Insects found in birds’ nests from the Neotropical Region (except Argentina) and immigrant species of Neotropical origin in the Nearctic Region

Neotropical birds’ nests have received a great deal of attention because sylvatic species of Triatominae (Hemiptera: Reduviidae) and parasitic flies of the genus Philornis (Diptera: Muscidae) were discovered inside them. Those insects known in birds’ nests from Argentina, the chacoan region of Boliv...

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Published in:Zootaxa
Main Authors: IORIO, OSVALDO DI, TURIENZO, PAOLA
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Mangolia Press 2009
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mapress.com/j/zt/article/view/zootaxa.2187.1.1
https://doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.2187.1.1
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record_format openpolar
spelling ftmagnoliapress:oai:ojs.mapress.com:article/6792 2023-05-15T13:43:45+02:00 Insects found in birds’ nests from the Neotropical Region (except Argentina) and immigrant species of Neotropical origin in the Nearctic Region IORIO, OSVALDO DI TURIENZO, PAOLA 2009-08-06 application/pdf https://www.mapress.com/j/zt/article/view/zootaxa.2187.1.1 https://doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.2187.1.1 eng eng Mangolia Press https://www.mapress.com/j/zt/article/view/zootaxa.2187.1.1/28942 Copyright (c) 2015 Zootaxa Zootaxa; Vol 2187, No 1: 6 Aug. 2009; 1–144 1175-5334 1175-5326 10.11646/zootaxa.2187.1 Aves Insects birds´nests Neotropical Region immigrants Nearctic Region info:eu-repo/semantics/article info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion 2009 ftmagnoliapress https://doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.2187.1.1 2019-09-17T15:03:41Z Neotropical birds’ nests have received a great deal of attention because sylvatic species of Triatominae (Hemiptera: Reduviidae) and parasitic flies of the genus Philornis (Diptera: Muscidae) were discovered inside them. Those insects known in birds’ nests from Argentina, the chacoan region of Bolivia, and the southern portion of Brazil and Uruguay were extensively but not completely summarized by Turienzo & Di Iorio (2007). The present contribution summarizes all insects known to occur in birds’ nests from the Neotropical Region (except for Argentina and the Antarctic Region of adjacent countries), updating Hicks’ catalogues for this part of the world. Regarding birds, the list comprises 172 taxa identified to species (in 38 families), 8 to genus (in 6 families), 6 to family (in 4 families), and 27 birds´nests not identified. Regarding insects of the Neotropical region, 123 were identified to species (13 Blattaria; 5 Coleoptera; 26 Diptera; 34 Hemiptera; 15 Hymenoptera; 23 Psocoptera; 6 Siphonaptera; 1 Thysanura), 96 to genus (5 Blattaria; 8 Coleoptera; 48 Diptera; 4 Hemiptera; 6 Hymenoptera; 25 Psocoptera), 63 to superfamily, family or subfamily (1 Blattaria; 21 Coleoptera; 10 Diptera; 7 Hemiptera; 14 Hymenoptera; 1 Isoptera; 3 Orthoptera; 5 Psocoptera; 1 Thysanoptera), and 34 to order (6 Blattaria [including 1 Mantodea]; 6 Coleoptera; 3 Diptera; 3 Embioptera; 2 Hemiptera; 3 Hymenoptera; 1 Thysanoptera; 2 Isoptera; 4 Lepidoptera; 1 Orthoptera; 1 Phthiraptera; 2 Psocoptera). Associations of Neotropical insects with birds´nests were extracted from 392 references including original and posterior citations. Some North American species of insects that are neotropical immigrants are discussed, while a few other had been accidentally introduced in both directions. Synonymies, old combinations, misidentifications, original localities, amounts of insects, and repositories when they were stated, are provided. Article in Journal/Newspaper Antarc* Antarctic Magnolia press Antarctic The Antarctic Argentina Uruguay Hicks ENVELOPE(64.763,64.763,-71.144,-71.144) Zootaxa 2187 1 1 144
institution Open Polar
collection Magnolia press
op_collection_id ftmagnoliapress
language English
topic Aves
Insects
birds´nests
Neotropical Region
immigrants
Nearctic Region
spellingShingle Aves
Insects
birds´nests
Neotropical Region
immigrants
Nearctic Region
IORIO, OSVALDO DI
