Lifestyle:
Unknown.
Larva: The larvae of flies are leg-less maggots without a head capsule (see examples). They never have thoracic or abdominal legs. They do not have chewing mouthparts, although they do have a characteristic cephalo-pharyngeal skeleton (see examples), usually visible internally through the body wall.
Puparium: The puparia of flies are formed within the hardened last larval skin or puparium and as a result sheaths enclosing head appendages, wings and legs are not visible externally (see examples).
Comments:
Like other species of Melanagromyza it is likely to be a stem- or root-borer or galler.
Hosts in Great Britain and Ireland: Currently unknown.
Hosts
elsewhere: Currently unknown.
Time
of year - larvae: Currently unknown.
Time
of year - adults: June.
Distribution
in Great Britain and Ireland: Uncommon. London (Putney Heath),
Cambridgeshire (Snailwell), Glamorgan (Porthcawl) (Spencer, 1972b: 17), East Suffolk and South Devon (NBN
Atlas). Distribution
elsewhere: Austria, Denmark, Finland, Sweden, Germany, Mongolia
(Spencer, 1976: 54), Belgium,
Czech Republic, Estonia, Hungary, Italian mainland, Lithuania, Poland
and Slovakia (Fauna Europaea).
NBN Atlas links to known host species:
British and Irish Parasitoids in Britain and elsewhere:
Currently unknown.
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