Banner Image

Ferruginous Bee-Grabber Lat. “Sicus ferrugineus“
species of family “Thick-headed Flies“
1 species

Sicus ferrugineus is a species of fly from the genus Sicus in the family Conopidae….

Distribution and habitat

This species is common throughout much of Europe. These conopids mainly inhabit hedgerows and flower meadows.

Description

The adults grow up to 8–13 millimetres (0.31–0.51 in) long. The body is mainly reddish-brown or yellow-brown. The head is yellow, quite large and inflated-looking, with a kind of bubble at the front and narrow cheeks. The short antennae are brown, their second segment has the same length or it is longer than the third. The large eyes are reddish. The legs and also the last abdomen segments are often darkened. The abdomen is long, round in cross-section, the seventh segment is oblong and conical. When in resting position the abdomen is usually folded forward. In the females theca is hardly distinguishable. The wings are transparent, but reddish-yellow colored at the base.

Biology

They can be encountered from May through September, feeding on nectar or pollen of various Asteraceae species (Hieracium pilosella, Thistle, Cirsium species, etc.), Apiaceae species (Parsley Petroselinum sp, . Heracleum sphondylium), Onagraceae (Chamerion angustifolium), Lamiaceae (Teucrium scorodonia) and Rosaceae species (Blackberries, Rubus fruticosus sp.). Their larvae are endoparasites of bumble bees of the genus Bombus (B. lapidarius, B. terrestris , B. hortorum, B. pascuorum, etc.). They pupate and overwinter in their victims.

Bibliography

Joachim & Hiroko Haupt: Fliegen und Mücken: Beobachtung, Lebensweise. Naturbuch-Verlag, Augsburg 1998, ISBN 3-89440-278-4. Kurt Kormann: Schwebfliegen und Blasenkopffliegen Mitteleuropas. Fauna Verlag, Nottuln 2003, ISBN 3-935980-29-9. Marion Kotrba The internal female reproductive tract of Sicus ferrugineus (Linnaeus, 1761) (Diptera, Conopidae)

Insektenbox Nature Wonders

Ferruginous Bee-Grabber – No. 1 Ferruginous Bee-Grabber – No. 2 Ferruginous Bee-Grabber – No. 3 Ferruginous Bee-Grabber – No. 4 Ferruginous Bee-Grabber – No. 5

Ancestry Graph

%%{ init: { 'theme': 'base', 'themeVariables': { 'primaryColor': '#83a09c', 'primaryTextColor': '#212d2b', 'primaryBorderColor': '#fff', 'lineColor': '#fff', 'secondaryColor': '#006100', 'tertiaryColor': '#fff' } } }%% flowchart LR classDef active fill:#fff arthropods("phylum: Arthropods"):::active arthropods-->insects("class: Insects"):::active insects-->brachyceran-flies("suborder: Brachyceran Flies"):::active brachyceran-flies-->thick-headed-flies("family: Thick-headed Flies"):::active thick-headed-flies==>ferruginous-bee-grabber(["species: Ferruginous Bee-Grabber"]):::active click ferruginous-bee-grabber href "/en/catalogue/arthropods/insects/brachyceran-flies/thick-headed-flies/ferruginous-bee-grabber/" click arthropods href "/en/catalogue/arthropods/" click insects href "/en/catalogue/arthropods/insects/" click brachyceran-flies href "/en/catalogue/arthropods/insects/brachyceran-flies/" click thick-headed-flies href "/en/catalogue/arthropods/insects/brachyceran-flies/thick-headed-flies/"

Further Information

Copyright

Wikipedia

This article uses material from the Wikipedia article Sicus ferrugineus the free encyclopedia Wikipedia which is released under Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License). On Wikipedia a list of authors is available.