Sciaroidea is a
superfamily in the infraorder
Bibionomorpha. There are about 16 families and more than 15,000 described species in Sciaroidea. Most of its constituent families are various
gnats.
Description
As
nematoceran flies, sciaroid adults generally have long segmented
antennae, while their larvae have a well-developed head and mouthparts.[1]
Aside from this, sciaroids vary in appearance. For example, Sciaridae adults have each eye extended dorsally to form an "eye bridge", a feature not found in related families.[2] Cecidomyiidae adults have a distinctive reduced wing venation, while their larvae are atypical for nematoceran larvae in having a very small head capsule.[3]
Ecology
Most fungus gnats (Sciaroidea excluding Cecidomyiidae) live in forests with their larvae occurring in fungi, dead wood and soil. There are some which live in wetlands such as
fens.[4] Several genera of Sciaridae and Mycetophilidae may reach high abundances in damp buildings with wet organic matter.[5]
Some species of Sciaridae and Cecidomyiidae are among the rare Diptera that spend their entire lives in soil. These are
wingless as adults.[6]
Sciaroid larvae typically feed on
fungi but there are some which form plant
galls (many Cecidomyiidae) or prey on other invertebrates (
Keroplatidae).[7]
Phylogeny
A 2016 molecular
phylogenetic analysis confirmed that Sciaroidea is a
monophyletic group and should include both Cecidomyiidae and Ditomyiidae.[8]
Families
These 15 families belong to the superfamily Sciaroidea:[9]
^Jaschhof, M.; Didham, R. K. (2002). "Rangomaramidae fam. nov. from New Zealand and implications for the phylogeny of the Sciaroidea (Diptera: Bibionomorpha)". Studia Dipterologica Supplement. 11: 1–60.