Horse flies, family Tabanidae, are the most diverse family-level clade of bloodsucking insects, but their phylogeny has never been thoroughly explored using molecular data. Most adult female Tabanidae feed on nectar and on the blood of various mammals. Traditional horse fly classification tends towards large heterogeneous taxa, which impede much-needed taxonomic work. To guide renewed efforts in the systematics of horse flies and their relatives, we assembled a dataset of 110 exemplar species using nucleotide data from four genes—mitochondrial CO1, and nuclear 28S, CAD and AATS. All commonly recognized tribes in Tabanidae are represented, along with outgroups in Tabanomorpha. The phylogeny is reconstructed using Bayesian inference, and dive...
The genus Stomoxys Geoffroy (Diptera; Muscidae) contains species of parasitic flies that are of medi...
Tabanidae suck the blood of humans and animals, are important biological vectors for the transmissio...
Early diverging brachyceran fly lineages underwent a rapid radiation approximately 180 million years...
Horse flies, family Tabanidae, are the most diverse family-level clade of bloodsucking insects, but ...
Horse flies, family Tabanidae, are the most diverse family-level clade of bloodsucking insects, but ...
Horse flies, family Tabanidae, are the most diverse family-level clade of bloodsucking insects, but ...
Bombyliidae is a very species-rich and widespread family of parasitoid flies with more than 250 gene...
Phylogenetic relationships within the Tabanidae are largely unknown, despite their considerable medi...
Phylogenetic relationships within the Tabanidae are largely unknown, despite their considerable medi...
The hairy-eyed horse fly tribe Scionini comprises over 280 species and are austral in distribution, ...
Popularly known as horse flies or deer flies, Tabanidae, has 4.400 described species distributed wor...
Blood-feeding female horse flies (Diptera: Tabanidae: Tabanus) are pests of livestock and man worldw...
The genus Stomoxys Geoffroy (Diptera; Muscidae) contains species of parasitic flies that are of medi...
The genus Stomoxys Geoffroy (Diptera; Muscidae) contains species of parasitic flies that are of medi...
Bombyliidae is a very species-rich and widespread family of parasitoid flies with more than 250 gene...
The genus Stomoxys Geoffroy (Diptera; Muscidae) contains species of parasitic flies that are of medi...
Tabanidae suck the blood of humans and animals, are important biological vectors for the transmissio...
Early diverging brachyceran fly lineages underwent a rapid radiation approximately 180 million years...
Horse flies, family Tabanidae, are the most diverse family-level clade of bloodsucking insects, but ...
Horse flies, family Tabanidae, are the most diverse family-level clade of bloodsucking insects, but ...
Horse flies, family Tabanidae, are the most diverse family-level clade of bloodsucking insects, but ...
Bombyliidae is a very species-rich and widespread family of parasitoid flies with more than 250 gene...
Phylogenetic relationships within the Tabanidae are largely unknown, despite their considerable medi...
Phylogenetic relationships within the Tabanidae are largely unknown, despite their considerable medi...
The hairy-eyed horse fly tribe Scionini comprises over 280 species and are austral in distribution, ...
Popularly known as horse flies or deer flies, Tabanidae, has 4.400 described species distributed wor...
Blood-feeding female horse flies (Diptera: Tabanidae: Tabanus) are pests of livestock and man worldw...
The genus Stomoxys Geoffroy (Diptera; Muscidae) contains species of parasitic flies that are of medi...
The genus Stomoxys Geoffroy (Diptera; Muscidae) contains species of parasitic flies that are of medi...
Bombyliidae is a very species-rich and widespread family of parasitoid flies with more than 250 gene...
The genus Stomoxys Geoffroy (Diptera; Muscidae) contains species of parasitic flies that are of medi...
Tabanidae suck the blood of humans and animals, are important biological vectors for the transmissio...
Early diverging brachyceran fly lineages underwent a rapid radiation approximately 180 million years...