Pegesimallus | |
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Pegesimallus sp. | |
Scientific classification | |
Kingdom: | Animalia |
Phylum: | Arthropoda |
Class: | Insecta |
Order: | Diptera |
Family: | Asilidae |
Subfamily: | Dasypogoninae |
Tribe: | Megapodini |
Genus: | Pegesimallus |
Species | |
see text |
see text
Pegesimallus is a genus of robber flies.
Africa and Eurasia.
These species spend much of their time perched in the shade on shrubs or grass, where they lie in wait for flying insects. Their prey includes a wide variety of arthropods; Hymenoptera and Diptera predominate. Females oviposit in the surface layer of the soil.
Female with fly prey
Mating pair; female with wasp prey
Mating pair
The classification of the species in this genus is difficult for two main reasons: Firstly, many are sexually dimorphic to the extent that females and males of the same species were, for some time, placed in different genera; and secondly, some of the species are so similar that they can only be separated by considering details of the male genitalia.
The genus has been placed in the tribe Megapodini of the subfamily Dasypogoninae. It contains about 54 species, including the following: