Tegmina fully developed ; wings longer or shorter than the tegmen; fore coxae without spine; sometimes with small spine; femora spinoses on lower side, fore and mid tibiae with longitudinal upper groove and spinules on margin fore tibiae moderately and gradually widened at bases tympanal opening oval ,exposed and covered by membrane; subgenital plate of male bifurcate with long lobes or tubular, lack apical styles.
Fore and, mid tibiae un-cylindrical; with longitudinal upper groove or flate; mid tibiae with spinules on posterior margin; openings of tympanal organ on fore tibiae oval, exposed and membranous.
;wings longer than tegmen; fore coxae with long soine, femur with spinosa on lower side ;fore tibiae, mid\tibiae with longitudinal groove on upper side, tibiae widened basally; posterior opening of tympanal organ, oval, membranous exposed; anterior opening concealed by swelling; in from of wide slit externally; terminal abdominal tergite with tubercles; subgenital plate of male with styles; ovipositor not shorter then pronotum, varying in shape, fully developed.
Antennae, pliable, thin; pronotum conspicuous humeral notch on lateral lobes; tegmen not wide, but fully developed; wings longer than tegmen; fore coxae lack spines or with a small spinule; fore femora compressed laterally with longitudinal upper carina; lower side groove, serrate or with a large spine; fore tibiae with longitudinal upper groove; with spines on the posterior margin ; tympanal openings concealed by swellings in from of wide slit externally; subgenital plate of male with deeply bifurcate.
The ears of the fly are endowed with two thin tympanal membranes, the eardrums, that are set very close together across the midline of the animal.
Taking place at the peripheral level of the tympanal membranes, the first step in the process of hearing pertains to the conversion of acoustic energy into mechanical energy.
In an effort to unite structure and function in a functional explanation, the reconstitution of actual tympanal deflections provides key information on the anatomical basis for the observed mechanical behavior.
The functional principle for this effect resides in the somewhat complex linear interaction between two coupled oscillators--the tympanal membranes.
Body 45 mm long (without ovipositor), ovipositor 14 mm long as preserved; fore tibia with two inner spines and one outer spine preserved, internal auditory organ perserved, tympanum longer than broad, widely ovoid auditory openings of a swollen
tympanal chamber plainly visible just below the femoro-tibial joint