hump at distal part (ST 8) (Fig. 7) .......................... Microcerella erythropyga (Lopes)</p><p>8 Wing with vein R1 dorsally setose ............................................................................................................................... 9</p><p>- Wing with vein R1 dorsally bare ................................................................................................................................ 12</p><p>9 Wing with vein R1 setose at full length.......................................................... Nephochaetopteryx cyaneiventris Lopes</p><p>- Wing with vein R1 setose at basal half ....................................................................................................................... 10</p><p>10 Three postsutural dorsocentral setae of similar size spaced to three. Tegula black.................................................... 11</p><p>- Four postsutural dorsocentral setae, spaced to four, the two anterior setae smaller than the posteriors. Tegula pale brown ...................................................................................................................................... Ravinia advena (Walker)</p><p>11 Abdominal T 5 reddish with golden microtomentum. Male with syntergosternite 7+8 reddish with golden micro- tomentum. Mid femur with posteroventral ctenidiun ............................... Blaesoxipha (Tephromyia) hospes (Aldrich)</p><p>- Abdominal T 5 blackish with silvery microtomentum. Male with syntergosternite 7+8 dark brown with silvery microtomentum. Mid femur without posteroventral ctenidium ................................. Helicobia aurescens (Townsend)</p><p>12 Lower frontal setae as a continuous row on the inner edge of fronto-orbital plate or with an additional seta on para- facial. In both cases, the lower row of frontal setae not clearly divergent from the inner edge of fronto-orbital plate (Fig. 3)........................................................................................................................................................................ 13</p><p>- Lower frontal setae abruptly divergent in a row of two or more setae from the inner edge of fronto-orbital plate and upper parafacial (Fig. 4) ............................................................................................................................................. 30</p><p>13 Postalar wall bare ...................................................................................................................................................... 14</p><p>- Postalar wall haired..................................................................................................................................................... 16</p><p>14 Head length at vibrissa at least equal to head length at antennal base. Vein M terminating in wing margin separately from R4+5 ..................................................................................................................................................................... 15</p><p>- Head length at vibrissa shorter than at antennal base. Vein M terminating in R4+5 at wing margin ............................... ................................................................................................................. [ Lepidodexia (Asilidodexia) proseni Lopes]</p><p>15 Tegula black. Body with pale gray microtomentum with abdominal spots. Anterior and posterior katepisternal setae present with one weak hair-like seta in the middle ............................ Tricharaea (Sarcophagula) occidua (Fabricius)</p><p>- Tegula pale orange, the same colour of basicosta. Body with yellowish microtomentum without abdominal spots. Male with single posterior katepisternal seta. Female with anterior and posterior katepisternal setae .......................... ....................................................................................................... Tricharaea (Tricharaea) brevicornis (Wiedemann)</p><p>16 Three postsutural dorsocentral setae of similar size, spaced for three....................................................................... 17</p><p>- Four or more postsutural dorsocentral setae, spaced for four, the two anterior setae smaller than the posteriors ... 20</p><p>17 Presutural acrostical setae present. Males with mid femur without apical posteroventral ctenidium or, if present, with short normal spines .................................................................................................................................................... 18</p><p>- Presutural acrostical setae absent. Males with mid femur with apical posteroventral ctenidium of flattened blunt spines........................................................................................................................................................................... 19</p><p>18 Gena and parafacial silvery in frontal view. Male mid femur with apical posteroventral ctenidium............................. ............................................................................................................ Blaesoxipha (Blaesoxipha) opifera (Coquillett)</p><p>- Gena and parafacial golden in frontal view. Male mid femur without apical posteroventral ctenidium........................ .................................................................................................................... Blaesoxipha (Tephromyia) quaesita (Hall)</p><p>19 Tegula black. Katepisternum with a spot of golden microtomentum on the lower part. Male with syntergosternite 7+8 and epandrium black or dark brown with spots of golden-yellow microtomentum. Female terminalia black with golden microtomentum (Fig. 8) .................................................................................... Oxysarcodexia varia (Walker)</p><p>- Tegula pale. Katepisternum with a spot of silvery microtomentum on the lower part. Male with syntergosternite 7+8 and epandrium orange-reddish with golden microtomentum. Female terminalia reddish-brown with golden microtomentum (Fig. 9) ........................................................................................... Oxysarcodexia terminalis (Wiedemann)</p><p>20 Gena with pale hairs. Mid tibia with one long antero-median seta ending beyond apex of tibia................................... ................................................................................................................................. Sarcodexia lambens (Wiedemann)</p><p>- Gena with black hairs. Mid tibia without one long antero-median seta ending beyond apex of tibia....................... 21</p><p>21 Three katepisternal setae of same size. Male mid femur without apical posteroventral ctenidium ............................... ........................................................................................................................................... Udamopyga percita (Lopes)</p><p>- Three (or four) katepisternal setae of different size, the middle one shorter than the anterior, or without the middle seta. Male mid femur with apical posteroventral ctenidium....................................................................................... 22</p><p>22 Tegula black ............................................................................................................................................................... 25</p><p>- Tegula orange-brown ................................................................................................................................................. 23</p><p>23 Abdominal T 5 brown with golden microtomentum. Gena and lower portion of parafacial golden, fronto-orbital plate and upper parafacial silvery ....................................................... Blaesoxipha (Gigantotheca) stallengi (Lahille)</p><p>- Abdominal T 5 black with golden microtomentum. Gena, fronto-orbital plate and parafacial golden ..................... 24</p><p>24 Postocular area with golden microtomentum. Three katepisternal setae ...................................... Ravinia sueta (Wulp)</p><p>- Postocular area with silver microtomentum. Two katepisternal setae (rarely three) ............ Ravinia aureopyga (Hall)</p><p>25 Scutellum with three pairs of strong marginal setae of similar size .............................................................................. ................................................................................................... Peckia (Euboettcheria) florencioi (Prado &amp; Fonseca)</p><p>- Scutellum with strong basal and subapical setae, lateral (when present) weak and shorter...................................... 26</p><p>26 Postpronotal lobe, notopleuron and anepisternum with golden microtomentum ...................................................... 27</p><p>- Postpronotal lobe, notopleuron and anepisternum with gray microtomentum ........................................................... 28</p><p>27 Median stripes of scutum with golden microtomentum. Anepimeron with golden microtomentum. (Fig. 14). Abdominal T 5 with silvery-gray microtomentum ......................................................... Oxysarcodexia bicolor Lopes</p><p>- Median stripes of scutum with gray microtomentum. Anepimeron with silvery-gray microtomentum. (Fig. 15). Abdominal T 5 with lateral spots of golden microtomentum ................................ Oxysarcodexia culmiforceps Dodge</p><p>28 Abdominal T 5 with golden microtomentum ............................................................ Oxysarcodexia thornax (Walker)</p><p>- Abdominal T 5 with gray microtomentum ................................................................................................................ 29</p><p>29 Male without apical scutellar setae. Syntergosternite 7+8 black with gray microtomentum. Female abdominal ST 6 black. Abdominal ST 7+8, not convex basally (ST 7), with a broad apical concave dark area (ST 8) (Figs. 10, 22) ... ......................................................................................................................................... Oxysarcodexia marina (Hall)</p><p>- Male with apical scutellar setae. Syntergosternite 7+8 orange brown with golden microtomentum. Female abdominal ST 6 golden. Abdominal ST 7+8, convex basally (ST 7), with a small apical concavity (ST 8) (Figs. 11, 23) .......................................................................................................................... Oxysarcodexia paulistanensis (Mattos)</p><p>30 Gena with white hairs ................................................................................................................................................. 31</p><p>- Gena with brown or black hairs.................................................................................................................................. 33</p><p>31 Acrostical postsutural setae absent (prescutellar pair). Gena with black hairs at the anterior part. Female with abdominal ST 7 exposed, strongly covex. Abdominal T6 divided, narrowly membranous on middorsal line (Fig. 17) .................................................................................................................. Sarcophaga (Bercaea) africa (Wiedemann)</p><p>- Acrostical postsutural setae present (prescutellar pair). Gena with white hairs continued to the anterior margin (sometimes with few black hairs above). Female with ST 7 not exposed, smaller and not convex. Abdominal T6 folded, entire (Figs. 18, 19)......................................................................................................................................... 32</p><p>32 Male with postcranium with a row of black occipital setae parallel to postorbitals. Female with abdominal T 6 with whitish microtomentum (Fig. 18). Mid femur with a bare shining striated sensory area on posterior surface, on apical 2/3 of the total length (Fig. 20) ......................................... Sarcophaga (Liopygia) argyrostoma (Robineau-Desvoidy)</p><p>- Male with postcranium without a row of black occipital setae parallel to postorbitals. Female with abdominal T 6</p><p>polished, without microtomentum (Fig. 19). Mid femur with a bare shining striated sensory area on posterior surface, extending along the total length (Fig. 21) ................................... Sarcophaga (Liopygia) crassipalpis Macquart 33 Proepisternum hairy. Male mid femur with apical posteroventral ctenidium............................................................. 34</p><p>- Proepisternum bare. Male mid femur without apical posteroventral ctenidium......................................................... 35</p><p>34 Gena with golden microtomentum. Four (or five) postsutural dorsocentral setae ......................................................... ................................................................................................... Blaesoxipha (Acanthodotheca) wagneri (Blanchard) [Note: The male of Blaesoxipha (Acanthodotheca) denieri has proepisternum haired and gena with golden microtomentum but is distinguished from B. (A.) wagneri by the possession of a golden face (silvery in B. (A.) wagneri).]</p><p>- Gena with gray microtomentum. Three postsutural dorsocentral setae.......................................................................... ............................................................................................................. Blaesoxipha (Acridiophaga) caridei (Brèthes)</p><p>35 Anterior spiracle golden-brown. Postcranium with a single row of black occipital setae parallel to postorbitals. Male abdominal ST 5 with posterior margin with pad of black rounded stout bristles .......................................................... ................................................................................................................... Sarcophaga (Neobellieria) polistensis Hall [Note: The male of Engelimyia bosqui is differentiated from S. (N.) polistensis by the possession of a dense bristle tuft on abdominal ST III and IV (normal setae in S. (N.) polistensis).]</p><p>- Anterior spiracle black. Postcranium with two rows of black occipital setae parallel to postorbitals. Male abdominal ST 5 with median projections (Figs. 26, 27)............................................................................................................... 36</p><p>36 Postocular area golden. Lateral and supra-alar stripes golden. Male ST 5 with bifid projection on posterior margin (Fig. 26)........................................................................................ Sarcophaga (Lipoptilocnema) koehleri (Blanchard)</p><p>- Postocular area gray. Lateral and supra-alar stripes gray. Male ST 5 without bifid projection on posterior margin (Fig. 27) ................................................................................................ Sarcophaga (Lipoptilocnema) lanei Townsend</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03AB00440F60F31BFF51C085FA63FCD1	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Mariluis, Pablo Ricardo Mulieri Juan Carlos;Patitucci, Luciano Damián	Mariluis, Pablo Ricardo Mulieri Juan Carlos, Patitucci, Luciano Damián (2010): Review of the Sarcophaginae (Diptera: Sarcophagidae) of Buenos Aires Province (Argentina), with a key and description of a new species. Zootaxa 2575: 1-37, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.197479
