TYRANNIDAE
Elaenia parvirostris Pelzeln, 1868
HEMIPTERA
Reduviidae: Triatominae
Triatoma infestans Klug in Meigen, 1834
Note: Dinelli (1941) cites several specimens of T. infestans he killed when he camped under a tree of Prosopis nigra Griseb. in Tucumán, and attributes the population reduction of this bird, whose nests are constructed in big trees, because of the high population density of Triatomas living in large trees far away of any other human habitations. He doesn´t mention whether the Prosopis tree had nests. Although this is a supposition, without corroboration of the author, it is coincident with later occurrences of T. infestans in wild ecotopes (birds´nests) (Carpintero 1986; Cichero 1975; Viana & Carpintero 1977), and other non specified Triatominae in nests of Tyrannidae (Bar et al. 1999; Damborsky et al. 2001).
Machetornis rixosa (Vieillot, 1819) DIPTERA: Muscidae
Philornis torquans (Nielsen, 1913) Santa Fe: see Table 2; Fig. 9.
Pitangus sulphuratus [bolivianus (Lafresnaye, 1852)] DIPTERA: Muscidae
Philornis seguyi García, 1952
Buenos Aires: see Table 2; Fig. 9.
Philornis torquans (Nielsen, 1913)
= Philornis anomala [nec Jaennicke, 1866]: Nielsen [1911] 1912, 1913; García 1952: 277.
Tucumán: Concepción ( Nielsen [1911] 1912, 1913; García 1952, only as Pitangus); (Sèguy 1946, only as Pitangus); (Couri 1983, only from Argentina); Fig. 9.
Santa Fe: see Table 2, Fig. 9, inside a close nest of other species, generally Furnariidae (de la Peña et al. 2003).
HEMIPTERA
Reduviidae: Triatominae
Species not stated
Corrientes (Bar et al. 1999; Damborsky et al. 2001, only as Tyrannidae).
Pyrocephalus rubinus [ rubinus (Boddaert, 1783)] DIPTERA: Muscidae
Philornis seguyi García, 1952
Buenos Aires: see Table 2; Fig. 9.