dcsimg

Conservation Status

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None needed.
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Cyclicity

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In Canada, C. discalis is found from late May to early August.
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Distribution

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The southern portions of British Columbia east across the prairies to southern Manitoba, and south from California to Colorado and Nebraska.
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General Description

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"The most distinctive of Alberta's deerflies. Large, with a length of 8-11 mm. The females overall are pale yellow and grey with black markings. On the head (Teskey 1990) they are black above the antennae and yellow below (except for black spots on the clypeus), and covered all over with grey pruinosity (powder); the ocellar areas are glossy black; the antenna are slender, and darker laterally than dorso-ventrally; the palpi are yellow. The thorax is prominently striped with grey and black; the legs are yellow, with the joints and the apical tarsal segments darkened; the wings have a prominent fenestrated (with window-like openings) pattern. The abdomen dorsally has double rows of black spots, with the spots on tergite 2 united anteriorly; the sternites are yellow (Teskey 1990). Males are similar but are darker overall, especially on the antennae, wings, scutum, and abdomen. The fenestrated pattern of infuscation in the wing cells (infuscation around the perimeter of the cells but not in the center) is diagnostic except for some C. fulvaster, but the antennae of the latter are always much more robust. Males of C. discalis are unique in that the eyes are not holoptic (touching) but are separated by the width of an ocellus (Teskey 1990)."
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Habitat

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Dry grasslands and prairies. Larvae have been captured from the margins of alkaline lakes and sloughs (Teskey 1990).
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Life Cycle

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Not much is known of the life history of C. discalis, despite its being known since 1919 as a vector of tularemia, a bacterial disease usually of rabbits and occasionally of humans (Cole, 1969).
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Trophic Strategy

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Nothing is known of the dietary habits of the larvae, nor of the adults specifically. Adult Chrysops are known to ingest flower nectar and aphid honeydew as their primary food source (Teskey 1990).
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Chrysops discalis

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Chrysops discalis is a species of deer fly in the family Tabanidae.[2][3]

Distribution

Canada, United States.

References

  1. ^ Williston, S.W. (1880). "Some interesting new Diptera". Transactions of the Connecticut Academy of Arts and Sciences. 4: 243–246. Retrieved 13 September 2022.
  2. ^ Moucha, J. (1976). "Horse-flies (Diptera: Tabanidae) of the World. Synoptic Catalogue" (PDF). Acta Entomologica Musei Nationalis Pragae Supplements. 7: 1–320. Retrieved 11 September 2022.
  3. ^ Burger, J. F. (1995). "Catalog of Tabanidae (Diptera) in North America north of Mexico". International Contributions on Entomology. Associated Publishers. 1 (1): 1–100.
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Chrysops discalis: Brief Summary

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Chrysops discalis is a species of deer fly in the family Tabanidae.

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