03AB00440F62F31BFF51C3D8FE57FA3C.text	03AB00440F62F31BFF51C3D8FE57FA3C.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Blaesoxipha (Acanthodotheca) denieri (Blanchard 1939) Blanchard 1939	<div><p>Blaesoxipha (Acanthodotheca) denieri (Blanchard, 1939)</p><p>Hamatomyia denieri Blanchard, 1939: 816 .</p><p>Distribution: Neotropical – Argentina (Buenos Aires, Santa Fe), Brazil (Espírito Santo, Paraná, Rio Grande do Sul, Santa Catarina, São Paulo), Costa Rica, Paraguay.</p><p>Type material examined: Lectotype ɗ of Hamatomyia denieri Blanchard, designated by Pape (1994), Santa Fe (MACN); paralectotype ɗof Hamatomyia denieri Blanchard, designated by Pape (1994), Quequén, Salado, Buenos Aires (MACN).</p><p>Remarks: The female of B. (A.) denieri was superficially redescribed by Lopes (1990) and no illustrations were provided. In addition, we have not seen female material from Buenos Aires. For this reason we have only included a brief comment about the male in the key. Illustrations of the male terminalia can be found in Blanchard (1939), Lopes &amp; Downs (1950), Lopes (1990) and Pape (1994).</p><p>Biology: Unknown.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03AB00440F62F31BFF51C3D8FE57FA3C	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Mariluis, Pablo Ricardo Mulieri Juan Carlos;Patitucci, Luciano Damián	Mariluis, Pablo Ricardo Mulieri Juan Carlos, Patitucci, Luciano Damián (2010): Review of the Sarcophaginae (Diptera: Sarcophagidae) of Buenos Aires Province (Argentina), with a key and description of a new species. Zootaxa 2575: 1-37, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.197479
03AB00440F62F31BFF51C605FE5CF861.text	03AB00440F62F31BFF51C605FE5CF861.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Blaesoxipha (Acanthodotheca) diloboderi Pape 1994	<div><p>Blaesoxipha (Acanthodotheca) diloboderi Pape, 1994</p><p>Blaesoxipha (Acanthodotheca) diloboderi Pape, 1994: 25 .</p><p>Distribution: Neotropical – Argentina (Buenos Aires).</p><p>Type material examined: Holotype ɗ of Blaesoxipha (Acanthodotheca) diloboderi Pape, Norberto de la Riestra, Veinticinco de Mayo, Buenos Aires, 13.X.1961 (MACN).</p><p>Remarks: This species was described on the basis of the terminalia from a single teneral male (Pape 1994). It is not included in the key above. The female is unknown.</p><p>Biology: Host: Coleoptera, Scarabaeidae: Diloboderus abderus (Sturm) (Pape 1994; Crouzel 1964, as Helicobiella sanchezi).</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03AB00440F62F31BFF51C605FE5CF861	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Mariluis, Pablo Ricardo Mulieri Juan Carlos;Patitucci, Luciano Damián	Mariluis, Pablo Ricardo Mulieri Juan Carlos, Patitucci, Luciano Damián (2010): Review of the Sarcophaginae (Diptera: Sarcophagidae) of Buenos Aires Province (Argentina), with a key and description of a new species. Zootaxa 2575: 1-37, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.197479
03AB00440F63F315FF51C73CFE57FE92.text	03AB00440F63F315FF51C73CFE57FE92.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Blaesoxipha (Acanthodotheca) wagneri (Blanchard 1939) Blanchard 1939	<div><p>Blaesoxipha (Acanthodotheca) wagneri (Blanchard, 1939)</p><p>Sarcophodexia wagneri Blanchard, 1939: 812 .</p><p>Distribution: Neotropical – Argentina (Buenos Aires, Misiones, Santa Fe, Santiago del Estero).</p><p>Type material examined: Lectotype ɗ and paralectotypes 3 ɗ, 1 Ψ of Sarcophodexia wagneri Blanchard, designated by Pape (1994), Santiago del Estero, 1919 (MACN).</p><p>Other material studied: Buenos Aires: 1 ɗ Bahia San Blas, Patagones, II.1947 (ANLIS).</p><p>Remarks: Blanchard’s (1939) original description included good illustrations of the male terminalia. The female was also described but not illustrated.</p><p>Biology: Unknown.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03AB00440F63F315FF51C73CFE57FE92	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Mariluis, Pablo Ricardo Mulieri Juan Carlos;Patitucci, Luciano Damián	Mariluis, Pablo Ricardo Mulieri Juan Carlos, Patitucci, Luciano Damián (2010): Review of the Sarcophaginae (Diptera: Sarcophagidae) of Buenos Aires Province (Argentina), with a key and description of a new species. Zootaxa 2575: 1-37, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.197479
03AB00440F6CF314FF51C5E5FD27FEB9.text	03AB00440F6CF314FF51C5E5FD27FEB9.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Blaesoxipha (Acridiophaga) caridei (Brèthes 1906) Brethes 1906	<div><p>Blaesoxipha (Acridiophaga) caridei (Brèthes, 1906)</p><p>Sarcophaga caridei Brèthes, 1906: 299 .</p><p>Sarcophaga acridiorum var. obscurior Lahille, 1907: 91 . Sarcophaga aculeata var. gavia Aldrich, 1916: 145 .</p><p>Distribution: Nearctic, Neotropical – Argentina (Buenos Aires, Catamarca, Chaco, Chubut, Córdoba, Corrientes, Entre Ríos, Formosa, Jujuy, La Pampa, La Rioja, Mendoza, Neuquén, Río Negro, Salta, San Juan, San Luis, Santa Fe, Santiago del Estero, Tucumán), Chile, Colombia, Guatemala, Honduras, Mexico, Nicaragua, Venezuela.</p><p>Material studied: Buenos Aires: 1 ɗ, 1 Ψ Pergamino, Pergamino, 14.II.1934 (MACN).</p><p>Remarks: Although the original description by Brèthes (1906) included drawings of male terminalia, the best illustrations of the male terminalia were provided by Blanchard (1942a), Lopes (1978) and Pape (1994). Lopes (1978) included illustrations of the female terminalia.</p><p>Biology: Host. Orthoptera, Acridoidea: Aleuas brachypterus Bruner, Dichroplus elongatus (Giglio-Tos), D. maculipennis (Blanchard), Schistocerca cancellata (Serville), S. paranaensis (Burmeister), Scyllinops spp., Trimeropris ochraceipennis (Blanchard) (Brèthes 1906; Crouzel 1944; Crouzel &amp; Salavin 1961; Blanchard &amp; De Santis 1975). Lepidoptera, Pyralidae: Agathodes designalis (Guenée) (Bourquin 1932) . For an exhaustive bibliographic list of host records see Pape (1994).</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03AB00440F6CF314FF51C5E5FD27FEB9	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Mariluis, Pablo Ricardo Mulieri Juan Carlos;Patitucci, Luciano Damián	Mariluis, Pablo Ricardo Mulieri Juan Carlos, Patitucci, Luciano Damián (2010): Review of the Sarcophaginae (Diptera: Sarcophagidae) of Buenos Aires Province (Argentina), with a key and description of a new species. Zootaxa 2575: 1-37, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.197479
03AB00440F6DF317FF51C6C0FE43FD69.text	03AB00440F6DF317FF51C6C0FE43FD69.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Blaesoxipha (Blaesoxipha) opifera (Coquillett 1892) Coquillett 1892	<div><p>Blaesoxipha (Blaesoxipha) opifera (Coquillett, 1892)</p><p>Sarcophaga opifera Coquillett, 1892: 22 .</p><p>Sarcophagulopsis trigonophymi Blanchard, 1939: 798 . Opsophyto arteagai Blanchard, 1939: 840 .</p><p>Teprhromyiella piauhyensis Lopes &amp; Alves, 1988: 937 .</p><p>Distribution: Nearctic, Neotropical – Argentina (Buenos Aires, Córdoba, La Rioja, San Juan, Santa Fe), Brazil (Piauí, São Paulo), Cuba, Mexico (Chiapas), Paraguay.</p><p>Type material examined: Lectotype ɗ of Opsophyto arteagai Blanchard, designated by Pape (1994), La Colina, Gral. Lamadrid, Buenos Aires, II.1937 (MACN); Lectotype Ψ of Sarcophagulopsis trigonophymi Blanchard, designated by Pape (1994), La Colina, Gral. Lamadrid, Buenos Aires, II.1937 (MACN); paralectotypes 2 Ψ of Sarcophagulopsis trigonophymi Blanchard, designated by Pape (1994), Bahia Blanca, Bahia Blanca, Buenos Aires, 8.II.1927.</p><p>Remarks: Good illustrations of the male terminalia can be found in Blanchard (1939) (as Opsophyto arteagai Blanchard) and Pape (1994). The female terminalia were described and illustrated by Lopes &amp; Alves (1988).</p><p>Biology: Host. Orthoptera, Acridoidea: Dichroplus elongatus (Giglio-Tos), D. maculipennis (Blanchard), Rhammatocerus sp., Schistocerca cancellata (Serville), S. paranaensis (Burmeister) (Salavin 1958; Blanchard &amp; De Santis 1975; Lopes &amp; Alves 1988). For an exhaustive bibliography list of host records and biology see Pape (1994).</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03AB00440F6DF317FF51C6C0FE43FD69	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Mariluis, Pablo Ricardo Mulieri Juan Carlos;Patitucci, Luciano Damián	Mariluis, Pablo Ricardo Mulieri Juan Carlos, Patitucci, Luciano Damián (2010): Review of the Sarcophaginae (Diptera: Sarcophagidae) of Buenos Aires Province (Argentina), with a key and description of a new species. Zootaxa 2575: 1-37, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.197479
03AB00440F6EF316FF51C68DFC22FE6C.text	03AB00440F6EF316FF51C68DFC22FE6C.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Blaesoxipha (Gigantotheca) stallengi (Lahille 1907) Lahille 1907	<div><p>Blaesoxipha (Gigantotheca) stallengi (Lahille, 1907)</p><p>Sarcophaga stallengi Lahille, 1907: 89 .</p><p>Sarcophaga stallengi var. albicans Lahille, 1907: 91 . (Junior primary homonym of Sarcophaga albicans Wiedemann, 1830 .)</p><p>Distribution: Neotropical – Argentina (Buenos Aires, Salta, Santiago del Estero), Brazil (Bahia). Material studied. Salta: 4 ɗ, 3 Ψ (ANLIS).</p><p>Remarks: This species was cited for Buenos Aires by Pape (1996). However, the only materials available for examination was obtained from northern Argentina (Salta province). The male neotype of Lopesimyia albicans (Lahille) designated by Blanchard (1954) was not found at MACN, and presumably has been misplaced. The original description by Lahille (1907) included illustrations of the phallus. Good male terminalia illustrations were also provided by Blanchard (1954) and Lopes and Tibana (1982a). The female was described by Blanchard (1954) but not illustrated.</p><p>Biology: Host. Orthoptera, Acridoidea: Schistocerca cancellata (Serville) (Blanchard 1954) . Salavin (1958) referred to this species as saprophagous, feeding on dead locust.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03AB00440F6EF316FF51C68DFC22FE6C	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Mariluis, Pablo Ricardo Mulieri Juan Carlos;Patitucci, Luciano Damián	Mariluis, Pablo Ricardo Mulieri Juan Carlos, Patitucci, Luciano Damián (2010): Review of the Sarcophaginae (Diptera: Sarcophagidae) of Buenos Aires Province (Argentina), with a key and description of a new species. Zootaxa 2575: 1-37, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.197479
03AB00440F6FF311FF51C614FE61FD69.text	03AB00440F6FF311FF51C614FE61FD69.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Blaesoxipha (Tephromyia) hospes (Aldrich 1916) Aldrich 1916	<div><p>Blaesoxipha (Tephromyia) hospes (Aldrich, 1916)</p><p>Sarcophaga hospes Aldrich, 1916: 156 .</p><p>Sarcophaga blandita Brèthes, 1920: 282 .</p><p>Helicobiella sanchezi Blanchard, 1939: 838 . Helicobiella mantidiophaga Blanchard, 1942c: 340 . Sarcophaga pagella Reinhard, 1947: 100 .</p><p>Distribution: Nearctic, Neotropical – Argentina (Buenos Aires new record, Catamarca, Córdoba, Entre Ríos, San Juan, Tucumán), Brazil (Rio de Janeiro), Dominican Republic, El Salvador, Guyana.</p><p>Type material examined: Holotype ɗ of Helicobiella mantidiophaga Blanchard, Jose C. Paz, José C. Paz, Buenos Aires, 23.I.1942 on Coptopteryx (MACN); Lectotype Ψ, paralectotypes 3 Ψ of Sarcophaga blandita Brèthes, designated by Pape (1994), Pelotas, Brazil, Brèthes leg. (MACN); Lectotype ɗ of Helicobiella sanchezi Blanchard, designated by Pape (1994), Catamarca, 12.V.1934 on Stagmatoptera hyaloptera, Sánchez Orcido leg. (MACN); Paralectotype Ψ of Helicobiella sanchezi Blanchard, designated by Pape (1994), Córdoba, XI-1938 on Mantis spp.</p><p>Other material studied: Buenos Aires: 2 ɗ, 1 Ψ Jose C. Paz, José C. Paz, 23.I.1942 (MLP); 1 Ψ José C. Paz, José C. Paz, II.1956 from Coptopteryx argentina (MLP); 1 ɗ Villa Elisa, La Plata, III.1980 Mariluis leg. (ANLIS); 1 ɗ Burzaco, Alte. Brown 13.IV.2007 Mulieri leg. (ANLIS); 1 ɗ San Claudio, Carlos Casares, 08.I.2007 on Conium maculatum V. Fernandez leg. (ANLIS).</p><p>Remarks: No illustrations of male terminalia were included in the original description of Sarcophaga blandita by Brèthes (1906). Descriptions provided by Blanchard (1939, 1942c) included partial illustrations of genital structures. Later, Pape (1994) provided more detailed drawings of male terminalia. The female terminalia were adequately described by Lopes (1971).</p><p>Biology: Host. Isoptera, Mantodea: Coptopteryx argentina Burmeister, C. thoracica Rehn, Stagmatoptera hyaloptera (Perty) (Blanchard 1939; Crouzel &amp; Salavin 1961; Blanchard &amp; De Santis 1975). Coleoptera, Scarabaeioidea: Diloboderus abderus Sturm (Blanchard &amp; De Santis 1975) . Flower visitor of Apiaceae ( Conium maculatum).</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03AB00440F6FF311FF51C614FE61FD69	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Mariluis, Pablo Ricardo Mulieri Juan Carlos;Patitucci, Luciano Damián	Mariluis, Pablo Ricardo Mulieri Juan Carlos, Patitucci, Luciano Damián (2010): Review of the Sarcophaginae (Diptera: Sarcophagidae) of Buenos Aires Province (Argentina), with a key and description of a new species. Zootaxa 2575: 1-37, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.197479
