Introduction to the Robber Flies (Asilidae)
of British Columbia
(photo)
by
Robert A. Cannings
Royal British Columbia Museum
The robber fly family (Diptera: Asilidae) contains over 7000 described species worldwide (Geller-Grimm 2012). Robber flies are predators that as adults pursue other insects (usually flying ones), seize them, and kill them with paralyzing saliva injected through the hypopharynx (tongue). The liquified contents of the prey are then sucked up through the proboscis (Whitfield 1925, Wood 1981). The morphology of the adult fly, especially the prominent eyes, the mouthparts, and the raptorial legs, reflects this mode of prey capture and feeding. Robber flies usually hunt in open areas where there is plenty of light, and are most active in the warmest parts of the day. Overcast skies greatly curtail their activity. Different genera, and often different species within a genus, have different hunting behaviour and preferences for perching sites.
In British Columbia, the general appearance of robber flies ranges from the stout, densely hairy bumble bee mimics in the genus Laphria to the strikingly slender and almost naked Leptogaster species. The largest asilids in the province are also our largest Diptera – species of Proctacanthus, which can be 40 mm long; the smallest is Stichopogon fragilis at 3mm long.
There is usually little obvious difference between the sexes, except for the genitalia, although females tend to be larger than males and often have broader abdomens. Colour patterns sometimes differ between males and females. In Lasiopogon these differences are minor; often the tomentum on the abdomen is more extensive (but less dense) in the female. In some genera, however, differences are marked. In some species of Cyrtopogon, for example, the males have prominent, dark marks on the wings. Other secondary sexual characteristics occur in males, such as the expanded silver abdominal apex in Nicocles, the striking white abdomens of Efferia, and the tarsal ornamentation of some Cyrtopogon species.
Records of prey taken by Asilidae indicate that they are mostly opportunistic predators, feeding upon any insect that they can subdue and kill. However, some species show a strong preference for prey from one or two insect orders (Wood 1981). In many instances this may simply reflect the availability of prey in the habitat where the particular robber fly lives. Lasiopogon is known to attack several orders of insects, but is most commonly found with Diptera as prey (Melin 1923, Poulton 1906, Hobby 1931, Lavigne and Holland 1969, Lavigne 1972, Weinberg 1978).
Detailed life-history studies of robber flies are rare. Melin (1923), studying Asilidae in Sweden, showed that in northern species, at least, the larva is the overwintering stage and the pupal stage lasts two to six weeks. He estimated that the life cycle of Laphria species was at least three years and that of Lasiopogon cinctus (Fab.) was at least two. It is likely that larval growth is faster in warmer regions and many species probably live only one year (Theodor 1980).
Larvae are predators of the eggs, larvae and pupae of other insects in the soil or in rotting wood, although in a few species studied the immature larvae, especially, are ectoparasitic on their hosts (Wood 1981). Knutson (1972) has reviewed the literature on this subject.
The world genera of Asilidae were treated by Hull (1962) and the North American genera were keyed by Wood (1981). Engel (1930) is long out of date but is the only publication that has dealt with the entire family at the species level in the Palaearctic, although Lehr has produced a significant body of systematic and ecological publications for various groups of the Palaearctic fauna (e.g. Lehr 1962, 1984a&b, 1996). Majer (1997) keyed the European genera. The Palaearctic species are listed in Lehr (1988). Various publications examined parts of the Holarctic fauna from a regional geographic perspective, e.g., Hine (1909), Bromley (1934, 1946), James (1941), Adisoemarto (1967), Cole (1969), Oldroyd (1969b, 1970a), Baker and Fischer (1975), Nelson (1987), Weinberg and Bächli (1995) or a taxonomic one, e.g., Wilcox and Martin (1936), Cole and Wilcox (1938), Wilcox (1966), Adisoemarto and Wood (1975), Martin (1975), Fisher (1977), Lehr (1984a), Cannings (2002). Wood (1981) gave a summary of the morphology, biology and classification of the North American genera. Martin and Wilcox (1965) listed the North American species known at that time; a more recent list is Fisher and Wilcox (1997). Fisher (2009) documented the Central American fauna. Oldroyd (1970b, 1974) and Londt (e.g. 1985, 1994) have treated parts of the Afrotropical fauna. The latest phylogeny of the family, based on both molecular and morphological characters, was published by Dikow (2009), although the resulting classification is not comprehensive. Lavigne (1999) and Lavigne et al. (1978) have produced bibliographies for asilid literature subsequent to Hull's (1962) review and Geller-Grimm (2012) has compiled a comprehensive bibliography on the internet.
Biogeography of BC Asilidae
The majority of the 116 species of Asilidae known from British Columbia are restricted to North America; three (Laphria gilva, Lasiopogon hinei and Rhadiurgus variabilis) also occur in Eurasia. Species may be grouped with others that share similar distributions to form what can be termed faunal elements:
One species, Lasiopogon prima, is East Beringian. It is confined to the extreme northwest in the New World, presumably having lived in the Beringian glacial refugium during the Pleistocene ice ages; it does not occur west of the Bering Strait. Lasiopogon hinei is Palaearctic-East Beringian, with an East Beringian distribution in in North America (Alaska, Yukon and adjacent areas), but with a widespread range across Eurasia.
Ten species are Boreal; they occur in the northern spruce forests, across the boreal zone from treeline to the southern margin. In general, these species range from the Atlantic Provinces across the northern New England states, Quebec, northern Ontario, parts of the northern tier of mid-western states, the Prairie Provinces north of the Great Plains, and northern British Columbia, often ranging considerably southward in the higher mountains and plateaus of the western Cordillera. Seven of these species are in the genus Laphria.
More than half (60) of the BC species are Cordilleran. They live in the mountains and plateaus of western North America, mainly in coniferous forests. Dominant genera in this group are Cyrtopogon (17 species), Laphria (14 species), Eucyrtopogon (7 species). Three additional species have similar habitat preferences but are restricted to the Coast Mountains.
Intermontane species are largely confined to grasslands, shrub-steppes and adjacent open woodlands in the valleys and plateaus of the Cordillera. Twenty-two species are represented, six of them in Efferia. Another grassland species, Lasiopogon quadrivittatus, is the sole Great Plains species in the province, restricted to the northeastern corner east of the Rockies.
Ten species from a wide variety of genera, are Pacific Coastal, inhabiting forests, meadows and beaches of the Pacific coastal lowlands. Species confined to west of the 100th meridian but otherwise ranging widely in North America are termed Western; four of these occur. Another four, the Austral species, range across the continent mostly south of the boreal forests, and with most of their range in the United States.
References
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Adisoemarto, S. and D.M. Wood. 1975. The Nearctic species of Dioctria and six related genera (Diptera: Asilidae). Quaestiones entomologicae 11: 505-576.
Baker, N.T. and R.L. Fischer. 1975. A taxonomic and ecologic study of the Asilidae of Michigan. Great Lakes Entomologist 8: 31-91.
Bromley, S.W. 1934. The robber flies of Texas (Diptera: Asilidae). Annals of the Entomological Society of America 27: 74-113.
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Author, date, page title. In: Klinkenberg, Brian. (Editor) 2023. E-Fauna BC: Electronic Atlas of the Fauna of British Columbia [www.efauna.bc.ca]. Department of Geography, University of British Columbia, Vancouver. [Date Accessed]
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