Acrosathe Irwin & Lyneborg, 1981

Gibson, Joel F. & Cannings, Robert A., 2025, The Stiletto Flies (Diptera: Therevidae) of British Columbia, Yukon, and Alaska, Zootaxa 5618 (4), pp. 481-508 : 486-487

publication ID

https://doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.5618.4.2

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:FBDA7E17-7857-43FC-A87B-6044C6044860

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.15218692

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/F94187BB-0424-FF96-559E-F8EEFB501299

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Acrosathe Irwin & Lyneborg
status

 

Acrosathe Irwin & Lyneborg View in CoL

Acrosathe View in CoL is a Holarctic and Oriental genus ( Webb 2009). Males usually are covered in silver-white hairs, at least on the abdomen. Many species live on coastal sand dunes but others inhabit mountains and are often found on lake beaches and other sandy habitats near water. Webb (2009) gives keys to the males and females of the North American species.

Acrosathe otiosa (Coquillett) View in CoL is the only species of the genus previously recorded from British Columbia and Canada ( Webb et al. 2013). All specimens of Acrosathe View in CoL from British Columbia that we have examined key to A. vialis View in CoL , based on wing colour and most male genitalic characters. This even includes some specimens identified as A. otiosa View in CoL by D.W. Webb, the revisor of the genus and author of the species identification key ( Webb 2009). In one case, specimens collected at the same place, on the same date, by the same collector were identified as both A. otiosa View in CoL and A. vialis View in CoL ; males as the former, females as the latter. Acrosathe otiosa View in CoL and A. vialis View in CoL are very similar morphologically and distinguishing them is problematic as some of the diagnostic characters are somewhat variable. For the purposes of this study, we include A. vialis View in CoL as a British Columbia species but also accept A. otiosa View in CoL because of the identifications of unexamined specimens in databases and the literature. This study is not a revisionary systematic work; we expect future work on the genus will clarify this taxonomic confuseion.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Diptera

Family

Therevidae

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