03AB00440F69F310FF51C3FEFC5AF90A.text	03AB00440F69F310FF51C3FEFC5AF90A.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Blaesoxipha (Tephromyia) quaesita (Hall 1937) Hall 1937	<div><p>Blaesoxipha (Tephromyia) quaesita (Hall, 1937)</p><p>Sarcophaga quaesita Hall, 1937a: 366 .</p><p>Protodexia aleuaphaga Blanchard, 1942c: 343 . Protodexia australis Blanchard, 1942c: 344 .</p><p>Protodexia crouzelae Blanchard, 1942c: 347 (as crouzeli). Protodexia diponthi Blanchard, 1942c: 351 .</p><p>Protodexia liebermanni Blanchard, 1955: 33 .</p><p>Distribution: Neotropical – Argentina (Buenos Aires, Chubut, Córdoba, La Rioja, Neuquen, Río Negro, San Juan, San Luis), Brazil (Minas Gerais), Chile (Coquimbo, La Araucanía, Santiago), Uruguay.</p><p>Type material examined: Holotype ɗ of Protodexia crouzelae Blanchard, Jose C. Paz, Pdo. José C. Paz, Buenos Aires, II.1947, on Elaechlora viridicata (MACN); Holotype ɗ of Protodexia australis Blanchard, Cipoletti, Río Negro, 10.II.1941, on Dichroplus elongatus (MACN); Holotype ɗ of Protodexia diponthi Blanchard, Campo Monasterio, 12.V.1942, on Diponthus spp. (MACN).</p><p>Other material studied: Buenos Aires: 3 ɗ, 2 ΨJosé C. Paz, José C. Paz, 8.III.1944 (MLP); 1 ΨGuaminí, Guaminí, I.1948 (MLP).</p><p>Remarks: Male terminalia were illustrated by Blanchard (1942c, 1955) and Pape (1994). The female was described by Blanchard (1942c) but not illustrated.</p><p>Biology: Host. Orthoptera, Acridoidea: Aleuas lineatus Stål, Dichroplus elongatus (Giglio-Tos), D. maculipennis (Blanchard), D. vittatus Bruner, Diponthus schulzi Bruner, Elaechlora viridicata (Serville) (Blanchard 1942c; Blanchard 1955; Blanchard &amp; De Santis 1975).</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03AB00440F69F310FF51C3FEFC5AF90A	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Mariluis, Pablo Ricardo Mulieri Juan Carlos;Patitucci, Luciano Damián	Mariluis, Pablo Ricardo Mulieri Juan Carlos, Patitucci, Luciano Damián (2010): Review of the Sarcophaginae (Diptera: Sarcophagidae) of Buenos Aires Province (Argentina), with a key and description of a new species. Zootaxa 2575: 1-37, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.197479
03AB00440F69F313FF51C75BFE57FE92.text	03AB00440F69F313FF51C75BFE57FE92.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Engelimyia bosqui (Blanchard 1939) Blanchard 1939	<div><p>Engelimyia bosqui (Blanchard, 1939)</p><p>Paraphrissopoda bosqui Blanchard, 1939: 828 .</p><p>Distribution: Neotropical – Argentina (Buenos Aires, Misiones), Brazil (Rio de Janeiro, São Paulo).</p><p>Type material examined: Holotype ɗ of Paraphissopoda bosqui Blanchard, Misiones, X.1916 (MACN).</p><p>Remarks: This species was cited for Buenos Aires (Pape &amp; Mello-Patiu 2006), and therefore a brief comment was included in the key for the recognition of males. The female is unknown. Good illustrations of male terminalia were provided by Blanchard (1939) and Pape &amp; Mello-Patiu (2006). Biology: Unknown.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03AB00440F69F313FF51C75BFE57FE92	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Mariluis, Pablo Ricardo Mulieri Juan Carlos;Patitucci, Luciano Damián	Mariluis, Pablo Ricardo Mulieri Juan Carlos, Patitucci, Luciano Damián (2010): Review of the Sarcophaginae (Diptera: Sarcophagidae) of Buenos Aires Province (Argentina), with a key and description of a new species. Zootaxa 2575: 1-37, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.197479
03AB00440F6AF313FF51C1D0FDABFB94.text	03AB00440F6AF313FF51C1D0FDABFB94.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Helicobia aurescens (Townsend 1927) Townsend 1927	<div><p>Helicobia aurescens (Townsend, 1927)</p><p>Sarcophaga parvula Lahille, 1907: 87 . (Junior primary homonym of Sarcophaga parvula Wiedemann, 1830 .) Helicobiopsis aurescens Townsend, 1927: 313 .</p><p>Opsophyto ? lahillei Blanchard, 1939: 842. (New name for Sarcophaga parvula Lahille, 1907 .)</p><p>Distribution: Neotropical – Argentina (Buenos Aires, Catamarca, Corrientes, Misiones), Brazil (Rio de Janeiro, São Paulo).</p><p>Material studied: Buenos Aires: 2 ɗ, 4 Ψ El Carretero, Magdalena V–IX.1999 (FAUBA); 1 ɗ El Carretero, Magdalena 23.III.2000 (FAUBA); 1 Ψ El Carretero, Magdalena 4.VII.2000 (FAUBA); 1 ɗ El Carretero, Magdalena 12.XII.2000 (FAUBA); 1 ɗ Campana, Campana XI.1998, Mariluis leg. (ANLIS); 6 ɗ Campana, Campana, III.2003 Mariluis leg. (ANLIS); 8 ɗ, 3 Ψ Reserva Ecológica Costanera Sur, Ciud. Aut. Buenos Aires, II–IX.2002, Mulieri leg. (ANLIS); 4 ɗ Burzaco, Alte. Brown, VII.2002, Mulieri leg. (ANLIS); 1 ɗ Villa Elisa, La Plata, III.1980, Mariluis leg. (ANLIS).</p><p>Remarks: Good illustrations of the male terminalia can be found in Lopes (1936a, 1939). Female terminalia were described and illustrated by Lopes (1939).</p><p>Biology: This species has shown preferences for populated areas in the city of Curitiba, Brazil (Ferreira 1979), and was captured using rotten animal tissues by Mendes &amp; Linhares (1993). Moreover, Moura (2004) reared this species from dead rodents.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03AB00440F6AF313FF51C1D0FDABFB94	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Mariluis, Pablo Ricardo Mulieri Juan Carlos;Patitucci, Luciano Damián	Mariluis, Pablo Ricardo Mulieri Juan Carlos, Patitucci, Luciano Damián (2010): Review of the Sarcophaginae (Diptera: Sarcophagidae) of Buenos Aires Province (Argentina), with a key and description of a new species. Zootaxa 2575: 1-37, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.197479
03AB00440F6AF313FF51C4ADFE57F9DC.text	03AB00440F6AF313FF51C4ADFE57F9DC.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Lepidodexia (Asilidodexia) proseni Lopes 1992	<div><p>Lepidodexia (Asilidodexia) proseni Lopes, 1992</p><p>Asilidodexia proseni Lopes, 1992: 131 (as Asilodexia proseni).</p><p>Distribution: Neotropical – Argentina (Buenos Aires).</p><p>Remarks: This species was described from a single male obtained from Zárate, Buenos Aires (Lopes 1992). No specimens were examined by us. The inclusion of this species in the key was based on morphological characters given by Lopes (1992). The female is unknown. Good illustrations of male terminalia were provided by Lopes (1992).</p><p>Biology: Unknown.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03AB00440F6AF313FF51C4ADFE57F9DC	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Mariluis, Pablo Ricardo Mulieri Juan Carlos;Patitucci, Luciano Damián	Mariluis, Pablo Ricardo Mulieri Juan Carlos, Patitucci, Luciano Damián (2010): Review of the Sarcophaginae (Diptera: Sarcophagidae) of Buenos Aires Province (Argentina), with a key and description of a new species. Zootaxa 2575: 1-37, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.197479
03AB00440F6AF312FF51C665FCBEFDD9.text	03AB00440F6AF312FF51C665FCBEFDD9.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Microcerella acrydiorum (Weyenbergh 1875) Weyenbergh 1875	<div><p>Microcerella acrydiorum (Weyenbergh, 1875)</p><p>(Fig. 6)</p><p>Nemorea acrydiorum Weyenbergh, 1875: 85 . Sarcophaga minuta Lahille, 1907: 82 .</p><p>Xenopiella dyscineti Blanchard, 1966: 182 .</p><p>Distribution: Neotropical – Argentina (Buenos Aires, Córdoba, Salta, Santa Fe, Santiago del Estero, Tucumán), Brazil (São Paulo).</p><p>Type material examined: Holotype ɗ of Xenopiella dyscineti Blanchard, Tandil, Tandil, Buenos Aires, 6.XI.1938 (MACN).</p><p>Other material studied: Buenos Aires: 12 ɗ, 10 Ψ Bahia Blanca, Bahia Blanca, VI–IX.2002 reared from meat, De Arriba leg. (ANLIS); 1 ɗ, 1 Ψ Mar del Tuyú, De la Costa, II.2006, Mulieri leg. (ANLIS).</p><p>Remarks: Illustrations of male terminalia were provided by Lopes (1972) and Pape (1990). Mariluis (2005) redescribed the female of this species based on reared specimens, and commented that illustrations given by Lopes (1969b) were based on misidentified females.</p><p>Biology: Host. Coleoptera, Scarabaeidae: Dyscinetus gagates Burmeister (Blanchard 1966) . Lepidoptera, Noctuidae, Alabama argillacea (Hübner) (Blanchard &amp; De Santis 1975). Mantodea (Blanchard &amp; De Santis 1975) . Originally Weyenbergh (1875) and Lahille (1907) referred to this species as a parasite of Schistocerca paranaensis (Burmeister) ( Orthoptera, Acridoidea). It was reared by Crouzel (1950) only on dead Orthoptera . In addition, this species has been reared from dead snails of the genus Ampullaria (Gastropoda, Pomacea) (Lopes 1969b), and from rotten cow meat (Mariluis 2005).</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03AB00440F6AF312FF51C665FCBEFDD9	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Mariluis, Pablo Ricardo Mulieri Juan Carlos;Patitucci, Luciano Damián	Mariluis, Pablo Ricardo Mulieri Juan Carlos, Patitucci, Luciano Damián (2010): Review of the Sarcophaginae (Diptera: Sarcophagidae) of Buenos Aires Province (Argentina), with a key and description of a new species. Zootaxa 2575: 1-37, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.197479
03AB00440F6BF30DFF51C26FFC4AFBCC.text	03AB00440F6BF30DFF51C26FFC4AFBCC.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Microcerella asymmetrica	<div><p>Microcerella asymmetrica sp. nov.</p><p>(Figs. 28–33)</p><p>Description of male. Body length = 7.8–8.8 (from anterior margin of head to the posterior margin of tergite 5). Head. Head length at antennal base 0.95–1.0 head length at vibrissal level. Parafacial and fronto-orbital plate with silvery microtomentum, parafacial with slight yellowish tinge; parafacial with a row of setae (stronger at the lower part) and few complementary setulae on the upper half; and fronto-orbital plate with sparse black setulae; postcranium with silvery microtomentum, the upper half of the postcranium (occiput) with black setulae; eyes bare; frontal vitta blackish; frons at its narrowest point 0.24–0.25 head width; 8–11 frontal setae, the row of frontals diverging strongly anteriorly at the level of pedicel; reclinate orbital setae present; inner vertical seta strong and reclinate, outer vertical seta less than 0.5x the inner vertical and divergent, similar to the postorbital setae; ocellar triangle black with silvery microtomentum, with one pair of divergent and proclinate ocellar setae and supplementary long and diverging setulae; post ocellar and paravertical setae present; postocular setae black in one row; genal groove with silvery microtomentum, genal dilation with golden microtomentum; postgena with silvery microtomentum and pale setae, gena with black setae; face with silvery microtomentum; facial ridge black with silvery microtomentum, with setae and setulae close to vibrissa; 4–6 subvibrissal setae; antenna black, first flagellomere black with brown microtomentum, length 0.24–0.26 head height, arista pubescent on basal half with hairs shorter as largest diameter of arista; palpus brown with black setae on the apical half. Thorax. Black, with gray-yellowish microtomentum; prescutum and scutum with intermediate stripes with gray-yellowish microtomentum, lateral stripes with golden microtomentum and three black bands; scutellum with intermediate stripes with gray-yellowish microtomentum and one apical spot of golden microtomentum at posterior margin; postpronotal lobe, notopleuron, katepisternum, anepimeron and anepisternum with spots of golden microtomentum; proepisternum silvery-gray, bare; one proepisternal seta strong plus 2 or 3 supplementary setae, two proepimeral setae, katepisternals 3 on the same level, postalar wall bare. Chaetotaxy: acrostichals 0+0, dorsocentrals 1–2+2 (posteriors), intra-alars 1+1, supra-alars 1+3 (the middle pair stronger), anterior postpronotal 1, basal postpronotal 1, postalars 2, notopleurals 4 (two big and two small). Scutellum with two pairs of lateral and one pair of discal setae. Wing hyaline, tegula dark brown, whitish basicosta and brown veins, R1 bare, R4+5 setulose in proximal 0.25 or less of distance to crossvein r-m, costal spine differentiated, third costal sector without ventral setae, cell r4+5 open at wing apex, lower calypteres whitish. Legs with coxae, trochanter, femora and tibiae with silvery gray microtomentum; middle trochanter with a ventral pad of short and stout spines; middle femur without posteroventral ctenidium on its apical portion, 2–3 anterodorsal setae and rows of anteroventral and posteroventral setae; middle tibia with 2 anterdorsal setae, 2 posterodorsal and 2 posterior setae; hind trochanter with a ventral pad of short and stout spines, and sparse short and stout spines on postero-ventral surface; hind femur with rows of anterodorsal, anterior and anteroventral setae, posteroventral surface with long hairs; hind tibia with 2 anterodorsal setae, 2 anteroventral seta, 2 posterodorsal setae and posteroventral surface with long hairs; tarsi blackish. Abdomen. Black; sternites exposed with silvery microtomentum; T1+2–T5 with dorsal silvery-gray microtomentum; T3–T5 with dorsal and lateral spots of golden microtomentum; T1+2–T4 with two pairs of lateral marginal setae, T3 and T4 without median marginal setae; T5 with a complete row of marginal setae; ST2–ST4 with long hairs, especially on sides; ST5 V-shaped, brown, with hair-like setae on the apical margins of its ventral surface. Terminalia. Syntergosternite 7+8 shining black, with a median spot of golden microtomentum, having a marginal row of three pairs of setae and some smaller black hair-like setae; epandrium orange-reddish with black hair-like setae; cerci asymmetrical, right cercus shorter than left cercus (Fig. 29); cercal prong curved forward (Fig. 30); cercal base with long hairs; surstylus narrow with few apical hair-like setae (Fig. 29); pregonite curved with several hair-like setae (Fig. 31); postgonite with one basal seta (Fig. 31); phallus with flat vesica, not much extended; juxta well developed, curved forward (lateral view); with two pairs of asymmetrical membranous lobes in the anterior and lateral margins, respectively (Figs. 32–33); lateral styli asymmetrical with microserration in the apical part; right lateral stylus longer than left one (Figs. 32–33); harpes (or lateral plates) bifid and well sclerotized (lateral view) (Fig. 32); median stylus not exposed.</p><p>Distribution: Neotropical – Argentina (Buenos Aires).</p><p>Type material. Holotype ɗ: “ Argentina, Las Chilcas / Dpto. Pila, Bs. As. / XII/09 S/ Mentha spp.” (ANLIS). Paratype ɗ: same data as holotype.</p><p>Remarks: Microcerella asymmetrica agrees in general morphology with Microcerella . Moreover, in general appearance and coloration pattern this species resembles many of the Andean and Patagonian species of Microcerella . The combinationof a flat but short vesica, and the shape and antero-ventrally development of the juxta is reminiscent of Microcerella chilensis (Hall) or M. engeli (Hall) . However the remarkable modifications forming the anterior and lateral membranous lobes of the juxta, and lateral styli are unique in the genus. The presence of asymmetric features in the terminalia are not common among Sarcophagidae but were recognized in Oxysarcodexia varia, for the phallic structures (Blanchard 1942a), or Engelimyia inops for cerci (Pape &amp; Mello-Patiu 2006).</p><p>Biology: Unknown. Flower visitor of Lamiaceae ( Mentha spp.).</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03AB00440F6BF30DFF51C26FFC4AFBCC	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Mariluis, Pablo Ricardo Mulieri Juan Carlos;Patitucci, Luciano Damián	Mariluis, Pablo Ricardo Mulieri Juan Carlos, Patitucci, Luciano Damián (2010): Review of the Sarcophaginae (Diptera: Sarcophagidae) of Buenos Aires Province (Argentina), with a key and description of a new species. Zootaxa 2575: 1-37, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.197479
