Dilophus bicolor Wiedemann, 1821

Pacheco Da Silva, Vitor C., Schelesky-Prado, Daniel De C., Fitzgerald, Scott J., Serra, Wilson Sebastián, Scarabino, Fabrizio, Costa, Andrés, Hagopián, Damián & Martínez, María, 2025, Bibionidae (Diptera: Bibionomorpha) from Uruguay: updated inventory including first reports of four species, Zootaxa 5588 (1), pp. 129-146 : 142

publication ID

https://doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.5588.1.5

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:B659DBD2-CCF1-43B8-B8DB-0F6F647B666E

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.14927262

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/C02C87F1-EB3D-0101-FF25-DA6A0175F87C

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Dilophus bicolor Wiedemann, 1821
status

 

Dilophus bicolor Wiedemann, 1821 View in CoL ( Macquart’s (1838) specimen)

Records in Uruguay. Hunter, (1900), Brèthes, (1908).

Distribution. Uruguay.

Wiedemann described Dilophus bicolor in 1821 without giving the locality, but later ( Wiedemann 1828) the type locality was given as “Kap” [Cape, South Africa] ( Skartveit and Freidberg 2023). Macquart (1838) identified a specimen from Montevideo ( Uruguay) as D. bicolor , which is unexpected considering the type locality of the species. After that, several catalogs listed this species for the Neotropical Region ( Lynch Arribálzaga 1881, Hunter 1900, Kertész 1902, Bréthes 1908, Hardy 1959, 1966). Hardy (1966) erroneously treated the species as described by Macquart, i.e., D. bicolor Macquart, 1838 , and also considered it an unrecognizable species. According to Skartveit and Freidberg (2023), listing the species in catalogs as if it occurred in the Neotropical region is erroneous. Thus, the real identity of Macquart’s (1838) specimen is unknown.

Based on some features of D. bicolor , such as the orange-red thorax, coxae and femorae of female and the presence of one set with 4 medial spines ( Skartveit and Freidberg 2023), which are possibly present in Macquart’s specimen and led him to attribute it as the Afrotropical species, it can be assumed that the Montevideo specimen is D. pectoralis , a species that also has reddish parts on thorax and legs, and has one set with 4-8 medial spines ( Hardy 1953). However, it is not possible to properly identify the specimen without examining the material, which is housed in the Muséum National d’Histoire Naturelle (MNHN) in France.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Diptera

InfraOrder

Bibionomorpha

SuperFamily

Bibionoidea

Family

Bibionidae

SubFamily

Pleciinae

Genus

Dilophus

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