Gastroxides ater is a species of horsefly found in India. The larvae live in humus, tree-holes etc. and feed on organisms in the moist debris. The pupae take six days and the adults emerge mainly in June and July. The male has a reddish yellow band on the abdomen. They complete only one life-cycle a year and the larvae grow very slowly and undergo a diapause in the dry season.[1][2]

Gastroxides ater
Male
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Insecta
Order: Diptera
Family: Tabanidae
Genus: Gastroxides
Species:
G. ater
Binomial name
Gastroxides ater
Saunders, 1842
The female lacks the band on the abdomen

Saunders created the genus Gastroxides on the basis of this species. His type specimen came from "northern India" and was a female with completely black abdomen (ater referring in Latin to black) and a few years later he saw a male in the collections of Colonel Hearsey with a "rufous" band. He described the genus as having three ocelli on the vertex of the head and also separated it from the genus Tabanus based on relative sizes of the three segments of the ringed antenna and the shape of the abdomen.[3]

References

edit
  1. ^ Saunders, W.W. (1847). "Description of the male of Gastroxides ater, a dipterous insect belonging to the family Tabanidae". Transactions of the Entomological Society of London. 4: 233.
  2. ^ Isaac, P.V. (1925). "Papers on Indian Tabanidae, VIII. The Bionomics and Life-histories of some of the Common Tabanidae of Pusa". Memoirs of the Department of Agriculture in India. 9 (2): 21–28.
  3. ^ Saunders, W.W. (1842). "Descriptions of four new Dipterous Insects from central and northern India". Transactions of the Entomological Society of London. 3: 59–61.