03AB00440F74F30DFF51C495FABEF9FA.text	03AB00440F74F30DFF51C495FABEF9FA.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Microcerella austrohartigia Pape 1990	<div><p>Microcerella austrohartigia Pape, 1990</p><p>Austrohartigia bicoloricauda Lopes, 1981: 334 . (Junior secondary homonym of Mesosthyrsia bicoloricauda Enderlein, 1928 .)</p><p>Microcerella austrohartigia Pape, 1990: 50 . (New name for Austrohartigia bicoloricauda Lopes, 1981 .)</p><p>Distribution: Neotropical – Argentina (Buenos Aires), Brazil (Paraná, Rio Grande do Sul, São Paulo).</p><p>Material studied: Buenos Aires: 2 Ψ Burzaco, Alte. Brown, I.2006, Mulieri leg. (ANLIS); 2 ɗ, 5 Ψ Burzaco, Alte. Brown, IV–X.2006 reared from bovine liver, Mulieri leg. (ANLIS).</p><p>Remarks: Illustrations of male and female terminalia can be found in Lopes (1981).</p><p>Biology: Unknown but probably saprophagous. We have reared this species on rotten bovine liver.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03AB00440F74F30DFF51C495FABEF9FA	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Mariluis, Pablo Ricardo Mulieri Juan Carlos;Patitucci, Luciano Damián	Mariluis, Pablo Ricardo Mulieri Juan Carlos, Patitucci, Luciano Damián (2010): Review of the Sarcophaginae (Diptera: Sarcophagidae) of Buenos Aires Province (Argentina), with a key and description of a new species. Zootaxa 2575: 1-37, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.197479
03AB00440F74F30DFF51C648FE57F842.text	03AB00440F74F30DFF51C648FE57F842.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Microcerella chaetosa (Townsend 1927) Townsend 1927	<div><p>Microcerella chaetosa (Townsend, 1927)</p><p>Catheteronychia chaetosa Townsend, 1927: 295 .</p><p>Distribution: Neotropical – Argentina (Buenos Aires), Brazil (São Paulo).</p><p>Material studied: Buenos Aires: 1 ɗ Campana, Campana, XI.1998, Mariluis leg. (ANLIS); 2 Ψ Punta Lara, Berazategui, II.1982, Mariluis leg. (ANLIS).</p><p>Remarks: Male and female terminalia were illustrated by Lopes (1972). Later, Lopes (1979) provided a detailed redescription of phallic structures based on the male holotype</p><p>Biology: Unknown.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03AB00440F74F30DFF51C648FE57F842	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Mariluis, Pablo Ricardo Mulieri Juan Carlos;Patitucci, Luciano Damián	Mariluis, Pablo Ricardo Mulieri Juan Carlos, Patitucci, Luciano Damián (2010): Review of the Sarcophaginae (Diptera: Sarcophagidae) of Buenos Aires Province (Argentina), with a key and description of a new species. Zootaxa 2575: 1-37, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.197479
03AB00440F76F30FFF51C085FBD4FD4A.text	03AB00440F76F30FFF51C085FBD4FD4A.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Microcerella erythropyga (Lopes 1936) Lopes 1936	<div><p>Microcerella erythropyga (Lopes, 1936)</p><p>(Figs. 1, 7)</p><p>Xenoppia erythropyga Lopes, 1936b: 71 .</p><p>Distribution: Neotropical – Argentina (Buenos Aires, Córdoba), Brazil (Espírito Santo, Rio de Janeiro, São Paulo).</p><p>Material studied: Buenos Aires: 1 ɗ Burzaco, Alte. Brown, X.2002, Mulieri leg. (ANLIS); 4 ɗ Campana, Campana, III.2003, Mariluis leg. (ANLIS); 1 ɗ Camet Norte, Mar Chiquita, XI.2007, Mulieri leg. (ANLIS); 7 ɗ Ministro Rivadavia, Alte. Brown, XI.2005 on liver, Mulieri leg.; 1 Ψ Ministro Rivadavia, Alte. Brown, XI.2005, on liver, Mulieri leg.; 2 ɗ Ministro Rivadavia, Alte. Brown, II. V.2006 on liver, Mulieri leg.</p><p>Remarks: Male terminalia originally described and illustrated by Lopes (1936b), then redescribed with the addition of the female terminalia by Lopes (1972).</p><p>Biology: Obtained from Bulimulus taenuissimus (d’Orbigny) (Gastropoda, Bulimulidae), probably as a necrophage (Lopes 1969b). We captured M. erythropyga with rotten liver bait.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03AB00440F76F30FFF51C085FBD4FD4A	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Mariluis, Pablo Ricardo Mulieri Juan Carlos;Patitucci, Luciano Damián	Mariluis, Pablo Ricardo Mulieri Juan Carlos, Patitucci, Luciano Damián (2010): Review of the Sarcophaginae (Diptera: Sarcophagidae) of Buenos Aires Province (Argentina), with a key and description of a new species. Zootaxa 2575: 1-37, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.197479
03AB00440F76F30FFF51C318FA65FA42.text	03AB00440F76F30FFF51C318FA65FA42.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Microcerella muehni (Blanchard 1939) Blanchard 1939	<div><p>Microcerella muehni (Blanchard, 1939)</p><p>(Fig. 5)</p><p>Scopaediscus muehni Blanchard, 1939: 802 (as mühni).</p><p>Distribution: Neotropical – Argentina (Buenos Aires, Chaco).</p><p>Material studied: Buenos Aires: 1 ɗ La Plata, La Plata, II.1988, Schnack leg. (ANLIS); 1 ɗ Tandil, Tandil, V.1998 Ojanguren leg. (ANLIS); 2 ɗ El Carretero, Magdalena, V–IX.1999 (FAUBA); 15 ɗ, 5 Ψ Campana, Basural Tapado, XI.1998 Mariluis leg. (ANLIS); 24 ɗ, 11 Ψ Campana, Campana, III–IV.2003, Mariluis leg. (ANLIS); 1 ɗ, 1 Ψ Ciud. Aut. Buenos Aires, II.1997 on rotten meat, Oliva leg. (MACN); 1 Ψ Ciud. Aut. Buenos Aires, IV.1997, Oliva leg. (MACN); 12 ɗ, 1 Ψ Santa Clara del Mar, Mar Chiquita, XI.2007 Mulieri leg. (ANLIS).</p><p>Remarks: Good illustrations of male and female terminalia were provided by Blanchard (1939) and Lopes (1982).</p><p>Biology: Originally, the specimens of the type series of M. muehni were obtained from Oiketicus kirbyi (Guilding) ( Lepidoptera, Psychidae) (Blanchard 1939). Additional material was obtained from Alabama argillacea (Hübner) ( Lepidoptera, Noctuidae) (Blanchard &amp; De Santis 1975). Nevertheless, the species was later considered as non-specific saprophagous (Oliva 1997). In Buenos Aires, M. muehni exhibited higher abundance during the winter, and was captured both with rotten cow liver and dog faeces (Mulieri et al. 2008).</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03AB00440F76F30FFF51C318FA65FA42	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Mariluis, Pablo Ricardo Mulieri Juan Carlos;Patitucci, Luciano Damián	Mariluis, Pablo Ricardo Mulieri Juan Carlos, Patitucci, Luciano Damián (2010): Review of the Sarcophaginae (Diptera: Sarcophagidae) of Buenos Aires Province (Argentina), with a key and description of a new species. Zootaxa 2575: 1-37, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.197479
03AB00440F76F30EFF51C600FBD3FEB9.text	03AB00440F76F30EFF51C600FBD3FEB9.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Nephochaetopteryx cyaneiventris Lopes 1936	<div><p>Nephochaetopteryx cyaneiventris Lopes, 1936</p><p>Nephochaetopterix cyaneiventris Lopes, 1936b: 86 .</p><p>Sarcohelicobia elegans Blanchard, 1939: 795 . Syn. nov.</p><p>Distribution: Neotropical – Argentina (Buenos Aires, Misiones), Brazil (São Paulo).</p><p>Type material examined: Holotype Ψof Sarcohelicobia elegans Blanchard, Misiones, 1936, Bosq leg.</p><p>Other material studied: Buenos Aires: 1 ɗ, 2 Ψ Reserva Ecológica Costanera Sur, Ciud. Aut. Buenos Aires, III.2004 on faeces, Mulieri leg. (ANLIS); 3 ɗ Reserva Ecológica Costanera Sur, Ciud. Aut. Buenos Aires, III.2004, Mariluis leg. (ANLIS); 1 Ψ Reserva Ecológica Costanera Sur, Ciud. Aut. Buenos Aires, 24.V.2007 on faeces, Patitucci leg. (ANLIS).</p><p>Remarks: The identity of this species was determined in two ways. Male specimens obtained by authors were dissected. In all cases the adeagal morphology agrees with that of N. cyaneiventris (Lopes 1936b) . In addition, the examination of the terminalia of females captured by authors and the female holotype of Sarcohelicobia elegans Blanchard deposited in MACN, showed similar morphology of sternites 6, 7, and 8 with descriptions made by Mello-Patiu &amp; Santos (2001) for N. cyaneiventris .</p><p>Biology: Mulieri et al. (2008) commented on the strong association of this species with woodlands on the coastline of Río de la Plata, Buenos Aires. We captured this species on faeces.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03AB00440F76F30EFF51C600FBD3FEB9	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Mariluis, Pablo Ricardo Mulieri Juan Carlos;Patitucci, Luciano Damián	Mariluis, Pablo Ricardo Mulieri Juan Carlos, Patitucci, Luciano Damián (2010): Review of the Sarcophaginae (Diptera: Sarcophagidae) of Buenos Aires Province (Argentina), with a key and description of a new species. Zootaxa 2575: 1-37, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.197479
03AB00440F77F30EFF51C18FFE93F932.text	03AB00440F77F30EFF51C18FFE93F932.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Oxysarcodexia bicolor Lopes 1946	<div><p>Oxysarcodexia bicolor Lopes, 1946</p><p>(Figs. 12, 14, 24)</p><p>Oxysarcodexia bicolor Lopes, 1946a: 127 .</p><p>Description of female. Body length = 7.3–8.5 mm. Head. Head length at antennal base 1.16–1.05 head length at vibrissal level. Microtomentum of parafacial and fronto-orbital plate, gena, and postorbital areas distinctly golden. Genal and postcranial setae black. Antenna black, first flagellomere black with dark microtomentum, length 0.29–0.33 head height, arista plumose. The females differ from males by the possession of wider front (0.28–0.30 of head width), two pairs of proclinate fronto-orbital bristles, the anterior bristle smaller (0.50x) than the posterior one. Thorax. Postpronotal lobe, notopleuron anepimeron, anepisternum and median stripes of scutum with yellowish golden microtomentum. Katepisternum with silvery microtomentum. Proanepisternum bare. Chaetotaxy: acrostichals 5–4 (small)+1 (prescutellar), dorsocentrals 4+5 (two posterior pairs larger), intra-alars 2+2, supra-alars 2+3, anterior postpronotal 1, basal postpronotal 2, postalars 2, notopleurals 4 (two big and two small), katepisternals 4 (usually the two median smaller). Scutellum with basal and lateral pairs, apical absent, discals one pair. Wing hyaline, tegula black, yellow-orange basicosta and veins, R1 bare, R4+5 setulose in proximal 0.67 or less of distance to crossvein r-m, costal spine not differentiated, third costal sector without ventral setae, lower calypteres pale brown. Legs black; middle femur without posteroventral ctenidium on its apical portion. Abdomen. Tergites with spots of gray microtomentum. Tergites 1+2, 3, and 4 without erect marginal setae. Tergite 5 with a complete row (five pairs) of erect marginal setae. Terminalia. Tergite 6 entire and mostly reddish, covered with dense golden microtomentum, and sparse black hairs on dorsal and central areas. Tergite 8 absent. Sternite 6 and 7+8 reddish with golden microtomentum, having a broad concave apical area (Figs.12, 24).</p><p>Distribution: Neotropical – Argentina (Buenos Aires), Brazil (Rio de Janeiro, São Paulo).</p><p>Material studied: Buenos Aires: 1 ɗ El Carretero, Pdo. Magdalena, 30.XI.2000 on Scutia buxifolia, Torretta leg. (FAUBA); 1 Ψ Isla A (no date) (ANLIS); 1 ɗ Campana, Campana, III.2003 Mariluis leg.; 2 ɗ, 5 Ψ Reserva Ecológica Costanera Sur, Ciud. Aut. Buenos Aires, 31.III.2004 Mariluis leg. (ANLIS); 1 ɗ Ministro Rivadavia, Alte. Brown, V.2005 on faeces Mulieri leg. (ANLIS).</p><p>Remarks: The specimens examined agree with the original description given by Lopes (1946a) based on the male type material. Females were studied by Tibana &amp; Mello (1985) who grouped O. bicolo r with those co-generic species having the so-called “Syntergite 6+7” (here tergite 6) entirely sclerotized as a single plate, and with the absence of tergite 8. Otherwise not illustrated or described. Male terminalia were illustrated by Lopes (1946a).</p><p>Biology: Mulieri et al. (2008) commented on the strong association of this species with woodlands on the coastline of Río de la Plata, Buenos Aires. We captured this species on faeces. Flower visitor of Rhamnaceae ( Scutia buxifolia).</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03AB00440F77F30EFF51C18FFE93F932	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Mariluis, Pablo Ricardo Mulieri Juan Carlos;Patitucci, Luciano Damián	Mariluis, Pablo Ricardo Mulieri Juan Carlos, Patitucci, Luciano Damián (2010): Review of the Sarcophaginae (Diptera: Sarcophagidae) of Buenos Aires Province (Argentina), with a key and description of a new species. Zootaxa 2575: 1-37, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.197479
