Quantcast

Articles

Aedes Aeshnidae Aeshnidae Ailanthus webworm Anise Swallowtail (butterfly) Ant Aphid Apocrita Asian long-horned beetle Asian tiger mosquito Atlas moth Band-eyed Brown Horsefly Bee Beetle Black Swallowtail Blue Morpho (butterfly) Bogong Moth Boll weevil Bombyliidae Brimstone (butterfly) Bumblebee Butterfly Caelifera Cairns Birdwing Carolina mantis Carpenter bee Caterpillar Chrysomelidae Cicada Cicada killer wasp Cinnabar moth Clouded Apollo Cloudless Sulphur (butterfly) Cockroach Codling Moth Comet Moth Common asparagus beetle Common Blue (butterfly) Common Green Birdwing Crambidae Crambidae Crane fly Cricket Cricket Cucujiformia Damselfly Death's-head Hawkmoth Deer Fly Devil's coach horse beetle Diamondback Moth Digger wasp Dragonfly Earwig Eastern Tiger Swallowtail Elachistidae Emperor Gum Moth European mantis Fire ant Firefly Flea Flower-fly Froghopper Gatekeeper Butterfly Gelechiidae Geometer moth Giant Leopard Moth Green-veined White Gulf Fritillary Gypsy moth Halictidae Hawk moth Head louse Heliconiinae Helicoverpa zea Honeybee Housefly Hummingbird Hawk-moth Indianmeal Moth Japanese beetle Jerusalem cricket Katydid Ladybird Large White Leaf beetle Leaf-miner Fly Leafcutter ant Longhorn beetle Luna Moth Madagascar hissing cockroach Magicicada Many-plumed Moth Marsh fly (Sciomyzidae) Meadow Brown Megachilidae Migrant Hawker Migratory Locust Monarch butterfly Morpho (butterfly) Mosquito Moth Mountain Apollo Neuroptera (lacewing) Nine-spotted moth Oecophoridae Orthoptera Painted Lady Butterfly Palos Verdes Blue Butterfly Paper wasp Papilio Papilionoidea Parent Bug Passalidae Pasture Day Moth Peacock butterfly Pentatomidae Photuris (Firefly genus) Plume moth Plume moth Polyphemus Moth Pyralidae Queen Alexandra's Birdwing Rajah Brooke Butterfly Red Admiral Red Underwing Reduviidae Rothschild's Birdwing Sapygidae Saturniidae Scarce Swallowtail Scoliidae Sesiidae Shining flower beetle Silkworm Skipper (butterfly) Small Heath Small Tortoiseshell Small White Small-headed Fly Soldier beetle South American Scarab Dung Beetle Southern Tailed Birdwing Speckled Wood Spider wasp Swallowtail Butterfly Symphyta Tachinid Tachinid Termite Tortix moth Velvet ant Vespid Wasp Wasp Water strider Weevil Western Tiger Swallowtail Weta Whites (butterfly) Yellowjacket Yellowjacket Zygaenidae

Latest Thoughts



Bombyliidae


Credit: Wikipedia
Download full size image

The Bombyliids are a large family of flies with hundreds of genera. Their life cycles are not well known. Adults generally feed on nectar and pollen, thus are pollinators of flowers. They superficially resemble bees, thus are commonly called bee flies, and this may offer the adults some protection from predators.

The larval stage are predators or parasitoids of other insect eggs and larvae. The adult females usually deposit eggs in the vicinity of possible hosts, quite often in the burrows of beetles or wasps/solitary bees. Where most often in the insect world parasitoids are highly specific in the host species that they will infect, it is thought that bombyliids are opportunistic and will use a myriad of hosts.

While bombyliids have a great variety of species, rarely are individuals of any one species abundant, and this is perhaps one of the poorest known families of insects. There are at least 4,500 described species, and probably thousands as of yet undescribed.

Species include:

  • Major Bee Fly (Bombylius major)
  • Williston's Bee Fly (Poecilanthrax willistoni)
  • Bomber Fly (Heterostylum robustum)



redOrbit Friends