TABANIDAE, Latreille, 1802
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.1206/0003-0090-408.1.1 |
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https://treatment.plazi.org/id/CF1987FE-E942-ED73-4164-FA5CC88E72BA |
treatment provided by |
Carolina |
scientific name |
TABANIDAE |
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FAMILY TABANIDAE View in CoL View at ENA
Females of most species of tabanids are hematophagous with notoriously painful or irritating “bites,” wherein skin is punctured with knifelike serrated mandibles. Some species, such as the longproboscid pangoniines, feed on flower nectar and pollen. The species-level taxonomy of tabanids is quite advanced, no doubt due to their conspicuous habits, medical significance, and their large, robust size. There are approximately 4450 species. The family is unquestionably monophyletic.
The traditional subfamily and tribal classification of Tabanidae (e.g., Mackerras, 1954, 1955) has been challenged recently by the molecular study of Morita et al. (2016), which was based on four genes (one mitochondrial, three nuclear). Pangoniinae , long thought to be the basalmost tabanids, appears to be a monophyletic sister group to all other tabanids ( Morita et al., 2016). Pangoniines plesiomorphically have eight free flagellomeres (vs. four, the others being fused), and an undivided ninth tergite in both sexes; the subfamily apomorphically has bifid gonostyli.
Tabanidae View in CoL have a significant fossil record. Evenhuis (1994) listed seven Tertiary genera (all extant) with 14 species (several of these nomina nuda). It was not until 1994 that the first definitive Cretaceous tabanid was described, Cratotabanus stenomyomorphus (Martins-Neto and Kucera-Santos, 1994) View in CoL . Since then five additional Cretaceous species have been described: Eopangonius pletus Ren ( Ren, 1998a) View in CoL (Early Cretaceous: Yixian Formation, China), Baissomyia redita Mostovski et al. (2003) View in CoL (Early Cretaceous: Zaza Formation, Russia) (placement uncertain); Eotabanoid lordi Mostovski et al. (2003) View in CoL (Early Cretaceous: Purbeck Group, England), Cratotabanus newjerseyensis Grimaldi ( Grimaldi et al., 2011) (Late Cretaceous: Raritan Formation, New Jersey), Laiyangitabanus formosus View in CoL J.-F. Zhang (2012) (Early Cretaceous: Laiyang Formation, China). Palaeopangonius eupterus Ren ( Ren, 1998a) View in CoL was transferred to Athericidae View in CoL ( Zhang, 2012; herein, above), but the position of this genus is ambiguous (above). The great majority of tabanid fossils are compressions, although two of the three Cretaceous species of Cratotabanus View in CoL occur in amber, C. newjerseyensis and C. asiaticus View in CoL , n. sp. (below). There are at least six described tabanid species in Tertiary amber (all in living genera or tribes), from the Miocene from the Dominican Republic and Mexico and Eocene of Baltic region (Evenhuis, 1994; Trojan, 2002; Strelow et al., 2013). I have seen several additional (undescribed) species in Tertiary ambers.
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Class |
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Family |
TABANIDAE
Grimaldi, David A. 2016 |
C. asiaticus
Grimaldi 2016 |
Laiyangitabanus formosus
Zhang 2012 |
Baissomyia redita
Mostovski 2003 |
Eotabanoid lordi
Mostovski 2003 |
Eopangonius pletus Ren ( Ren, 1998a )
Ren (Ren 1998 |
eupterus Ren ( Ren, 1998a )
Ren (Ren 1998 |
Tabanidae
Latreille 1802 |