03AB00440F77F309FF51C730FC9BFCD2.text	03AB00440F77F309FF51C730FC9BFCD2.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Oxysarcodexia culmiforceps Dodge 1966	<div><p>Oxysarcodexia culmiforceps Dodge, 1966</p><p>(Fig. 15)</p><p>Oxysarcodexia culmiforceps Dodge, 1966: 687 .</p><p>Distribution: Neotropical – Argentina (Buenos Aires, Entre Ríos, Misiones), Brazil (Minas Gerais, Paraná, Rio de Janeiro, Rio Grande do Sul, Santa Catarina, São Paulo), Paraguay.</p><p>Material studied: Buenos Aires: 4 ɗ, 4 Ψ Campana, Campana, XI.1998, Mariluis leg. (ANLIS); 24 ɗ, 1 Ψ Campana, Campana, III–IV.2003, Mariluis leg. (ANLIS); 1 ɗ San Isidro, Magdalena, VII.1998 (FAUBA); 1 ɗ San Isidro, Magdalena, 25.VIII.1998 (FAUBA); 2 ɗ El Carretero, Magdalena, V.1999 (FAUBA), 1 ɗ El Carretero, Magdalena, VII.1999 (FAUBA); 1 ɗ, 2 Ψ El Carretero, Magdalena, IX.1999 on Scutia buxifolia (FAUBA); 1 Ψ El Carretero, Magdalena, 3.XI.1999 (FAUBA); 1 Ψ Punta Lara, Ensenada, 19.XI.2003 on Sebastiana brasiliensis (FAUBA).</p><p>Remarks: Dodge (1966) described O. culmiforceps and suggested it was misidentified by Lopes (1946b) as O. culminata (Aldrich) . Dodge (1966) restricted the name O. culmiforceps to those specimens “with thorax entirely gray pollinose”. Lopes (1975), agreed with the identification made by Dodge, but suggested that O. culmiforceps is highly variable in colour and some details of cerci and phallus, and reported that Blanchard misidentified this species under the name O. meridionalis (Engel) . Blanchard (1939) and Lopes (1946b) provided good illustrations of O. culmiforceps (as O. meridionalis and O. culminata, respectively). Additionally, Tibana &amp; Mello (1983) provided illustrations of female terminalia.</p><p>Biology: In Brazil, some studies indicate that O. culmiforceps is an abundant species throughout the year, with a tendency to avoid urban areas (Ferreira 1979; Linhares 1981; Dias et al. 1984a, b). This species is mostly attracted to faeces baits (Ferreira 1979; Dias et al. 1984c). Flower visitor of Euphorbiaceae ( Sebastiana brasiliensis) and Rhamnaceae ( Scutia buxifolia).</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03AB00440F77F309FF51C730FC9BFCD2	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Mariluis, Pablo Ricardo Mulieri Juan Carlos;Patitucci, Luciano Damián	Mariluis, Pablo Ricardo Mulieri Juan Carlos, Patitucci, Luciano Damián (2010): Review of the Sarcophaginae (Diptera: Sarcophagidae) of Buenos Aires Province (Argentina), with a key and description of a new species. Zootaxa 2575: 1-37, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.197479
03AB00440F70F308FF51C390FE1BFE22.text	03AB00440F70F308FF51C390FE1BFE22.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Oxysarcodexia marina (Hall 1938) Hall 1938	<div><p>Oxysarcodexia marina (Hall, 1938)</p><p>(Figs. 10, 22)</p><p>Apelophyla marina Hall, 1938: 257 .</p><p>Description of female. Body length = 6.4–7.2 mm. Head. Head length at antennal base 1.11–1.05 head length at vibrissal level. Microtomentum of parafacial and fronto-orbital plate, gena, and postorbital areas distinctly golden. Genal and postcranial setae black. Antenna black, first flagellomere black with dark microtomentum, length 0.25–0.28 head height, arista plumose. The females differ from males by the possession of wider front (0.34–0.38 of head width), two pairs of proclinate fronto-orbital bristles, the anterior bristle half the size of the posterior one. Thorax. Postpronotal lobe, notopleuron, anepimeron, anepisternum and median stripes of scutum with grey microtomentum. Proanepisternum bare. Chaetotaxy: acrostichals 4–3 (small)+1 (prescutellar), dorsocentrals 3+3, intra-alars 2+2, supra-alars 2+3, anterior postpronotal 1, basal postpronotal 2, postalars 2, notopleurals 4 (two big and two small), katepisternals 3 with the median one a little smaller and inserted near the anterior one. Scutellum with basal and lateral pairs, apical absent, discals one pair. Wing hyaline, tegula black, yellow-orange basicosta and veins, R1 bare, R4+5 setulose in proximal 0.67 or less of distance to crossvein r-m, costal spine not differentiated, third costal sector without ventral setae, lower calypter whitish to brown. Legs black; middle femur without posteroventral ctenidium on its apical portion. Abdomen. Tergites with spots of gray microtomentum. Tergites 1+2, 3 and 4 without erect marginal setae. Tergite 5 with a complete row (five pairs) of erect marginal setae. Terminalia. Tergite 6 with membranous median area covered with golden microtomentum, and sclerotized blackish laterals. T8 present. Sternite 6 black, sternite 7+8 with golden microtomentum, not convex at basal part and having a broad concave brown apical area (Figs. 10, 22).</p><p>Distribution: Neotropical – Argentina (Buenos Aires, Mendoza).</p><p>Material studied: Buenos Aires: 1 ɗ El Carretero, Magdalena, 10.X.2000 (FAUBA); 2 Ψ Campana, Campana, III.2003, Mariluis leg. (ANLIS); 1 ɗ Isla Paulino, Berisso, 25.IV.2004 (ANLIS); 3 ɗ, 1 Ψ Reserva Ecológica Costanera Sur, Ciud. Aut. Buenos Aires, 24.IX.2003, on liver, Mulieri leg. (ANLIS); 1 ɗ Ministro Rivadavia, Alte. Brown, 17.V.2005 on faeces, Mulieri leg. (ANLIS); 1 ɗ Ministro Rivadavia, Alte. Brown, V.2006 on faeces, Mulieri leg. (ANLIS); 1 ɗ San Claudio, Carlos Casares, I.2008 on Ludwigia spp. (ANLIS).</p><p>Remarks: The specimens examined agree with the descriptions given by Hall (1938) and Lopes (1975) based on the male type material. This species is similar in general morphology and coloration to O. paulistanensis . However, males of these species are easy to separate by coloration of syntergosternite 7+8 (black in O. marina) and the absence of apical scutellar bristles in the male of O. marina . Illustrations of male terminalia can be found in Hall (1938) and Dodge (1966). In addition, Lopes (1975) provided a detailed redescription of genitalic structures based on type material. The sternites of female terminalia resemble in general shape and coloration those of O. varia .</p><p>Biology: This species was captured in grasslands along the coastline of Río de la Plata, Buenos Aires using rotten cow liver and dog faeces as baits (Mariluis et al. 2007; Mulieri et al. 2008). Flower visitor of Onagraceae ( Ludwigia spp.)</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03AB00440F70F308FF51C390FE1BFE22	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Mariluis, Pablo Ricardo Mulieri Juan Carlos;Patitucci, Luciano Damián	Mariluis, Pablo Ricardo Mulieri Juan Carlos, Patitucci, Luciano Damián (2010): Review of the Sarcophaginae (Diptera: Sarcophagidae) of Buenos Aires Province (Argentina), with a key and description of a new species. Zootaxa 2575: 1-37, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.197479
03AB00440F71F30BFF51C220FB33FEB9.text	03AB00440F71F30BFF51C220FB33FEB9.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Oxysarcodexia paulistanensis (Mattos 1919) Mattos 1919	<div><p>Oxysarcodexia paulistanensis (Mattos, 1919)</p><p>(Figs. 11, 23)</p><p>Sarcophaga paulistanensis Mattos, 1919: 72 .</p><p>Oxysarcodexia amarali Prado &amp; Fonseca, 1932: 35 . Oxysarcodexia delpontei Blanchard, 1939: 809 . Oxysarcodexia artigasi Dodge, 1966: 684 .</p><p>Distribution: Neotropical – Argentina (Buenos Aires, Córdoba, Entre Ríos, Mendoza, Tucumán), Brazil (Minas Gerais, Paraná, Rio de Janeiro, Rio Grande do Sul, São Paulo), Chile (Santiago).</p><p>Lectotype designation. Blanchard (1939: 809) described Oxysarcodexia delpontei from an unknown number of specimens (as “cotipos”) from Córdoba, Buenos Aires and Delta del Paraná, all in Argentina . We located one male syntype from Buenos Aires and eleven female syntypes from Delta del Paraná in MACN. The male syntype is hereby designated lectotype of Oxysarcodexia delpontei Blanchard, 1939 in the interests of nomenclatural stability. Lectotype male (MACN): in perfect condition, pinned, terminalia dissected on two cover slips pinned below the specimen. Label: “Bs As. [Buenos Aires] / prep. EB 2 [white label, handwritten]”. Paralectotypes 11 Ψpinned. Labels: “Delta / VI-38 [white label, handwritten] // Oxysarcodexia / delpontei / Blnchd. / det E.E. Blanchard [white label, black square, handwritten]”.</p><p>Other material studied: Buenos Aires: 4 ɗ Burzaco, Alte. Brown, VII.2002, Mulieri leg. (ANLIS); 1 ɗ, 2 Ψ Burzaco, Alte. Brown, 19.IV-2005 on faeces, Mulieri leg. (ANLIS), 1 ɗ, 11 Ψ Olivos, Vicente Lopez, IX.1951 (ANLIS); 1 Ψ Mar del Plata, Gral. Pueyrredon, I.1947 (ANLIS); 1 ɗ Ciud. Aut. Buenos Aires 30.IX-1931 (ANLIS); 1 ɗ, 1 Ψ Ciud. Aut. Buenos Aires, II.1944 on meat (ANLIS); 1 ɗ Ciud. Aut. Buenos Aires, 23.IX.1986 on Discaria americana (FAUBA); 1 ɗ Ciud. Aut. Buenos Aires, III.2002, Mariluis leg. (ANLIS); 1 ɗ Ciud. Aut. Buenos Aires, X.2002, Mariluis leg. (ANLIS); 1 Ψ Ciud. Aut. Buenos Aires, 31.X.2002 (FAUBA); 1 ɗCiud. Aut. Buenos Aires, 13.XI.2003 on Coriandrum sativum (FAUBA); 1 Ψ Ciud. Aut. Buenos Aires, 4.X.2004 on Condalia spp. (FAUBA); 4 ɗ, 2 Ψ Ciud. Aut. Buenos Aires, II-III.1998 emerged from faeces, Oliva leg. (MACN); 1 ΨIsla Baradero, Baradero, 5.VII.1939 (ANLIS); 4 ɗ, 3 Ψ Zárate, Zarate, XI.1998, Mariluis leg. (ANLIS); 8 ɗ, 4Ψ Villa Elisa, La Plata, III.1980, Mariluis leg. (ANLIS); 2 ɗ, Villa Elisa, La Plata, II.1982, Mariluis leg. (ANLIS); 11 ɗ San Miguel, Gral. Sarmiento, XI.1976 Mariluis leg. (ANLIS); 1 Ψ San Isidro, Magdalena, 20.XI.1998 on Scutia buxifolia (FAUBA); 1 Ψ El Carretero, Magdalena, 27.V.1999 (FAUBA); 1 Ψ Gral. Pacheco, Tigre, 6.X.2002 (FAUBA); 40 ɗ, 3 Ψ Campana, Campana, III.2003, Mariluis leg. (ANLIS); 7 ɗ Campana, Campana, IV.2003, Mariluis leg. (ANLIS); San Clemente el Tuyú, De la Costa, X.1997 (ANLIS); 1 Ψ Villa Gesell, Villa Gesell, I.2007 on faeces, Patitucci leg. (ANLIS); 1 ΨSanta Clara del Mar, Mar Chiquita, 25.XII.2005 on faeces, Mulieri leg. (ANLIS); 8 ɗ, 5 Ψ Santa Clara del Mar, Mar Chiquita, XI.2007 on faeces, Mulieri leg. (ANLIS).</p><p>Remarks: Good illustrations of male terminalia were provided by Blanchard (1939), Lopes (1946a), and Dodge (1966). The female terminalia were illustrated by Tibana &amp; Mello (1985).</p><p>Biology: The seasonal abundance of this species was described by several authors from different geographic locations where O. paulistanensis is found throughout the year (Ferreira 1979; Linhares 1981; Dias et al. 1984b; Mendes &amp; Linhares 1993; Mulieri et al. 2008). Moreover, O. paulistanensis showed a wide range of habitat preferences such as urban areas (Ferreira 1979; Linhares 1981; Dias et al. 1984a) or grasslands and woodlands of natural areas (Mariluis et al. 2007; Mulieri et al. 2008). This species was captured on faeces and rotten animal tissues (Ferreira 1979; Linhares 1981; Dias et al. 1984c; Mariluis et al. 2007; Mulieri et al. 2008), and was reared on rat carcasses (Moura 2004). Flower visitor of Apiaceae ( Coriandrum sativum), Rhamnaceae ( Condalia spp., Discaria americana, Scutia buxifolia).</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03AB00440F71F30BFF51C220FB33FEB9	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Mariluis, Pablo Ricardo Mulieri Juan Carlos;Patitucci, Luciano Damián	Mariluis, Pablo Ricardo Mulieri Juan Carlos, Patitucci, Luciano Damián (2010): Review of the Sarcophaginae (Diptera: Sarcophagidae) of Buenos Aires Province (Argentina), with a key and description of a new species. Zootaxa 2575: 1-37, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.197479
03AB00440F72F30BFF51C18FFA65FB04.text	03AB00440F72F30BFF51C18FFA65FB04.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Oxysarcodexia terminalis (Wiedemann 1830) Wiedemann 1830	<div><p>Oxysarcodexia terminalis (Wiedemann, 1830)</p><p>(Fig. 9)</p><p>Sarcophaga terminalis Wiedemann, 1830: 366 .</p><p>Amesothyrsus chilensis Enderlein, 1928: 41 . (Junior secondary homonym of Sarcophaga chilensis Macquart, 1844 .) Sarcophaga complicata Hall, 1937a: 371 .</p><p>Hybopygia pseudovaria Blanchard, 1939: 806 .</p><p>Distribution: Neotropical – Argentina (Buenos Aires, Córdoba), Brazil, Chile (Coquimbo, Ñuble).</p><p>Material studied: Buenos Aires: 12 ɗ Basural Tapado, Campana, XI.1998, Mariluis leg. (ANLIS); 2 ɗ, 1 ΨCampana, Campana, III.2003, Mariluis leg. (ANLIS); 2 Ψ Balcarce, Balcarce, I.2005, Torretta leg. (ANLIS); 1 ɗ Tandil, Tandil, V.1998, Ojanguren leg. (ANLIS); 1 ɗ Sierra de la Ventana, Tornquist, IX.1998, Ojanguren leg. (ANLIS); 1 Ψ Laguna La Brava, Balcarce, XI.2007, Mariluis leg. (ANLIS); 1 Ψ Sierra de los Padres, Gral. Pueyrredón, XI.2007, Patitucci leg. (ANLIS); 1 ɗ Mar del Plata, Gral. Pueyrredón, XI.2007, Patitucci leg. (ANLIS); 2 Ψ Ministro Rivadavia, Alte. Brown, IX.2005 on faeces, Mulieri leg. (ANLIS); 1 Ψ Ministro Rivadavia, Alte. Brown, II.2006 on liver, Mulieri leg. (ANLIS); 1 ɗ San Claudio, Carlos Casares, I.2009 on Baccharis spp., Torretta leg. (ANLIS).</p><p>Remarks: Illustrations of male terminalia were provided by Hall (1937a) and Blanchard (1939). The female was described by Blanchard (1939) but not illustrated.</p><p>Biology: In Brazil, this is a relatively common species, with populational peaks from September to December, and showing synathropic habits (Linhares 1981; Dias et al. 1984b; Mendes &amp; Linhares 1993). This species also showed preference for faeces baits (Ferreira 1979; Linhares 1981; Dias et al. 1984c). Furthermore, O. terminalis was listed as coprophagous, reared in cattle dung (Marchiori et al. 2001; Mendes &amp; Linhares 2002) or human faeces (Mendes &amp; Linhares 1993). Flower visitor of Asteraceae ( Baccharis spp.).</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03AB00440F72F30BFF51C18FFA65FB04	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Mariluis, Pablo Ricardo Mulieri Juan Carlos;Patitucci, Luciano Damián	Mariluis, Pablo Ricardo Mulieri Juan Carlos, Patitucci, Luciano Damián (2010): Review of the Sarcophaginae (Diptera: Sarcophagidae) of Buenos Aires Province (Argentina), with a key and description of a new species. Zootaxa 2575: 1-37, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.197479
