Nothomicrodon Explained
Nothomicrodon aztecarum is a species of Neotropical flies, originally described from a larva collected in 1924 from a carton nest of the ant Azteca trigona. It is the only species in the genus Nothomicrodon, but shows none of the features of a hoverfly larva, the family in which it was originally classified,[1] and instead belongs in the family Phoridae.[2]
Notes and References
- Xin-Yue Cheng & F. Christian Thompson . 2008 . A generic conspectus of the Microdontinae (Diptera: Syrphidae) with the description of two new genera from Africa and China . . 1879 . 21–48 . 10.11646/zootaxa.1879.1.3 .
- Gabriela Pérez-Lachaud, Benoit J. B. Jahyny, Gunilla Ståhls, Graham Rotheray, Jacques H. C. Delabie & Jean-Paul Lachaud (2017) Rediscovery and reclassification of the dipteran taxon Nothomicrodon Wheeler, an exclusive endoparasitoid of gyne ant larvae. Scientific Reports 7: 45530 doi:10.1038/srep45530