Rhamphomyia (Holoclera) culicina (Fallén)
Empis culicina Fallén, 1816: 28 . Type-localities: “ Scania et Ostrogothia ” [= Skåne and Östergötland] (Sweden).
Material examined. RUSSIA. Amurskaya Prov.: Klimoutsy, 40 km W of Svobodny, 25.viii.1958, Zinovjev (1 ♀) ; 52 km N of Zeya, 25.vii.1982, Zlobin (1 ♂, 1 ♀) . Arkhangelskaya Prov.: Arkhangelsk, Yuras River, 64.52N 40.7E, 5.viii.2011, D. Gavryushin (2 ♂, ZMMU) . Bashkiria Rep.: Beloretsk, 6.viii.1973, KBG (2 ♂) . Irkutskaya Prov.: Ust-Kut, 2.ix.1988, KBG (2 ♀) . Khanty-Mansi AO: Khanty-Mansiysk, 28.viii.1976, KBG (1 ♂) . Komi Rep.: Syktyvkar, 1.viii.1976, KBG (1 ♀) ; Gavrilovo, 40 km NNW of Syktyvkar, 31.vii.1976, KBG (3 ♂) ; Ukhta — 3.viii.1976 (1 ♀) , 2.viii.1985, KBG (2 ♂) . Krasnoyarskiy Terr.: Krasnoyarsk env., Stolby Nature Reserve, 600 m, 31.viii.1973, KBG (12 ♂, 7 ♀) . Leningradskaya Prov.: Luga, 13–24.viii.1953, AAS (15 ♂, 2 ♀) . Magadanskaya Prov.: Evensk, 12.ix.1984, KBG (1 ♂, 1 ♀) . Murmanskaya Prov.: Umba, 13.viii.1995, KBG (3 ♂) ; Kandalaksha — 7.viii.1995 (1 ♂) , 4–5.ix.1984 (1 ♂), KBG. Novosibirskaya Prov.: Novosibirsk, Akademgorodok, 3.viii.–2.ix.2007, leg. O. Kosterin (1 ♂, ZMMU) . Omskaya Prov.: Tara, 31.viii.1985, KBG (1 ♂, 1 ♀) ; railway station Syropyatskoe, 32 km E Omsk, 27.viii.1985, KBG (2 ♂) . Orenburgskaya Prov.: Buzulukskiy Bor National Park, 23–27.viii.2004, V. Krivokhatsky, O. Ovchinnikova (1 ♀) . St. Petersburg: Kolomyagi, 6.viii.1921, AAS (2 ♂) . Sverdlovskaya Prov.: env. Koltsovo, Ekaterinburg, 24.vii.1977, KBG (1 ♂) . Tyumenskaya Prov.: Tyumen’, Roschino, 30.viii.– 7.ix.1976, KBG (5 ♀) . Yakutia — Sakha Rep.: Aldan, 29,30. viii.1974, KBG (3 ♂, 5 ♀) ; Tommot, 31.viii.1974, KBG (1 ♀) ; Lensk, 14.9.1987, KBG (1 ♂) .
Distribution. Austria, Bulgaria, Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, France, Germany, Great Britain, Ireland, Norway, Poland, Russia (north-west and centre of European part, East Siberia, Far East), Sweden, Switzerland.
Remarks. Rhamphomyia (H.) culicina (R. (H.) flava group) is the only species of R. ( Holoclera) with trans-Palaearctic distribution, extending to the east as far as Magadanskaya Province of Russia.