03AB00440F72F30AFF51C55DFCF9FF29.text	03AB00440F72F30AFF51C55DFCF9FF29.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Oxysarcodexia thornax (Walker 1849) Walker 1849	<div><p>Oxysarcodexia thornax (Walker, 1849)</p><p>Musca auriflua Wiedemann, 1830: 364 . Unavailable name. (Originally proposed in synonymy with Musca tessellata Fabricius, 1805 and not validated by subsequent usage.)</p><p>Sarcophaga thornax Walker, 1849: 814 .</p><p>Sarcophaga pudica Rondani, 1850: 174 .</p><p>Sarcophaga aurifinis Walker, 1853: 325 .</p><p>Oxysarcodexia neotropicale Prado &amp; Fonseca, 1932: 36 .</p><p>Distribution: Neotropical – Argentina (Buenos Aires, Catamarca, Jujuy, Misiones, Tucumán), Bolivia, Brazil (Amazonas, Ceará, Espirito Santo, Goiás, Mato Grosso, Minas Gerais, Pará, Paraíba, Paraná, Pernambuco, Rio de Janeiro, Rio Grande do Sul, Santa Catarina, São Paulo), Ecuador, Guyana, Paraguay, Peru.</p><p>Material studied: Buenos Aires: 2 ɗ, 3 Ψ Campana, Campana, III.2003, Mariluis leg. (ANLIS); 1 ɗ Ciud. Aut. Buenos Aires, II.2002, Mulieri leg. (ANLIS).</p><p>Remarks: Detailed illustrations of male terminalia can be found in Blanchard (1942a) and Lopes (1946a). The female terminalia were described by Lopes (1976) and Tibana &amp; Mello (1983).</p><p>Biology: Previous works indicate that O. thornax is very abundant, especially during summer and autumn in Brazil, with a wide range of habitat and bait preferences (Ferreira 1979; Linhares 1981; Dias et al. 1984 a, b, c; Mendes &amp; Linhares 1993). Two natural larviposition habits were alternatively recorded for this species: on faeces or dung (D’Almeida 1988, 1989; Mendes &amp; Linhares 1993; Marchiori et al. 2001; Mendes &amp; Linhares 2002), and on dead fish (D’Almeida 1994).</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03AB00440F72F30AFF51C55DFCF9FF29	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Mariluis, Pablo Ricardo Mulieri Juan Carlos;Patitucci, Luciano Damián	Mariluis, Pablo Ricardo Mulieri Juan Carlos, Patitucci, Luciano Damián (2010): Review of the Sarcophaginae (Diptera: Sarcophagidae) of Buenos Aires Province (Argentina), with a key and description of a new species. Zootaxa 2575: 1-37, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.197479
03AB00440F73F30AFF51C13FFCB0F92A.text	03AB00440F73F30AFF51C13FFCB0F92A.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Oxysarcodexia varia (Walker 1836) Walker 1836	<div><p>Oxysarcodexia varia (Walker, 1836)</p><p>(Figs. 3, 8)</p><p>Sarcophaga varia Walker, 1836: 353 .</p><p>Sarcophaga milleri Johnston &amp; Tiegs, 1922: 185 . Sarcophaga chilensis Macquart, 1844: 261 . Sarcophaga flavicostata Macquart, 1844: 261 . Sarcophaga truncata Schiner, 1868: 314 .</p><p>Sarcophaga nobilis Thomson, 1869:536 .</p><p>Distribution: Neotropical – Argentina (Buenos Aires, Mendoza, Neuquen, Tucumán), Bolivia, Brazil (Rio Grande do Sul), Chile (Bío Bío, Concepción, Coquimbo, La Araucanía, Ñuble, Santiago, Valdivia), Uruguay – Australasian/Oceanian.</p><p>Material studied: Buenos Aires: 6 Ψ Campana, Campana, XI.1998, Mariluis leg. (ANLIS); 24 ɗ, 2 Ψ Campana, Campana, III–IV.2003, Mariluis leg. (ANLIS); 1 Ψ Ciud. Aut. Buenos Aires, 23.IX.1986 (FAUBA); 1 ɗ Ciud. Aut. Buenos Aires, II.2002, Mulieri leg. (ANLIS); 2 ɗ El Carretero, Magdalena, I– V.1999 (FAUBA); 1 ɗ El Carretero, Magdalena, 22.XII.2000 (FAUBA); 1 ɗ El Destino, Magdalena, 25.XI.2005 on Scutia buxifolia (FAUBA); 1 Ψ Olivos, Vicente Lopez, IX.1951 (ANLIS); 1 ɗ, 9 Ψ Mar del Plata, Gral. Pueyrredon, XII.1946 (ANLIS); 1 Ψ Mar del Plata, Gral. Pueyrredon, 27.XII.2003 on Baccharis juncea (FAUBA); 1 Ψ Moreno, Moreno 12.I.1949 (ANLIS); 1 Ψ Bahia San Blas, Patagones, II.1947 (ANLIS); 1 ɗ Punta Lara, Ensenada, 19.XI.2003 on Sebastiana brasiliensis (FAUBA); 3 ɗ, 7 Ψ Bunge, Gral. Villegas, I–III.2003 (FAUBA); 1 Ψ Balcarce, Balcarce, 9.III.1990 on Colletia paradoxa (FAUBA); 1 ɗ Balcarce, Balcarce, 9.I.2005 on Eryngium horridum (FAUBA); 15 ɗ, 8 Ψ Balcarce, Balcarce, I.2005 on faeces, Torretta leg. (ANLIS); 2 Ψ Balcarce, Balcarce, 27.I.2005 light trap, Torretta leg. (ANLIS); 1 Ψ Balcarce, Balcarce, 22.I.2005 on Helianthus annuus (FAUBA); 1 Ψ Martinez de Hoz, Lincoln, 8.I.2006 on Helianthus annuus (FAUBA); 1 Ψ La Lucila el Mar, De la Costa, 31.X.1989 on Discaria americana (FAUBA); 1 Ψ Punta Médanos, Pdo. De la Costa, 30.X.1989 on Discaria americana (FAUBA); 4 ɗ, 5 Ψ Sierra de la Ventana, Tornquist, 28.X.1989 on Discaria americana (FAUBA); 1 Ψ Chascomús, Chascomús, XI.1965, Bachmann leg. (ANLIS); 2 ɗ, 7 Ψ Santa Clara del Mar, Mar Chiquita, 25.XII.2005 on faeces, Mulieri leg. (ANLIS).</p><p>Remarks: The male terminalia were illustrated by Blanchard (1939), Lopes &amp; Albuquerque (1955) and Dodge (1966). The female terminalia were adequately described and illustrated by Lopes &amp; Albuquerque (1955).</p><p>Biology: Oxysarcodexia varia is more abundant during the spring and summer in Argentina and southern Brazil (Ferreira 1979; Mariluis et al. 2007; Mulieri et al. 2008). Moreover, this species showed preference for faeces bait, and is regarded as asynanthropic because of its higher abundance in rural areas (Ferreira 1979; Mariluis et al. 2007; Mulieri et al. 2008). In previous works, O. varia was reared on dung (Mendes &amp; Linhares 2002) or dead insects (Blanchard 1939). Flower visitor of Apiaceae ( Eryngium horridum), Asteraceae ( Baccharis juncea, Helianthus annuus), Euphorbiaceae ( Sebastiana brasiliensis), Rhamnaceae ( Colletia paradoxa, Discaria americana, Scutia buxifolia).</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03AB00440F73F30AFF51C13FFCB0F92A	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Mariluis, Pablo Ricardo Mulieri Juan Carlos;Patitucci, Luciano Damián	Mariluis, Pablo Ricardo Mulieri Juan Carlos, Patitucci, Luciano Damián (2010): Review of the Sarcophaginae (Diptera: Sarcophagidae) of Buenos Aires Province (Argentina), with a key and description of a new species. Zootaxa 2575: 1-37, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.197479
03AB00440F73F305FF51C738FDBDFDB2.text	03AB00440F73F305FF51C738FDBDFDB2.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Peckia (Euboettcheria) florencioi (Prado & Fonseca 1932) Prado & Fonseca 1932	<div><p>Peckia (Euboettcheria) florencioi (Prado &amp; Fonseca, 1932)</p><p>Ctenoprosballia florencioi Prado &amp; Fonseca, 1932: 36 .</p><p>Sarcophaga dentifera Hall, 1937b: 208 .</p><p>Neosarcodexia deaurata Kreibohm, 1940: 166 .</p><p>Neosarcodexia deaurata Blanchard 1942b: 60 . (Junior primary homonym of Neosarcodexia deaurata Kreibohm, 1940 .)</p><p>Distribution: Neotropical – Argentina (Buenos Aires new record, Misiones, San Luis, Tucumán), Brazil (Mato Grosso, Río Grande do Sul, Santa Catarina, São Paulo).</p><p>Material studied: Buenos Aires: 1 Ψ Burzaco, Alte. Brown, VII.2005, on faeces, Mulieri leg. (ANLIS); 1 ɗBurzaco, Alte. Brown, VI.2006, on faeces, Mulieri leg (ANLIS).</p><p>Remarks: Good illustrations of male terminalia were provided by Lopes (1958) and Carvalho &amp; Mello- Patiu (2008). Illustrations of the female terminalia can be found in Blanchard (1942b) and Lopes &amp; Tibana (1982b).</p><p>Biology: In previous works, P. (E.) florencioi was described as an urban avoider species that is attracted to vertebrate carcasses or rotten animal tissues (Linhares 1981; Dias et al. 1984 a, c; Mendes &amp; Linhares 1993). This species showed higher abundance during winter in Belo Horizonte, Brazil (Dias et al. 1984b). It is considered necrophagous and was successfully reared from rodent cadavers and rotten animal tissues (Mendes &amp; Linhares 1993; D’Almeida 1994).</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03AB00440F73F305FF51C738FDBDFDB2	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Mariluis, Pablo Ricardo Mulieri Juan Carlos;Patitucci, Luciano Damián	Mariluis, Pablo Ricardo Mulieri Juan Carlos, Patitucci, Luciano Damián (2010): Review of the Sarcophaginae (Diptera: Sarcophagidae) of Buenos Aires Province (Argentina), with a key and description of a new species. Zootaxa 2575: 1-37, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.197479
03AB00440F7CF305FF51C285FC52FAA1.text	03AB00440F7CF305FF51C285FC52FAA1.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Ravinia advena (Walker 1853) Walker 1853	<div><p>Ravinia advena (Walker, 1853)</p><p>Sarcophaga advena Walker, 1853: 324 .</p><p>? Sarcophaga contermina Walker, 1853: 327 .</p><p>Catasarcophaga trivittata Townsend, 1927: 295 . Sarcophaga (Chaetoravinia) townsendi Engel, 1931: 149 .</p><p>Distribution: Neotropical – Argentina (Buenos Aires new record, Misiones), Bolivia, Brazil (Mato Grosso, Minas Gerais, Santa Catarina, São Paulo).</p><p>Material studied: Buenos Aires: 1 ɗ Zárate, Zárate, XI.1998, Mariluis leg. (ANLIS); 1 Ψ El Carretero, Magdalena 27.V.2005, A. Basilio leg. (FAUBA); 2 ɗ Burzaco, Alte. Brown, VII.2005 on faeces, Mulieri leg. (ANLIS); 3 Ψ Ministro Rivadavia, Alte. Brown VII–XI.2005 on faeces, Mulieri leg. (ANLIS); 1 Ψ Ministro Rivadavia, Alte. Brown II.2006 on liver, Mulieri leg. (ANLIS); 1 Ψ Ministro Rivadavia, Alte. Brown IV.2007 on faeces, Mulieri leg. (ANLIS).</p><p>Remarks: Engel (1931) illustrated the male terminalia. Later, Lopes (1976) and Guimarães (2004) redescribed the male copulatory apparatus with the inclusion of good and interpretative drawings. Illustrations of female terminalia were provided by Lopes (1976).</p><p>Biology: In Brazil this species shows higher abundance during the winter, a strong association with wild and non-urbanized areas, and coprophilous habits (Ferreira 1979; Dias et al. 1984a, b, c,). In addition, R. advena was reared from cattle dung by Mendes &amp; Linhares (2002).</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03AB00440F7CF305FF51C285FC52FAA1	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Mariluis, Pablo Ricardo Mulieri Juan Carlos;Patitucci, Luciano Damián	Mariluis, Pablo Ricardo Mulieri Juan Carlos, Patitucci, Luciano Damián (2010): Review of the Sarcophaginae (Diptera: Sarcophagidae) of Buenos Aires Province (Argentina), with a key and description of a new species. Zootaxa 2575: 1-37, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.197479
03AB00440F7CF305FF51C5B8FB08F812.text	03AB00440F7CF305FF51C5B8FB08F812.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Ravinia aureopyga (Hall 1928) Hall 1928	<div><p>Ravinia aureopyga (Hall, 1928)</p><p>Sarcophaga aureopyga Hall, 1928: 339 .</p><p>Distribution: Neotropical – Argentina (Buenos Aires new record, Córdoba, Entre Ríos, Santa Fe), Brazil (Rio Grande do Sul), Chile (La Araucanía, Maule, Santiago).</p><p>Material studied: Buenos Aires: 1 ɗ, La Juanita, Laprida, 1950 (ANLIS); 2 ɗ, 1 Ψ Carlos Casares, C. Casares, II.2007 on faeces, Torretta leg. (ANLIS), 1 Ψ, Bahía Blanca, Bahía Blanca, 1.II.1938 Scott &amp; Birabén leg (MLP).</p><p>Remarks: Blanchard misidentified this species as Euravinia lherminieri Robineau-Desvoidy (Blanchard 1942a) . Both R. lherminieri and R. aureopyga have very similar phallic structures. We base our identification (in part) on the distributional information provided by Pape (1996) who reported R. lherminieri from North and Central America and R. aureopyga from South America. Illustrations of the male terminalia can be found in Hall (1928) and Blanchard (1942a). The female was described by Blanchard (1942a) (as Euravinia lherminieri) but not illustrated.</p><p>Biology: Ravinia aureopyga was regarded as a coprophagous species by Blanchard (1939).</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03AB00440F7CF305FF51C5B8FB08F812	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Mariluis, Pablo Ricardo Mulieri Juan Carlos;Patitucci, Luciano Damián	Mariluis, Pablo Ricardo Mulieri Juan Carlos, Patitucci, Luciano Damián (2010): Review of the Sarcophaginae (Diptera: Sarcophagidae) of Buenos Aires Province (Argentina), with a key and description of a new species. Zootaxa 2575: 1-37, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.197479
03AB00440F7DF304FF51C085FD1AFD01.text	03AB00440F7DF304FF51C085FD1AFD01.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Ravinia sueta (Wulp 1895) Wulp 1895	<div><p>Ravinia sueta (Wulp, 1895)</p><p>Sarcophaga sueta Wulp, 1895: 268 .</p><p>Distribution: Nearctic, Neotropical – Argentina (Buenos Aires), Brazil (Rio Grande do Sul), Costa Rica, Dominican Republic, Ecuador, El Salvador, Guatemala, Mexico (Chiapas, Guerrero, Nayarít, Tabasco), Peru.</p><p>Material studied: Buenos Aires: 1 ɗ, 1 Ψ Balcarce, Balcarce, I.2005 on faeces, Torretta leg. (ANLIS); 6 Ψ Olivos, Vicente Lopez, IX.1951 (ANLIS); 4 ɗ, 16 Ψ Campana, Campana, III.2003, Mariluis leg. (ANLIS); 3 ɗ Basural Tapado, Campana, XI.1998, Mariluis leg. (ANLIS); 1 ɗ Villa Elisa, La Plata, III.1980 Mariluis leg. (ANLIS); 1 Ψ Villa Elisa, La Plata, II.1982, Mariluis leg. (ANLIS); 1 Ψ Burzaco, Alte. Brown, VIII.2001, Mulieri leg. (ANLIS); 1 ɗ Carlos Casares, Pdo. C. Casares, II.2007 on faeces, Torretta leg. (ANLIS).</p><p>Remarks: A good illustration of the male terminalia was provided by Blanchard (1942a) and Lopes (1946b, 1973b). The female was described by Blanchard (1942a) but not illustrated.</p><p>Biology: The adults of this species were captured principally on faeces according to previous findings (Mulieri et al. 2008) and the present study. Larvae of this species were recorded feeding on sarcophagid larvae ( Oxysarcodexia) in horse dung (Hernandez 1992).</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03AB00440F7DF304FF51C085FD1AFD01	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Mariluis, Pablo Ricardo Mulieri Juan Carlos;Patitucci, Luciano Damián	Mariluis, Pablo Ricardo Mulieri Juan Carlos, Patitucci, Luciano Damián (2010): Review of the Sarcophaginae (Diptera: Sarcophagidae) of Buenos Aires Province (Argentina), with a key and description of a new species. Zootaxa 2575: 1-37, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.197479
