Published September 29, 2016 | Version v1
Journal article Open

The Mesozoic Family Eremochaetidae (Diptera: Brachycera) in Burmese amber and Relationships of Archisargoidea: Brachycera in Cretaceous Amber, Part VIII

Description

Grimaldi, David A., Barden, Phillip (2016): The Mesozoic Family Eremochaetidae (Diptera: Brachycera) in Burmese amber and Relationships of Archisargoidea: Brachycera in Cretaceous Amber, Part VIII. American Museum Novitates 2016 (3865): 1-32, DOI: 10.1206/3865.1, URL: http://www.bioone.org/doi/10.1206/3865.1

Files

source.pdf

Files (697.3 kB)

Name Size Download all
md5:546cc2217ba02f5f4173092cceb910ef
697.3 kB Preview Download

Linked records

Additional details

Identifiers

References

  • Grimaldi, D., and J. Cumming. 1999. Brachyceran Diptera in Cretaceous ambers and Mesozoic diversification of the Eremoneura. Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History 239: 1-124.
  • Grimaldi, D., M.S. Engel, and P. Nascimbene. 2002. Fossiliferous Cretaceous amber from Myanmar (Burma): its rediscovery, biotic diversity, and paleontological significance. American Museum Novitates 3361: 1-72.
  • Grimaldi, D., A. Arillo, J. Cumming, and M. Hauser. 2011. Brachyceran Diptera (Insecta) in Cretaceous ambers, part IV: significant new orthorrhaphous taxa. In M.S. Engel (editor), Contributions celebrating Kumar Krishna. Zookeys 148: 293-332.
  • Hennig, W. 1973. Ordnung Diptera (Zweiflugler). Handbuch der Zoologie 4 (2): 2/31 (Leif 20) 1-337. Berlin: W. de Gruyter.
  • Hong, Y.-C. 1983. Middle Jurassic insects in North China. Beijing: Geological Publishing House.
  • Kovalev, V. G. 1986. [Infraorders Bibionomorpha and Asilomorpha]. In Insects in the Early Cretaceous ecosystems of western Mongolia (Studies in the Soviet-Mongolian Paleontological Expeditions 28): 125-154. Moscow: Nauka Press.
  • Kovalev, V.G. 1989. Bremochaetidae [sic: Eremochaetidae], the Mesozoic family of brachycerous dipterans. Paleontological Journal 23: 100-105.
  • McAlpine, D.K. 2002. Some examples of reduced segmentation of the arista in Diptera-Cyclorrhapha, and some phylogenetic implications. Studia Dipterologica 9: 3-19.
  • Mostovski, M.B. 1996a. New species of the genus Mesosolva Hong, 1983 (Diptera, Archisargidae) from the Jurassic of Kazakhstan and Mongolia. Museum of Northern Arizona Bulletin 60: 329-332.
  • Mostovski, M.B. 1996b. To the knowledge of Archisargoidea (Diptera, Brachycera). Families Eremochaetidae and Archisargidae. Russian Entomological Journal 5: 117-124.
  • Mostovski, M.B. 1997. On knowledge of fossil flies of the superfamily Archisargoidea (Diptera, Brachycera). Paleontological Journal 31: 72-78.
  • Nagatomi, A., and D. Yang. 1998. A review of extinct Mesozoic genera and families of Brachycera (Insecta, Diptera, Orthorrhapha). Entomologist's Monthly Magazine 134: 95-192.
  • Nartshuk, E.P. 1996. A new fossil acrocerid fly from the Jurassic beds of Kazakhstan (Diptera: Acroceridae). Zoosystematica Rossica 4: 313-315.
  • Oberprieler, S.K., and D.K. Yeates. 2012. Calosargus talbragarensis new species: the first brachyceran fly from the Jurassic of Australia (Diptera, Archisargidae). Journal of Paleontology 86: 641-645.
  • Ren, D. 1998. Late Jurassic Brachycera from northeastern China (Insecta: Diptera). Acta Zootaxonomica Sinica 23: 65-83.
  • Ren, D., and Z. Guo. 1995. A new genus and two new species of short-horned flies of Upper Jurassic from northeast China (Diptera: Eremochaetidae). Insect Science 2: 300-307.
  • Rohdendorf, B.B. 1938. Mesozoic Diptera from Karatau. I. Brachycera and assorted Nematocera. Trudy Paleontologicheskogo Instituta (Akademii Nauk SSSR) 7: 29-67. [in Russian]
  • Ross, A.J., C. Mellish, P. York, and B. Crighton. 2010. Burmese amber. In D. Penney (editor), Biodiversity of fossils in amber from the major world deposits: 208-235. Manchester: Siri Scientific Press.
  • Shi, G., et al. 2012. Age constraint on Burmese amber based on U-Pb dating of zircons. Cretaceous Research 37: 155-163.
  • Stuckenberg, B.R. 1996. A revised generic classification of the wormlion flies of Southern Africa previously placed in Lampromyia Macquart, with reinstatement of Leptynoma Westwood 1876, and descriptions of a new subgenus and two new species (Diptera, Vermileonidae). Annals of the Natal Museum 37: 239-266.
  • Stuckenberg, B.R. 1999. Antennal evolution in the Brachycera (Diptera), with a reassessment of terminology relating to the flagellum. Studia Dipterologica 6: 33-48.
  • Sun, T.T., et al. 2015. Burmese amber from Hti Lin. 34th International Gemmological Conference IGC, Vilnius, Lithuania: 26-29. Online resource (http://www.igc-gemmology.org/igc-2015/4590671472).
  • Ussatchov, D.A. 1968. New Jurassic Asilomorpha (Diptera) in Karatau. Entomologiske Obozrenie 47: 617-628. [in Russian].
  • Wiegmann, B.M., et al. 2011. Episodic radiations in the fly tree of life. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 108 (14): 5690-5695.
  • Zhang, J.-F. 2010a. New species of Palaeobolbomyia Kovalev and Ussatchovia Kovalev (Diptera, Brachycera, Rhagionidae) from the Callovian-Oxfordian (Jurassic) Daohugou biota of China: Biostratigraphic and paleoecologic implications. Geobios 43: 663-669.
  • Zhang, J.-F. 2010b. Records of bizarre Jurassic brachycerans in the Daohugou biota, China (Diptera, Brachycera, Archisargidae and Rhagionemestriidae). Palaeontolog y 53: 307-317.
  • Zhang, J.-F. 2011. Three distinct but rare kovalevisargid flies from the Jurassic Daohugou biota, China (Insecta, Diptera, Brachycera, Kovalevisargidae). Palaeontology 54: 163-170.
  • Zhang, J.-F. 2012a. Distinct but rare archisargid flies from Jurassic of China (Diptera, Brachycera, Archisargidae) with discussion of the systematic position of Origoasilus pingquanensis Zhang et al., 2011. Journal of Paleontology 86: 878-885.
  • Zhang, J.-F. 2012b. Orientisargidae fam. n., a new Jurassic family of Archisargoidea (Diptera, Brachycera), with review of Archisargidae from China. ZooKeys 238: 57-76.
  • Zhang, J.-F. 2014a. Archisargoid flies (Diptera, Brachycera, Archisargidae and Kovalevisargidae) from the Jurassic Daohugou biota of China, and the related biostratigraphical correlation and geological age. Journal of Systematic Palaeontology. [doi: 10.1080/14772019.2014.960902]
  • Zhang, J.-F. 2014b. New male eremochaetid flies (Diptera, Brachycera, Eremochaetidae) from the Lower Cretaceous of China. Cretaceous Research 49: 205-213.