Thread subject: Diptera.info :: Ecology of Rhinophoridae

Posted by John Bratton on 11-05-2007 12:50
#1

A web search hasn't produced much information about the ecology of Rhinophoridae so it is perhaps worth drawing attention to the following. R.A. Bedding wrote a Ph.D. thesis in 1965 at Imperial College, London University on Parasitism of British terrestrial isopods by Diptera and it is summarised in Sutton, S.L., 1972. Invertebrate types: woodlice, London, Ginn & Co.

The study involved dissecting over 20,000 woodlice. Of 17,000 Porcellio scaber, over 10% were parasitised, mostly by Paykullia maculata but also Phyto discrepans, Melanophora roralis, Rhinophora lepida, Tricogena rubricosa and Ph. melanocephala. A small percentage of 2,600 Oniscus asellus were parasitised by P. maculata and Ph. discrepans. Ph. melanocephala was the only rhinophorid found in the pill woodlouse Armadillidium vulgare. Of 117 Trachelipus rathkei, 9 were parasitised by Stevenia atramentaria.

Melanophora was found mostly in the upper seashore, Phyto discrepans was synanthropic (rubbish dumps and gardens) and Paykullia was found in woodlice under loose bark.

Now a question for our Dutch correspondents: Why is the Dutch word for a terrestrial isopod a pissebed? Does it mean what it sounds as though it ought to mean? I understand you use the same word for the plant dandelion (Taraxacum), which is understandable as eating dandelion is well known to make you wet the bed. But no one eats woodlice, do they? Is it because woodlice are attracted to damp mattresses?

John Bratton