Austromerope
| Austromerope | |
|---|---|
| |
| Austromerope brasiliensis | |
| |
| Austromerope poultoni | |
| Scientific classification | |
| Kingdom: | Animalia |
| Phylum: | Arthropoda |
| Class: | Insecta |
| Order: | Mecoptera |
| Family: | Meropeidae |
| Genus: | Killington, 1933 |
| Species | |

Austromerope is a genus of forcepfly which contains only two known species, Austromerope poultoni from Western Australia,[1][2] and the South American Austromerope brasiliensis.[3] They are small scorpionflies, with large forceps-like structures at the tail and two pairs of wings. Only adults and eggs from captured adults are known - no larval stage has been seen. Much of the biology of these insects is not known, due to their secretiveness and rarity.
References
- ^ Abbott, I.; Burbidge, T.; Wills, A. (2007). "Austromerope poultoni (Insecta, Mecoptera) in south-west Western Australia; occurrence, modelled geographical distribution and phenology". Journal of the Royal Society of Western Australia. 90: 97โ106.
- ^ Faithfull, M. J.; Majer, J. D.; Postle, A. C. (1985). "Some notes on the occurrence and seasonality of Austromerope poultoni (Mecoptera) in western Australia". Australian Entomological Magazine. 12: 57โ60.
- ^ Machado; Kawada, R. J. P.; Rafael, J. A. (2013). "New continental record and new species of Austromerope (Mecoptera, Meropeidae) from Brazil". ZooKeys (269): 1โ10. doi:10.3897/zookeys.269.4255. PMC 3592268. PMID 23653525.
Data related to Austromerope at Wikispecies
Media related to Austromerope at Wikimedia Commons

