Subspecies
No subspecies are recognized.
Synonyms
Cephalia rufipes Meigen, 1826
Cephalia nigripes Meigen, 1826
Myrmecomyia formicaria Robineau-Desvoidy, 1830
Identification
No information has been entered yet.
Distribution
An extremely rare species that, however, appears to be widely distributed in Europe.
Kameneva (2008) lists specimens from Germany, Austria, Switzerland, France, and Spain. Further records from Spain are given by
Carles-Tolra (1994) and
Carles-Tolra and Kameneva (2008).
Merz (1996)
reports the species for Switzerland for the first time, but states that
all available specimens were collected in the 19th centruy, thus
suggesting that the species is now extinct in Switzerland. It is also
recorded from Israel (
Freidberg and Morgulis 2011), Slovakia (
Semelbauer and Vidlicka 2015;
Straka and Majzlan 2016), Czech Republic (
Martinek 2001), Portugal (
Almeida 2013), and the Netherlands and Belgium (
Van Aartsen 2001).
Biology
The biology of this species is virtually unknown.
Merz (1996) suggests that the larvae might live in dead trees (coarse woody debris).