03AB00440F7DF304FF51C347FEDCF839.text	03AB00440F7DF304FF51C347FEDCF839.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Sarcodexia lambens (Wiedemann 1830) Wiedemann 1830	<div><p>Sarcodexia lambens (Wiedemann, 1830)</p><p>Sarcophaga lambens Wiedemann, 1830: 365 .</p><p>Sarcophaga amata Wiedemann, 1830: 367 .</p><p>Sarcophaga innota Walker, 1861: 308 .</p><p>Sarcodexia sternodontis Townsend, 1892: 106 . Sarcophaga pyophila Neiva &amp; Faria 1913: 17 . Sarcophaga freirei Mattos, 1919: 75 .</p><p>Ctenoprosballia butantani Prado &amp; Fonseca, 1932: 36 . Sarcodexia anisitsiana var. diminuta Blanchard 1942b: 95 .</p><p>Distribution: Nearctic, Neotropical – Argentina (Buenos Aires new record, Chaco, Entre Ríos, Formosa, Misiones, Santa Fe, Tucumán), Bahamas, Bolivia, Brazil (Ceará, Mato Grosso, Rio de Janeiro, Santa Catarina, São Paulo), Chile (Tarapacá), Colombia, Costa Rica, Cuba, El Salvador, Guyana, Haiti, Jamaica, Mexico (Jalisco, Nuevo León, Tamaulipas), Panamá, Paraguay, Peru, Puerto Rico, St. Vincent, Trinidad and Tobago – Australasian/Oceanian.</p><p>Material studied: Buenos Aires: 2 ɗ Campana, Campana, III.2003, Mariluis leg. (ANLIS); 1 Ψ Burzaco, Alte. Brown, IV.2006, Mulieri leg. (ANLIS); 1 Ψ Ministro Rivadavia, Alte. Brown, I.2007 on liver, Mulieri leg. (ANLIS); 1 ɗ Burzaco, Alte. Brown, III.2007 on liver, Mulieri leg. (ANLIS).</p><p>Remarks: The male terminalia of S. lambens are well recognized. Good illustrations of the males can be found in Aldrich (1916), Engel (1931), Blanchard (1942a) and Shewell (1987). The female terminalia were described and illustrated by Lopes (1974) on the basis of the holotype of Sarcophaga innota described by Walker.</p><p>Biology: In Brazil, this species showed higher abundance during the warmer months (Linhares 1981). Sarcodexia lambens is regarded as an urban avoider species (Ferreira 1979; Linhares 1981; Dias et al. 1984a). This species also showed a wide range of food preferences and was captured with several kinds of baits (Ferreira 1979; Linhares 1981; Dias et al. 1984c), or reared from carrion, dead invertebrates, or living insects (as a facultative parasitoid) (Lopes 1973c; Blanchard &amp; De Santis 1975; D’Almeida 1988, 1989, 1994; Coupland &amp; Barker 2004). Host. Gastropoda, Bulimulidae: Plagiodentes meieri Weyrauch, P. multiplicatus (Doering), Spixia juradoi Parodiz and S. pseudosexdentatus Doering (Lopes 1969b) . In addition, S. lambens was recorded as a myiasis-causing species on domestic animals and humans (Neiva &amp; Faria 1913; Guimarães et al. 1983).</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03AB00440F7DF304FF51C347FEDCF839	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Mariluis, Pablo Ricardo Mulieri Juan Carlos;Patitucci, Luciano Damián	Mariluis, Pablo Ricardo Mulieri Juan Carlos, Patitucci, Luciano Damián (2010): Review of the Sarcophaginae (Diptera: Sarcophagidae) of Buenos Aires Province (Argentina), with a key and description of a new species. Zootaxa 2575: 1-37, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.197479
03AB00440F7EF307FF51C085FE5BF808.text	03AB00440F7EF307FF51C085FE5BF808.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Sarcophaga (Bercaea) africa (Wiedemann 1824) Wiedemann 1824	<div><p>Sarcophaga (Bercaea) africa (Wiedemann, 1824)</p><p>(Fig. 17)</p><p>Musca africa Wiedemann, 1824: 49 .</p><p>Sarcophaga cruentata Meigen, 1826: 28 .</p><p>Sarcophaga georgina Wiedemann, 1830: 357 .</p><p>Myophora squalida Robineau-Desvoidy, 1830: 342 .</p><p>Myophora villica Robineau-Desvoidy, 1830: 340 .</p><p>Sarcophaga aegra Walker, 1849: 821 .</p><p>Myophora blondeli Robineau-Desvoidy, 1830: 344 .</p><p>Sarcophaga consobrina Rondani, 1860: 391 . (Junior secondary homonym of Myophora consobrina Robineau-Desvoidy, 1830 .)</p><p>Myophora capensis Robineau-Desvoidy, 1830: 347 .</p><p>Sarcophaga nurus Rondani, 1860: 392 .</p><p>Sarcophaga zetterstedtii Robineau-Desvoidy, 1863: 439 .</p><p>Sarcophaga iners Robineau-Desvoidy, 1863: 439 .</p><p>Sarcophaga pabulorum Robineau-Desvoidy, 1863: 441 .</p><p>Sarcophaga fulvipalpis Robineau-Desvoidy, 1863: 442 . (Junior primary homonym of Sarcophaga fulvipalpis Macquart, 1844 .)</p><p>Sarcophaga meigenii Robineau-Desvoidy, 1863: 442 .</p><p>Sarcophaga inclyta Robineau-Desvoidy, 1863: 443 .</p><p>Sarcophaga praeceps Robineau-Desvoidy, 1863: 480 .</p><p>Sarcophaga fugax Robineau-Desvoidy, 1863: 481 .</p><p>Myophora nitida Robineau-Desvoidy, 1863: 510 .</p><p>Myophora albidula Robineau-Desvoidy, 1863: 513 .</p><p>Myophora commendata Robineau-Desvoidy, 1863: 516 .</p><p>Bercaea haemathura Robineau-Desvoidy, 1863: 551 .</p><p>Bercaea agilis Robineau-Desvoidy, 1863: 552 . (Junior secondary homonym of Sarcophaga agilis Robineau-Desvoidy, 1863 .)</p><p>Bercaea oralis Robineau-Desvoidy, 1863: 554 . (Junior secondary homonym of Sarcophaga oralis Robineau-Desvoidy, 1863 .)</p><p>Bercaea agraria Robineau-Desvoidy, 1863: 554 . (Junior secondary homonym of Sarcophaga agraria Robineau- Desvoidy, 1863.)</p><p>Bercaea meditata Robineau-Desvoidy, 1863: 576 .</p><p>Sarcophaga aequipalis Thomson, 1869: 534 .</p><p>Sarcophaga distinguenda Rondani, 1873: 284 .</p><p>Sarcophaga sejungenda Rondani, 1873: 285 .</p><p>Theria flavidula Bigot, 1880: 151 . (Junior secondary homonym of Mulsantia flavidula Robineau-Desvoidy, 1863 .)</p><p>Thyrsotetradiscus friederichsianus Enderlein, 1928: 20 .</p><p>Mesothyrsia madagascariensis Enderlein, 1928: 37 . (Junior secondary homonym of Sarcophaga madagascariensis Macquart, 1847 .)</p><p>Distribution: Nearctic, Neotropical – Argentina (Buenos Aires), Brazil (Rio de Janeiro, Rio Grande do Sul), Costa Rica, Cuba, Mexico, Paraguay – Palaearctic, Afrotropical, Oriental, Australasian/Oceanian.</p><p>Material studied: Buenos Aires: 1 ɗ Ciud. Aut. Buenos Aires, 31.I.1944 on rotten meat (ANLIS); 2 ɗ, 1 Ψ Burzaco, Alte. Brown, III.2002, Mulieri leg. (ANLIS); 1 ɗ Burzaco, Alte. Brown, III.2002 on liver, Mulieri leg. (ANLIS); 1 Ψ Mar del Plata, Gral. Pueyrredon, XII.2004, Mulieri leg. (ANLIS).</p><p>Remarks: Sarcophaga (B.) africa has been misidentified by several authors as S. haemorrhoidalis (Fallén) . Good illustrations of the male terminalia can be found in Blanchard (1942a) and Shewell (1987). Illustrations of the female terminalia also can be found in Shewell (1987).</p><p>Biology: This cosmopolitan species is regarded as highly synanthropic, and is attracted both to cadavers and faeces in Brazil (Linhares 1981; Dias et al. 1984a, c). Regarding the life cycle of S. africa, some authors have recorded it as coprophagous (Bänziger &amp; Pape 2004), necrophagous (Romera et al. 2003), or as a facultative parasitoid on snails (Coupland &amp; Barker 2004). Host. Gastropoda, Helicidae and Hygromiidae (Coupland &amp; Barker 2004) . This species has a medical impact because it is known to cause traumatic, gastrointestinal and aural myiasis (James 1947; Zumpt 1965; Guimarães et al. 1983; Lukin 1989; Sherman 2000; Uni et al. 2005).</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03AB00440F7EF307FF51C085FE5BF808	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Mariluis, Pablo Ricardo Mulieri Juan Carlos;Patitucci, Luciano Damián	Mariluis, Pablo Ricardo Mulieri Juan Carlos, Patitucci, Luciano Damián (2010): Review of the Sarcophaginae (Diptera: Sarcophagidae) of Buenos Aires Province (Argentina), with a key and description of a new species. Zootaxa 2575: 1-37, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.197479
03AB00440F7FF306FF51C085FDC3F9A2.text	03AB00440F7FF306FF51C085FDC3F9A2.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Sarcophaga (Lipoptilocnema) koehleri (Blanchard 1939) Blanchard 1939	<div><p>Sarcophaga (Lipoptilocnema) koehleri (Blanchard, 1939)</p><p>(Figs. 4, 13, 16, 25, 26)</p><p>Parapeltopyga koehleri Blanchard, 1939: 847 .</p><p>Description of female. Body length = 9.1– 10 mm. Head. Head length at antennal base 1.01–1.03 head length at vibrissal level. Microtomentum of parafacial and fronto-orbital plate, gena, and postorbital areas distinctly golden. Genal setae black. Postgenal setae pale. Antenna black, first flagellomere black with gray microtomentum, length 0.28–0.31 head height, arista plumose. The females differ from males by the possession of wider front (0.29–0.32 of head width), and two pairs of proclinate fronto-orbital bristles. Thorax. Postpronotal lobe, notopleuron, supra-alar area, anepimeron, anepisternum and lateral stripes of scutum with golden microtomentum (Fig. 16). Proanepisternum bare with silver microtomentum. Chaetotaxy: acrostichals 0+1 (prescutellar), dorsocentrals 3–4+2 (well developed posteriors), intra-alars 2+2, supra-alars 2+3, anterior postpronotal 1, basal postpronotal 2, postalars 2, notopleurals 4 (two big and two small), katepisternals 3 (median smaller on 3/4 the anterior). Scutellum with basal setae (with an additional smaller pair basally), lateral and apical (not crossed as in males) pairs well developed, sometimes with additional lateral or subapical pairs present (larger specimens). Wing hyaline, tegula black, yellow-orange basicosta, veins dark brown, R1 bare, R4+5 setulose in proximal 0.8 of distance to crossvein r-m, costal spine not differentiated, third costal sector without ventral setae, lower calypter whitish. Legs black; middle femur without posteroventral ctenidium on its apical portion. Abdomen. Tergites with spots of gray microtomentum. Tergites 1+2 and 3 without erect marginal setae. Tergite 4 with a pair of erect marginal setae. Tergite 5 with a complete row (four pairs) of erect marginal setae. Terminalia. Tergite 6 with a narrow membranous median area, and sclerotized reddish lateral edges. Tergite 8 absent. Sternite 6 mostly black, covered with hairs and silver microtomentum. Sternite 7 shining at the distal half, reddish to black, having a slight concave central area (Figs. 13, 25).</p><p>Distribution: Neotropical – Argentina (Buenos Aires, Salta), Brasil (Rio Grande do Sul).</p><p>Material studied: Buenos Aires: 1 ɗ Ciud. Aut. Buenos Aires, I.1995, Oliva leg. (MACN); 1 ɗ Ciud. Aut. Buenos Aires, IX.1998 emerged, Oliva leg. (MACN); 1 ɗ, 1 Ψ Burzaco, Alte. Brown, III.2002, Mulieri leg. (ANLIS); 1 Ψ Burzaco, Alte. Brown, II.2006 from dead snail, Mulieri leg. (ANLIS); 1 ɗ Burzaco, Alte. Brown, 19.IV.2005 on faeces, Mulieri leg. (ANLIS); 4 Ψ Olivos, Vicente Lopez, IX.1951 (ANLIS); 2 ɗ, 7 Ψ Mercedes, Mercedes, I.2004 (ANLIS); 1 Ψ El Carretero, Magdalena 7.V.1999 (FAUBA); 1 ɗ Ciud. Aut. Buenos Aires, 23.IX.1986 on Discaria americana (FAUBA); 1 ɗ Ciud. Aut. Buenos Aires, V.2002, Mulieri leg. (ANLIS); 1 ɗ Ciud. Aut. Buenos Aires, 4.X.2004 (FAUBA); 8 ɗ, 4 Ψ Reserva Ecológica Costanera Sur, Ciud. Aut. Buenos Aires, II–X.2002, Mulieri leg. (ANLIS); 3 ɗ Villa Elisa, La Plata, III.1980, Mariluis leg. (ANLIS); 1 ɗVilla Elisa, La Plata, III.1982, Mariluis leg. (ANLIS); 1 Ψ Campana, Campana, XI.1998, Mariluis leg. (ANLIS); 2 ɗ Campana, Campana, III.2003, Mariluis leg. (ANLIS); 4 ɗ, 8 Ψ San Miguel. San Miguel, II.1973, Mariluis leg. (ANLIS), 1 ɗ Mar del Plata, Gral. Pueyrredón, XI.2007, Mulieri leg. (ANLIS).</p><p>Remarks: Blanchard’s (1939) original description included good illustrations of the male terminalia.</p><p>Biology: Obtained from dead snails by the authors. Specimens also attracted to faeces. Flower visitor of Rhamnaceae ( Discaria americana).</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03AB00440F7FF306FF51C085FDC3F9A2	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Mariluis, Pablo Ricardo Mulieri Juan Carlos;Patitucci, Luciano Damián	Mariluis, Pablo Ricardo Mulieri Juan Carlos, Patitucci, Luciano Damián (2010): Review of the Sarcophaginae (Diptera: Sarcophagidae) of Buenos Aires Province (Argentina), with a key and description of a new species. Zootaxa 2575: 1-37, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.197479
03AB00440F7FF301FF51C6A0FBE9FE6C.text	03AB00440F7FF301FF51C6A0FBE9FE6C.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Sarcophaga (Lipoptilocnema) lanei Townsend 1934	<div><p>Sarcophaga (Lipoptilocnema) lanei Townsend, 1934</p><p>(Figs. 2, 27)</p><p>Lipoptilocnema lanei Townsend, 1934a: 112 . Dasypygia selloi Enderlein, 1928: 40 .</p><p>Parapeltopyga liguloides Blanchard, 1939: 845 .</p><p>Distribution: Neotropical – Argentina (Buenos Aires, Salta), Brazil (Rio Grande do Sul, Santa Catarina, São Paulo).</p><p>Material studied: Buenos Aires: 1 ɗ Burzaco, Alte. Brown, IV.2002, Mulieri leg. (ANLIS); 1 ɗ Burzaco, Alte. Brown, 19.IV.2005 on faeces, Mulieri leg. (ANLIS); 1 ɗ, 1 Ψ Burzaco, Alte. Brown, XI.2005, Mulieri leg. (ANLIS); 1 Ψ Burzaco, Alte. Brown, XII.2006, on faeces, Mulieri leg. (ANLIS); 1 Ψ Burzaco, Alte. Brown, 17.I.2006, Mulieri leg. (ANLIS); 2 ɗ Burzaco, Alte. Brown, XII.2008, Mulieri leg. (ANLIS). Remarks: Blanchard (1939) and Lopes (1942) provided illustrations of male terminalia. An illustration of female terminalia was included in Lopes (1988).</p><p>Biology: Unknown. This species was captured on faeces by the authors.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03AB00440F7FF301FF51C6A0FBE9FE6C	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Mariluis, Pablo Ricardo Mulieri Juan Carlos;Patitucci, Luciano Damián	Mariluis, Pablo Ricardo Mulieri Juan Carlos, Patitucci, Luciano Damián (2010): Review of the Sarcophaginae (Diptera: Sarcophagidae) of Buenos Aires Province (Argentina), with a key and description of a new species. Zootaxa 2575: 1-37, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.197479
03AB00440F78F301FF51C1F5FA8FF89A.text	03AB00440F78F301FF51C1F5FA8FF89A.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Sarcophaga (Liopygia) argyrostoma (Robineau-Desvoidy 1830) Robineau-Desvoidy 1830	<div><p>Sarcophaga (Liopygia) argyrostoma (Robineau-Desvoidy, 1830)</p><p>(Figs. 18, 20)</p><p>Myophora argyrostoma Robineau-Desvoidy, 1830: 340 . Sarcophaga barbata Thomson, 1869: 533 .</p><p>Sarcophaga falculata Pandellé, 1896: 185 .</p><p>Sarcophaga argentina Brèthes, 1916: 142 .</p><p>Sarcophaga falculata ssp. persicae Señor-White, 1924: 228. Sarcophaga chivensis Zimin, 1928: 27 .</p><p>Mesothyrsia henseliana Enderlein, 1928: 152 .</p><p>Distribution: Nearctic, Neotropical – Argentina (Buenos Aires), Brazil (Rio Grande do Sul) – Palaearctic, Afrotropical, Australasian/Oceanian.</p><p>Lectotype designation. Brèthes (1916: 141) described Sarcophaga argentina from several specimens, but the author did not mention the number of specimens or their sex. Indeed Brèthes only provided information on date and collector of these specimens: “ En febrero del corriente año, el doctor Pedro Caride Massini trájome varios ejemplares de una mosca...” (Brethes 1916: 141). We have located ten presumed syntypes (four males, five females, and one specimen of unidentified sex) from Buenos Aires in MACN, whose identity, date, and collector match the original description. One male syntype is hereby designated lectotype of Sarcophaga argentina Brèthes, 1916 in the interests of nomenclatural stability. Lectotype male (MACN): in good condition, pinned. Labels: “B. Aires / II,1916 / Dr. Caride [white label, handwritten] // 11575 [white label, red square, handwritten] // Bs. Aires [green label, black square, printed] Sarcophaga / argentina Br. [white label, handwritten]”. Paralectypes 3 ɗ, 4 Ψand one damaged (sex not recognizable) (MACN): pinned. Labels: “B. Aires / II, 1916 / Dr. Caride [white label, handwritten] // Sarcophaga / argentina Br. [white label, handwritten]”. Paralectotype 1 Ψ(MACN): pinned. Labels: “ Sarcophaga / argentina Brethes / Bs Aires II-1916 / Dr. Caride / Type o Cotype !! [white label, handwritten]”.</p><p>Other material studied: Buenos Aires: 3 ɗ, 2 Ψ Ciud. Aut. Buenos Aires, II.1944 on rotten meat (ANLIS); 4 ɗ, 2 Ψ Ciud. Aut. Buenos Aires, XI.1996 meat bait, Oliva leg. (MACN); 29 ɗ, 7 Ψ Ciud. Aut. Buenos Aires, and X.1997 reared from meat, Mariluis leg. (ANLIS); 10 ɗ, 7 Ψ Moreno, Moreno, 12.I.1949 (ANLIS); 2 Ψ Olivos, Vicente Lopez, IX.1951 (ANLIS); 18 ɗ, 16 Ψ Mercedes, Mercedes, I.2004 (ANLIS); 1 Ψ San Bernardo, De la Costa, 7.IV.2007, Mulieri leg. (ANLIS).</p><p>Remarks: Brèthes (1916) provided schematic drawings of the male terminalia. In addition, Blanchard (1942a) presented good illustrations of male terminalia, while the female was described but not illustrated.</p><p>Biology: This cosmopolitan species is regarded as highly synanthropic (Povolny &amp; Znojil 1989). Obtained from dead or dying insects (Lahille 1907), and from dead vertebrates (Oliva 1997; Romera et al. 2003). In the present work, this species was captured and reared from rotten meat. Sarcophaga (L.) argyrostoma has public health and veterinary significance. There are some records of it causing myiasis in sheep (Zumpt 1965) and man (James 1947; Burgess &amp; Spraggs 1992). In Argentina, Mazza &amp; Basso (1939) reported S. (L.) argyrostoma as causing cutaneous myiasis. Oliva (1997) reported it as a forensic indicator.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03AB00440F78F301FF51C1F5FA8FF89A	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Mariluis, Pablo Ricardo Mulieri Juan Carlos;Patitucci, Luciano Damián	Mariluis, Pablo Ricardo Mulieri Juan Carlos, Patitucci, Luciano Damián (2010): Review of the Sarcophaginae (Diptera: Sarcophagidae) of Buenos Aires Province (Argentina), with a key and description of a new species. Zootaxa 2575: 1-37, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.197479
