Saropogon, Loew, 1847

Londt, Jason G. H., 1997, Afrotropical Asilidae (Diptera) 29. A review of the genus Saropogon Loew, 1847 (Dasypogoninae), ANNALS OF THE NATAL MUSEUM 38, pp. 137-157 : 140

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.8322154

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.8322162

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/6E1F87C8-162D-FFFE-EBB4-468BF90EF7FA

treatment provided by

Carolina

scientific name

Saropogon
status

 

Key to afrotropical species of Saropogon View in CoL View at ENA

(excluding elbaiensis Efflatoun View in CoL and vestitus (Wiedemann)) View in CoL

Antennal flagellum plus microsegment more than 3 times the combined lengths of scape and pedicel; pedicel approximately half the length of scape ..................... greatheadi sp. n.

Antennal flagellum plus microsegment less than twice the combined lengths of scape and pedicel; pedicel and scape subequal in length .......................................2

2 Abdominal terga Tl-3 uniformly blackish ............................................................ 3

Abdominal terga Tl-3 yellow-brown with at most some dark red-brown parts ....4

3 Terga T4-6 blackish, like Tl-3; wing membrane uniformly transparent, and with cell m3 open at margin; a small species (wing length about 5 mm) ......................... incisuratus Wulp View in CoL

Terga T4-6 yellow-brown, contrasting with blackish Tl-3; wing membrane brown-shaded (due to presence of microtrichia) along major veins, and with cell m3 closed and stalked; a big species (wing length about 9 mm) ...........zinidi sp. n.

4 Wings yellow-brown (due to a combination of staining and the presence of microtrichia over entire membrane) ....................................................................... 5

Wings transparent (due to the complete lack of staining and the absence of microtrichia over most of the membrane) ..............................................................6

5 Dark red-brown markings of abdomen located predominantly on anterior segments; face gold pruinose in both sexes; cell m3 usually closed ......................... melampygus Loew View in CoL

Dark red-brown markings of abdomen located predominantly on posterior segments; cJ face dark red-brown pruinose, 9 face gold pruinose; cell m3 usually open ................................................................................................ kenyensis sp. n.

6 Cell m3 closed and stalked....................................................... pulverulentus Wulp View in CoL

Cell m3 open at margin ............................................................... rubriventris Wulp View in CoL

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Diptera

Family

Asilidae

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