Safaria

Safaria
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Insecta
Order: Diptera
Family: Sphaeroceridae
Subfamily: Sphaerocerinae
Genus: Safaria
Richards, 1950[1]
Type species
Safaria forcipata
Richards, 1950[1]

Safaria is a genus of flies belonging to the family of the Lesser Dung flies.[2]

Species

  • S. abyssinica Richards, 1951[3]
  • S. brachyptera Richards, 1966[4]
  • S. chelata Richards, 1950[1]
  • S. cornuta (Duda, 1926)[5]
  • S. forcipata Richards, 1950[1]
  • S. kistneri Richards, 1968[6]
  • S. liberiensis Richards, 1968[6]
  • S. saegeri (Vanschuytbroeck, 1959)[7]

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 Richards, O. W. (1950). "New species of Sphaeroceridae (Diptera) found with driver ants (Dorylinae) by S. Patrizi and F. Meneghetti". Bollettino dellí Istituto di Entomologia della Università degli Studi di Bologna. 18: 14–23.
  2. Rohček, Jindřich; Marshall, Stephen A.; Norrbom, Allen L.; Buck, Matthias; Quiros, Dora Isabel; Smith, Ian (2001). Rohček, Jindřich, ed. World Catalog of Sphaeroceridae (Diptera). Opava: Slezské Zemské Muzeum. pp. 1–414. ISBN 978-8086224213. Retrieved 3 September 2017.
  3. Richards, O. W. (1951). "New species of the genus "Safaria" Richards and of "Sphaerocera" Latreille (Dipt. Sphaeroceridae)". Bollettino dellí Istituto di Entomologia della Universiti degli Studi di Bologna. 18: 268–271.
  4. Richards, O. W. (1966). "New Sphaeroceridae (Diptera) from the Kivu district, with a revision of the genus Aluligera Richards". Revue de Zoologie et de Botanique Africaines. 73: 201–254.
  5. Duda, Oswald (1926). "Sphaerocera cornuta ♀, eine neue Borboride (Diptera) aus Centralafrika". Deutsche entomologische Zeitschrift. 1925: 381–384.
  6. 1 2 Richards, O. W. (1968a). "Sphaerocerid flies associated with doryline ants, collected by Dr. D. H. Kistner". Transactions of the Royal Entomological Society of London. 120: 183–198.
  7. Vanschuytbroeck, P. (1959). "Sphaerocerinae, Limosinae, Ceropterinae (Diptera, Ephydroidea)". Parc National de la Garamba, Mission H. de Saeger (1949-52), Bruxelles. 17 (2): 15–85.
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