03AB00440F79F300FF51C085FB6FFB7A.text	03AB00440F79F300FF51C085FB6FFB7A.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Sarcophaga (Liopygia) crassipalpis Macquart 1839	<div><p>Sarcophaga (Liopygia) crassipalpis Macquart, 1839</p><p>(Figs. 19, 21)</p><p>Sarcophaga crassipalpis Macquart, 1839: 112 .</p><p>Sarcophaga dalmatina Schiner, 1862: 571 .</p><p>Sarcophaga securifera Villeneuve, 1908: 123 .</p><p>Parasarcophaga crassipalpis forma slovenica Č epelák, 1956: 682. Sarcophaga nodosoides Zumpt, 1961: 2 .</p><p>Distribution: Nearctic, Neotropical – Argentina (Buenos Aires), Chile, Uruguay – Palaearctic, Afrotropical, Oriental, Australasian/Oceanian.</p><p>Material studied: Buenos Aires: 1 ɗ Ciud. Aut. Buenos Aires, 1.IV.1960 (ANLIS); 2 Ψ Ciud. Aut. Buenos Aires, I.1997 (ANLIS); 1 ɗ Ciud. Aut. Buenos Aires, 4.X.2004 on Condalia spp. (FAUBA); 1 ɗ Ciud. Aut. Buenos Aires, II.1998 emerged, Oliva leg. (MACN); 1 Ψ Ciud. Aut. Buenos Aires, II.1996 emerged, Oliva leg. (MACN); 4 Ψ Mercedes, Mercedes, I.2004 (ANLIS); 2 Ψ Olivos, Vicente Lopez, IX.1951 (ANLIS); 1 Ψ Villa Elisa, La Plata, II.1976, Mariluis leg. (ANLIS); 3 ΨSarandí, Avellaneda II.1997, Mariluis leg. (ANLIS); 2 ɗ, 3 Ψ Bahia Blanca, Bahia Blanca, II.2002, De Arriba leg. (ANLIS); 7 ɗ, 10 Ψ Ciud. Aut. Buenos Aires, III.1987 myiasis in dog, Mariluis leg. (ANLIS); 25 ɗ, 25 Ψ Ciud. Aut. Buenos Aires, III.1987 reared from meat, Mariluis leg. (ANLIS).</p><p>Remarks: Good illustrations of male terminalia can be found in Blanchard (1942a). The female terminalia were adequately illustrated by Shewell (1987).</p><p>Biology: Sarcophaga (L.) crassipalpis is necrophagous on dead vertebrates and insects (Oliva 1997; Romera et al. 2003). In the present work, it was reared from rotten meat. This species has been cited as producing traumatic and cutaneous myiasis in domestic animals and man (James 1947; Zumpt 1965; Lukin 1989; Sherman 2000; Uni et al. 2005). It has been recorded in human cases of intestinal myiasis caused by ingestion of larvae present in contaminated food (Nagakura et al. 1984; Shiota et al. 1990), and in cases of ophthalmomyiasis (Uni et al. 1999) and aural myiasis (Morris 1987). In Argentina, Oliva (1997) reported S. (L.) crassipalpis as a forensic indicator. Flower visitor of Rhamnaceae ( Condalia spp.).</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03AB00440F79F300FF51C085FB6FFB7A	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Mariluis, Pablo Ricardo Mulieri Juan Carlos;Patitucci, Luciano Damián	Mariluis, Pablo Ricardo Mulieri Juan Carlos, Patitucci, Luciano Damián (2010): Review of the Sarcophaginae (Diptera: Sarcophagidae) of Buenos Aires Province (Argentina), with a key and description of a new species. Zootaxa 2575: 1-37, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.197479
03AB00440F79F303FF51C4C8FD45FEDC.text	03AB00440F79F303FF51C4C8FD45FEDC.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Sarcophaga (Neobellieria) polistensis Hall 1933	<div><p>Sarcophaga (Neobellieria) polistensis Hall, 1933</p><p>Sarcophaga polistensis Hall, 1933: 110 .</p><p>Sarcophaga polistensis spp. offecta Lopes, 1938: 342. Neobellieria brethesi Blanchard, 1939: 823 .</p><p>Distribution: Nearctic, Neotropical – Argentina (Buenos Aires), Brazil (Mato Grosso, Rio de Janeiro, Santa Catarina, São Paulo), Costa Rica, El Salvador, Mexico (Chiapas).</p><p>Lectotype designation. Neobellieria brethesi Blanchard (1939: 823) was described from three males and one female from Buenos Aires. The male syntypes have their terminalia dissected. One of them is hereby designated as lectotype of Neobellieria brethesi Blanchard, 1939 in the interests of nomenclatural stability. Lectotype male (MACN): the specimen has the terminalia extracted, otherwise in good condition. Labels: “Cotipo [red label, handwritten] // J. Brèthes / Buenos Aires / 14.III.1907 [white label, black square, handwritten] // Parásito de Polistes / versicolor Linné [white label, handwritten] // Neobellieria / brethesi / Blchd. [handwritten] / det. E. E. Blanchard [printed] / Cotipos [white label, black square, handwritten] // Col. E. E. / Blanchard [white label, black square, printed]”. Paralectotypes 2 ɗ, 1 Ψ(MACN): the males have their terminalia dissected and non-expanded wings, the female has the abdomen dissected and glued on a card pinned below the specimen. Labels: “Cotipo [red label, handwritten] // J. Brèthes / Buenos Aires / 14.III.1907 [white label, black square, handwritten] // Parásito de Polistes / versicolor Linné [white label, handwritten] // Neobellieria / brethesi / Blchd. / det. E. E. Blanchard / Cotipos [white label, black square, handwritten]”.</p><p>Other material studied: Buenos Aires: 1 ɗ Moreno, Moreno, I.1973, Fritz leg (ANLIS).</p><p>Remarks: Male terminalia were illustrated by Lopes (1938) and Blanchard (1939). The female was described by Blanchard (1939) but not illustrated, and redescribed by Giroux &amp; Wheeler (2009) including figures of terminalia.</p><p>Biology: Larvae of Sarcophaga (N.) polistensis inhabit nests of wasps. Host. Hymenoptera, Vespidae: Polistes versicolor (Olivier) (Blanchard 1939) .</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03AB00440F79F303FF51C4C8FD45FEDC	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Mariluis, Pablo Ricardo Mulieri Juan Carlos;Patitucci, Luciano Damián	Mariluis, Pablo Ricardo Mulieri Juan Carlos, Patitucci, Luciano Damián (2010): Review of the Sarcophaginae (Diptera: Sarcophagidae) of Buenos Aires Province (Argentina), with a key and description of a new species. Zootaxa 2575: 1-37, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.197479
03AB00440F7AF303FF51C165FE2AFACA.text	03AB00440F7AF303FF51C165FE2AFACA.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Tricharaea (Sarcophagula) occidua (Fabricius 1794) Fabricius 1794	<div><p>Tricharaea (Sarcophagula) occidua (Fabricius, 1794)</p><p>Musca occidua Fabricius, 1794: 315 .</p><p>Tachina pusilla Wiedemann, 1830: 337 . (Junior secondary homonym of Musca pusilla Macquart, 1848 .) Sarcophaga sugens Wiedemann, 1830: 367 .</p><p>Sarcophaga parvula Wiedemann, 1830: 368 .</p><p>Sarcophaga parva Walker, 1853: 321 .</p><p>Sarcophaga despecta Thomson, 1869: 540 .</p><p>Sarcophagula imbecilla Wulp, 1896: 289 .</p><p>Distribution: Nearctic, Neotropical – Argentina (Buenos Aires, Entre Ríos), Brazil (Amazonas, Ceará, Goiás, Maranhão, Mato Grosso, Pará, Rio de Janeiro, São Paulo), Chile (Tarapacá), Colombia, Cuba, Dominican Republic, Ecuador, El Salvador, Is. Galápagos, Guyana, Haití, Mexico (Guerrero, Jalisco, Nayarit, Sinaloa, Tamaulipas, Veracruz), Panamá, Paraguay, Perú, Puerto Rico, Venezuela – Australasian/Oceanian.</p><p>Material studied: Buenos Aires: 1 ɗ, 2 Ψ Ciud. Aut. Buenos Aires, X.1946 (ANLIS); 1 Ψ Mar del Tuyú, De la Costa, 25. II.2006, Mulieri leg. (ANLIS); 1 ɗ Campana, Campana, XI.1998, Mariluis leg. (ANLIS); 12 ɗ, 1 Ψ Campana, Campana, III.2003, Mariluis leg. (ANLIS); 1 ΨVilla Elisa, La Plata, II.1982, Mariluis leg. (ANLIS); 1 Ψ Santa Clara del Mar, Mar Chiquita, 25.XII.2005 on faeces, Mulieri leg. (ANLIS).</p><p>Remarks: The females of this species are indistinguishable from those of T. (S.) cannuta Wulp. However, after the examination of large series of male specimens captured in previous works (Mariluis et al. 2007; Mulieri et al. 2008) we found the exclusive presence of T. (S.) occidua, hence we safely ascribed the females to this species. Illustrations of the male terminalia were provided by Aldrich (1916), Blanchard (1939) and Lopes (1956).</p><p>Biology: In Buenos Aires, the adults of this species showed higher abundance during the summer, and exhibit strong preferences for grasslands and attraction to faeces (Mariluis et al. 2007; Mulieri et al. 2008). The larvae of T. (S.) occidua possess coprophagous habits (D’Almeida 1988, 1989; Marchiori et al. 2001; Mendes &amp; Linhares 2002).</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03AB00440F7AF303FF51C165FE2AFACA	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Mariluis, Pablo Ricardo Mulieri Juan Carlos;Patitucci, Luciano Damián	Mariluis, Pablo Ricardo Mulieri Juan Carlos, Patitucci, Luciano Damián (2010): Review of the Sarcophaginae (Diptera: Sarcophagidae) of Buenos Aires Province (Argentina), with a key and description of a new species. Zootaxa 2575: 1-37, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.197479
03AB00440F7AF302FF51C598FC29FE22.text	03AB00440F7AF302FF51C598FC29FE22.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Tricharaea (Tricharaea) brevicornis (Wiedemann 1830) Wiedemann 1830	<div><p>Tricharaea (Tricharaea) brevicornis (Wiedemann, 1830)</p><p>Tachina brevicornis Wiedemann, 1830: 299 . Dexia ? albicans Walker, 1858: 204 .</p><p>Tricharaea scatophagina Thomson, 1869: 541 . Sarcophaga caescens Thomson, 1869: 539 . Leucoravinia quadraticephala Townsend, 1928: 143 . Euleucomyia australis Townsend, 1934b: 202 . Xenagria mallogaster Blanchard, 1939: 800 . Tricharaea penai Dodge, 1965: 90 .</p><p>Tricharaea bilineata Dodge, 1966: 700 .</p><p>Tricharaea engeli Dodge, 1966: 699 .</p><p>Distribution: Nearctic, Neotropical – Argentina (Buenos Aires, Entre Ríos), Brazil (Amazonas, Ceará, Goiás, Maranhão, Mato Grosso, Pará, Rio de Janeiro, São Paulo), Chile (Llanquihue), Peru, Uruguay – Australasian/ Oceanian.</p><p>Material studied: Buenos Aires: 2 ɗ, 1 Ψ Burzaco, Alte. Brown, I–VIII.2002, Mulieri leg. (ANLIS); 1 ɗ Villa Elisa, La Plata, III.1980, Mariluis leg. (ANLIS); 1 ɗ, 1 Ψ Villa Elisa, La Plata, II.1982, Mariluis leg.</p><p>(ANLIS); 1 ɗ Ciud. Aut. Buenos Aires, 13.I.2000 on Coriandrum sativum (FAUBA); 4 ɗ, 1 Ψ Ciud. Aut. Buenos Aires, 13.XI.2003 on Coriandrum sativum (FAUBA); 4 ɗ, 1 Ψ Mar del Tuyú, De la Costa, 25. II.2006 on faeces, Mulieri leg. (ANLIS); 3 ɗ Santa Clara del Mar, Mar Chiquita, XII.2006, Mulieri leg. (ANLIS).</p><p>Remarks: This species is highly variable in size, chaetotaxy, and body coloration (Lopes 1973a). The specimens collected in Buenos Aires have yellowish-gray colour, like Brazilian specimens. Illustrations of male terminalia were provided by Blanchard (1939), Dodge (1966) and Lopes (1973a). The female terminalia were described and illustrated by Lopes (1973a).</p><p>Biology: This species is associated with sandy beaches (Lopes 1973a), and presumably has saprophagous habits (Pape 1996). Flower visitor of Apiaceae ( Coriandrum sativum).</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03AB00440F7AF302FF51C598FC29FE22	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Mariluis, Pablo Ricardo Mulieri Juan Carlos;Patitucci, Luciano Damián	Mariluis, Pablo Ricardo Mulieri Juan Carlos, Patitucci, Luciano Damián (2010): Review of the Sarcophaginae (Diptera: Sarcophagidae) of Buenos Aires Province (Argentina), with a key and description of a new species. Zootaxa 2575: 1-37, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.197479
03AB00440F7BF302FF51C220FD3EFBD4.text	03AB00440F7BF302FF51C220FD3EFBD4.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Udamopyga percita (Lopes 1938) Lopes 1938	<div><p>Udamopyga percita (Lopes, 1938)</p><p>Sarcophaga percita Lopes 1938: 344 .</p><p>Distribution: Neotropical – Argentina (Buenos Aires new record), Brazil (Rio de Janeiro, São Paulo).</p><p>Material studied: Buenos Aires: 1 ɗ Burzaco, Alte. Brown, III.2002, Mulieri leg. (ANLIS); 5 ɗ, 1 ΨBurzaco, Alte. Brown, V–XII.2005 on faeces and liver, Mulieri leg. (ANLIS); 1 ɗ, 3 Ψ Burzaco, Alte. Brown, III.2007 reared from bovine liver, Mulieri leg. (ANLIS).</p><p>Remarks: The original description of U. percita included illustrations of male terminalia (Lopes 1938). The redescription by Lopes (1940) included illustrations of both male and female genital structures.</p><p>Biology: In Argentina, this species has been reared from snails. Host. Gastropoda, Xanthonychidae: Epiphragmophora hemiclausa Scott Hylton (Lopes 1969b) . Gastropoda, Bulimulidae: Bulimulus vervoorsti Weyrauch (Lopes 1969b) . Adult flies were captured on faeces and rotten liver, and the species was successfully reared on the latter bait by authors.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03AB00440F7BF302FF51C220FD3EFBD4	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Mariluis, Pablo Ricardo Mulieri Juan Carlos;Patitucci, Luciano Damián	Mariluis, Pablo Ricardo Mulieri Juan Carlos, Patitucci, Luciano Damián (2010): Review of the Sarcophaginae (Diptera: Sarcophagidae) of Buenos Aires Province (Argentina), with a key and description of a new species. Zootaxa 2575: 1-37, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.197479
