Acemyini is a small but cosmopolitan tribe of flies in the family Tachinidae.[2][3] Like all tachinid flies, acemyiines are parasitoids of other invertebrates. Specifically, the acemyiines are parasitoids of Orthoptera in the families Acrididae and Eumastacidae.[4]
Identification
The Acemyiini have a distinctive pattern of scutellar bristling among the Tachinidae, comprising three pairs of very strong setae; one pair of crossed apical setae, a diverging subapical pair set unusually far forwards, and a basal pair which may be approximately parallel or converging. Most species have a long series of proclinate orbital setae in both sexes. The basal node of vein R4+5 in acemyiines has one pair of very long setulae - one on each surface of the wing - which is uncommon in the Goniinae.[4]
^O’Hara, James E.; Shannon, J. Henderson; D. Monty, Wood (5 March 2020). "World Checklist of the Tachinidae"(PDF). Tachinidae Resources. Retrieved 28 February 2022.
^Robineau-Desvoidy, André Jean Baptiste (1830). "Essai sur les myodaires". Mémoires presentés à l'Institut des Sciences, Lettres et Arts, par divers savants et lus dans ses assemblées: Sciences, Mathématiques et Physique. 2 (2): 1–813. Retrieved 15 July 2018.
^Crosskey, R.W. (1977). "La faune terrestre de l'île de Sainte-Hélène. Troisième partie. Fam. Tachinidae. Annales du Musée Royal de l'Afrique Centrale, Sér. in-8°". Sciences Zoologiques. 215 [1976]: 144–152.
^ abMesnil, L.P. (1957). "Nouveaux tachinaires d'Orient. (Deuxième série.)". Mémoires de la Société Royale d'Entomologie de Belgique. 28 (1–80).
^Townsend, C.H.T. (1926). "New muscoid flies of the Oriental, Australian, and African faunas". Philippine Journal of Science. 29: 529–544.
^Herting, B. (1969). "Notes on European Tachinidae (Dipt.) described by Rondani (1856–1868)". Memorie della Società Entomologica Italiana. 48: 189–204.