Thereva aurofasciata Kröber, 1912

Gibson, Joel F. & Cannings, Robert A., 2025, The Stiletto Flies (Diptera: Therevidae) of British Columbia, Yukon, and Alaska, Zootaxa 5618 (4), pp. 481-508 : 496

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.15296776

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/F94187BB-042E-FF9F-559E-FC0AFAB81421

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Thereva aurofasciata Kröber
status

 

Thereva aurofasciata Kröber View in CoL

Thereva nigripilosa Cole , described from Victoria, British Columbia, is a synonym (Holston & Irwin 2013).

Specimens examined (33). BC: Alexandria; Arrow Lakes, Burton; Hope, Hunter Creek; Kamloops; Kamloops, Mount Lolo; Kilpoola Lake; Lac du Bois; Okanagan Falls, White Lake; Osoyoos; Osoyoos, Mt. Kobau ( Fig. 17 View FIGURES 14–19 ); Penticton, West Bench; Robson; Saanich, Rithet’s Bog; Spaist Mountain, Pimainus Lakes; Vernon, Becker Lake; Vernon, Cosen’s Bay. RBCM.

Database and literature records (33). BC: Aspen Grove; Christina Lake ; Cranbrook; Fernie, Kamloops, Lac la Hache; Manning Park, Blackwall Peak; Oliver; Pass Creek; Robson; Trinity Valley; Victoria; Victoria, Gordon Head. YT: Snafu Creek, Whitehorse. CASC, CNCI, MEI, OSUC, SEM.

Conservation status. BC: S4, YT: SU

Distributional notes. Thereva aurofasciata is relatively common across southern British Columbia, from Vancouver Island (Victoria) east to the Okanagan (Oliver, Vernon) and the East Kootenay (Cranbrook, Fernie), north to the Thompson Valley (Kamloops) and Cariboo (Lac la Hache). The species is probably more widespread in northern areas of the province because it is recorded from the southern Yukon (Whitehorse, Snafu Creek).

Ecoprovinces and other designations. BC: Georgia Depression, Southern Interior, Southern Interior Mountains, Central Interior. YT: Boreal Cordillera.

Range. Cordilleran. Yukon south through British Columbia and Alberta to California, Arizona, and New Mexico ( Webb et al. 2013).

Biological notes. Flight period:15 May–18August.The species has been collected in Artemisia / Pseudoroegneria grassland; open Pinus ponderosa / Pseudotsuga menziesii / Populus tremuloides woodland; an aspen draw in Pinus ponderosa woodland; and a fen with grasses, sedges, Salix , and Spiraea . Sites range from lowland habitats to subalpine meadows ( Fig. 17 View FIGURES 14–19 ). Holston & Irwin (2005) give typical locations as “forest and steppe habitats”.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Diptera

Family

Therevidae

Genus

Thereva

Loc

Thereva aurofasciata Kröber

Gibson, Joel F. & Cannings, Robert A. 2025
2025
Loc

Thereva nigripilosa

Cole 1923
1923
GBIF Dataset (for parent article) Darwin Core Archive (for parent article) View in SIBiLS Plain XML RDF