33 The Two-winged Flies 



tapering at one end. Some species inhabit ants' nests, and one is suspected 

 of living parasitically in bee-hives. 



Stratiomyia is a genus containing rather large conspicuous yellow-banded 

 flies with broad flattened abdomen, while Sargus, a genus whose species 

 are common, has a subcylindrical abdomen with the whole body metallic 

 green. 



The snipe-flies, Leptidae, are a small family represented by about fifty 

 North American species, including flies having no habits or structural pecu- 

 liarities appealing specially to popular interest. They are rather slender 

 and plainly colored, and rather heavy and slow in movement. They are 



apparently all predatory in both larval 

 and adult stages. The adults may be 

 best found, according to Comstock, in 

 low bushes and grass. The larvae live 

 in the ground, in moss, or in decaying 

 wood, sometimes penetrating to the 

 FlG - fi. -Diagram of wing of Chryso- burrows of wood-boring insects. The 

 phua thoracica (Leptidas), showing 

 venation. species of the genus Atherix deposit 



their eggs "in dense masses attached 



to dry branches overhanging water. Not only do numerous females con- 

 tribute to the formation of these masses, but they remain there themselves 

 and die. The larvae on hatching escape into the water. " 



In the second group of Brachycera, including flies which have their anten- 

 nae composed of four or five distinct segments, there are two families, the 

 Asilidae, or robber-flies, and the Midaidae, or Midas-flies. These latter resemble 

 the, robber-flies in size and general appearance, but differ from them by having 

 the antennae rather long and clubbed at the tip. They are predaceous, 

 catching and devouring other flying insects, and the larvae of the few species 

 whose life-history is known are also carnivorous, and seem to have a special 

 fancy for the larva? of the great wood-boring grubs of the giant Prionus 

 beetles. Howard believes that the large species, Mydas luteipennis, found 

 in the Southwest, mimics in coloration and general appearance for protection 

 or aggression the tarantula-killer wasp found commonly in this country. 



The Asilidse, or robber-flies, compose a considerable family nearly 1000 

 species occur in this country of large, swift, hairy, ferocious-looking flies 

 which live wholly by predatory attacks on other insects. The body is usually 

 long and slender, tapering behind (Fig. 462), although in a few genera the 

 abdomen is flattened and not unusually elongate. The proboscis is strong 

 and sharp, the eyes large and keen, and the wings long and narrow and 

 capable of carrying this insect hawk swiftly and strongly in pursuit of its 

 prey. Some of the robber-flies are very large, an inch and a half or even 

 two inches long, and they do not hesitate to attack other large and strong and 