TURIENZO, PAOLA
Insects found in birds’ nests from the Neotropical Region (except Argentina) and immigrant species of Neotropical origin in the Nearctic Region
topic_facet Aves
Insects
birds´nests
Neotropical Region
immigrants
Nearctic Region
description Neotropical birds’ nests have received a great deal of attention because sylvatic species of Triatominae (Hemiptera: Reduviidae) and parasitic flies of the genus Philornis (Diptera: Muscidae) were discovered inside them. Those insects known in birds’ nests from Argentina, the chacoan region of Bolivia, and the southern portion of Brazil and Uruguay were extensively but not completely summarized by Turienzo & Di Iorio (2007). The present contribution summarizes all insects known to occur in birds’ nests from the Neotropical Region (except for Argentina and the Antarctic Region of adjacent countries), updating Hicks’ catalogues for this part of the world. Regarding birds, the list comprises 172 taxa identified to species (in 38 families), 8 to genus (in 6 families), 6 to family (in 4 families), and 27 birds´nests not identified. Regarding insects of the Neotropical region, 123 were identified to species (13 Blattaria; 5 Coleoptera; 26 Diptera; 34 Hemiptera; 15 Hymenoptera; 23 Psocoptera; 6 Siphonaptera; 1 Thysanura), 96 to genus (5 Blattaria; 8 Coleoptera; 48 Diptera; 4 Hemiptera; 6 Hymenoptera; 25 Psocoptera), 63 to superfamily, family or subfamily (1 Blattaria; 21 Coleoptera; 10 Diptera; 7 Hemiptera; 14 Hymenoptera; 1 Isoptera; 3 Orthoptera; 5 Psocoptera; 1 Thysanoptera), and 34 to order (6 Blattaria [including 1 Mantodea]; 6 Coleoptera; 3 Diptera; 3 Embioptera; 2 Hemiptera; 3 Hymenoptera; 1 Thysanoptera; 2 Isoptera; 4 Lepidoptera; 1 Orthoptera; 1 Phthiraptera; 2 Psocoptera). Associations of Neotropical insects with birds´nests were extracted from 392 references including original and posterior citations. Some North American species of insects that are neotropical immigrants are discussed, while a few other had been accidentally introduced in both directions. Synonymies, old combinations, misidentifications, original localities, amounts of insects, and repositories when they were stated, are provided.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author IORIO, OSVALDO DI
TURIENZO, PAOLA
author_facet IORIO, OSVALDO DI
TURIENZO, PAOLA
author_sort IORIO, OSVALDO DI
title Insects found in birds’ nests from the Neotropical Region (except Argentina) and immigrant species of Neotropical origin in the Nearctic Region
title_short Insects found in birds’ nests from the Neotropical Region (except Argentina) and immigrant species of Neotropical origin in the Nearctic Region
title_full Insects found in birds’ nests from the Neotropical Region (except Argentina) and immigrant species of Neotropical origin in the Nearctic Region
title_fullStr Insects found in birds’ nests from the Neotropical Region (except Argentina) and immigrant species of Neotropical origin in the Nearctic Region
title_full_unstemmed Insects found in birds’ nests from the Neotropical Region (except Argentina) and immigrant species of Neotropical origin in the Nearctic Region
title_sort insects found in birds’ nests from the neotropical region (except argentina) and immigrant species of neotropical origin in the nearctic region
publisher Mangolia Press
publishDate 2009
url https://www.mapress.com/j/zt/article/view/zootaxa.2187.1.1
https://doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.2187.1.1
long_lat ENVELOPE(64.763,64.763,-71.144,-71.144)
geographic Antarctic
The Antarctic
Argentina
Uruguay
Hicks
geographic_facet Antarctic
The Antarctic
Argentina
Uruguay
Hicks
genre Antarc*
Antarctic
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctic
op_source Zootaxa; Vol 2187, No 1: 6 Aug. 2009; 1–144
1175-5334
1175-5326
10.11646/zootaxa.2187.1
op_relation https://www.mapress.com/j/zt/article/view/zootaxa.2187.1.1/28942
op_rights Copyright (c) 2015 Zootaxa
op_doi https://doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.2187.1.1
container_title Zootaxa
container_volume 2187
container_issue 1
container_start_page 1
op_container_end_page 144
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