Leschenaultia
Leschenaultia is a genus of flies in the family Tachinidae. It may be synonymous with the genus Harrisia, but the type material of Harrisia has been lost, hindering comparisons.[3] Leschenaultia comprises 32 species, distributed across the Americas:[3]
Species
- L. adusta (Loew, 1872) – United States (California, Arizona, New Mexico), Mexico (Sonora, Durango)[3]
- L. aldrichi Toma & Guimarães, 2002 – Brazil (São Paulo, Santa Catarina)[3]
- L. americana (Brauer & von Bergenstamm, 1893) – Canada (British Columbia, Alberta), United States (Oregon, Montana, Idaho, California, Arizona)[3]
- L. arnaudi Toma & Guimarães, 2002 – Haiti[3]
- L. barbarae Toma, 2008 – Venezuela[4]
- L. bergenstammi Toma & Guimarães, 2002 – Brazil (Santa Catarina), Peru (San Martín)[3]
- L. bessi Toma & Guimarães, 2002 – Brazil (São Paulo, Santa Catarina)[3]
- L. bicolor (Macquart, 1846) – Canada, United States, Mexico, Brazil, Argentina[3]
- L. bigoti Toma & Guimarães, 2002 – Mexico, Honduras, Costa Rica, Ecuador, Peru, Brazil[3]
- L. blanchardi Toma & Guimarães, 2002 – Ecuador[3]
- L. braueri Toma & Guimarães, 2002 – Mexico, Venezuela, Brazil[3]
- L. brooksi Toma & Guimarães, 2002 – Mexico, Panama, Peru, Brazil[3]
- L. ciliata (Macquart, 1848) – Colombia (Bogotá)[3]
- L. coquilletti Toma & Guimarães, 2002 – Brazil (Santa Catarina)[3]
- L. cortesi Toma & Guimarães, 2002 – Venezuela, Colombia[3]
- L. currani Toma & Guimarães, 2002 – Brazil (São Paulo, Santa Catarina)[3]
- L. exul (Townsend, 1892) – Canada (Ontario, Quebec, New Brunswick), United States (Maine, New York, New Hampshire, Massachusetts, Connecticut, New Jersey, Maryland)[3]
- L. fulvipes (Bigot, 1887) – Canada (British Columbia, Saskatchewan), United States (Washington, Idaho, Wyoming, California, Arizona, New Mexico, Texas)[3]
- L. grossa Brooks, 1947 – United States (Nevada, Arizona, New Mexico)[3]
- L. halisidotae Brooks, 1947 – Canada (British Columbia, Ontario, Quebec), United States (Minnesota, Maine, New York, Massachusetts, Ohio, Wisconsin, Pennsylvania, New Jersey, California, Arizona)[3]
- L. hospita Reinhard, 1952 – Mexico (Michoacan, Oaxaca, Morelos), United States (New Mexico)[3]
- L. hystrix (Townsend, 1915) – Peru (Matucana)[3]
- L. jurinioides (Townsend, 1895) – Jamaica[3]
- L. leucophrys (Wiedemann, 1830) – Mexico, Venezuela, Ecuador, Bolivia, Peru, Paraguay, Uruguay, Brazil[3]
- L. loewi Toma & Guimarães, 2002 – Mexico (Veracruz)[3]
- L. macquarti Toma & Guimarães, 2002 – United States (Arizona)[3]
- L. montagna (Townsend, 1912) – Peru[3]
- L. nuda Thompson, 1963 – Trinidad[3]
- L. reinhardi Toma & Guimarães, 2002 – Canada (British Columbia, Ontario, Quebec), United States (Oregon, Idaho, Ohio, California, Tennessee)[3]
- L. sabroskyi Toma & Guimarães, 2002 – United States (California, Arizona)[3]
- L. schineri Toma & Guimarães, 2002 – United States (Oregon, California, Idaho)[3]
- L. thompsoni Toma & Guimarães, 2002 – Mexico (Mexico City, Chiapas)[3]
- L. townsendi Toma & Guimarães, 2002 – Mexico (Puebla)[3]
One species, L. nigrisquamis (Townsend, 1892), was not examined in the most recent monograph of the genus, because the type material is missing, and two former species were not recognised:
References