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  2. Fly - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fly

    Diptera is a large order containing more than 150,000 species including horse-flies, [a] crane flies, hoverflies, mosquitoes and others. Flies have a mobile head, with a pair of large compound eyes, and mouthparts designed for piercing and sucking (mosquitoes, black flies and robber flies), or for lapping and sucking in the other groups. Their ...

  3. Biology of Diptera - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Biology_of_Diptera

    Diptera is an order of winged insects commonly known as flies. Diptera, which are one of the most successful groups of organisms on Earth, are very diverse biologically. None are truly marine but they occupy virtually every terrestrial niche. Many have co-evolved in association with plants and animals.

  4. List of Diptera families - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Diptera_families

    This is a list of the families of the order Diptera (true flies). The classification is based largely on Pape et al. (2011). Many of the fossil species are of uncertain placement and are retained in separate lists broadly under Nematocera and Brachycera. [1]

  5. Morphology of Diptera - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Morphology_of_Diptera

    The Diptera is a very large and diverse order of mostly small to medium-sized insects. They have prominent compound eyes on a mobile head, and (at most) one pair of functional, membraneous wings, [ 1 ] which are attached to a complex mesothorax.

  6. Halteres - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Halteres

    The majority of insects have two pairs of wings. Flies possess only one set of lift-generating wings and one set of halteres. The order name for flies, "Diptera", literally means "two wings", but there is another order of insect which has evolved flight with only two wings: strepsipterans, or stylops; [2] they are the only other organisms that possess two wings and two halteres. [6]

  7. Mosquito - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mosquito

    Mosquitoes are members of a family of the true flies (order Diptera): the Culicidae (from the Latin culex, genitive culicis, meaning "midge" or "gnat"). [95] They are members of the infraorder Culicomorpha and superfamily Culicoidea. The phylogenetic tree is based on the FLYTREE project. [96] [97]

  8. Ephydridae - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ephydridae

    Ephydridae (shore fly, sometimes brine fly) is a family of insects in the order Diptera. Shore flies are tiny flies that can be found near seashores or at smaller inland waters, such as ponds. About 2,000 species have been described worldwide, [2] including Ochthera.

  9. List of arthropod orders - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_arthropod_orders

    Order Neuroptera – 5,000 (Net-winged insects) Order †Protomecoptera; Order †Tarachoptera; Order †Permotrichoptera; Order Lepidoptera – 174,250 (Butterflies and moths) Order Trichoptera – 12,627 (Caddisfly) Order †Paratrichoptera; Order †Protodiptera (Permotipula and Permila) Order Diptera – 152,956 (Flies) Order ...