Members of this and the Nycteribiidae are often known collectively as
  
  bat flies. They are pupiparous and parasitic exclusively on bats. Streblids
  
  are more diverse in structure and biology and can, in several respects,
  
  be readily distinguished from nycteribiids. The body shape is usually normal,
  
  rarely bilaterally compressed and flealike, never strongly flattened and
  
  spiderlike. The head and legs arise from the sides of the thorax, never
  
  from the dorsal thoracic surface. The wings are almost always fully developed,
  
  rarely reduced and nonfunctional. The puparia are ovoid and are usually
  
  found on the ground beneath the roosts of bat hosts. Sexual dimorphism is
  
  exceedingly significant in the subfamily Ascodipterinae: the male has degenerated
  
  mouthparts and probably takes no food during its short life; the female
  
  has strongly modified mouthparts and, on finding a suitable site on the
  
  host bat (such as ear base, forehead, upper arm), sheds its wings and legs,
  
  burrows into and encysts itself in the tissues of the bat, and becomes endoparasitic.
  
  By that time the entire dealate and legless female is maggotlike, with head
  
  and thorax invaginated inside the distorted abdomen, leaving only 3 pairs
  
  of the hindmost spiracles and genital aperture exposed to the outside. Apparently
  
  females ingest mainly serous fluid.
  
  Streblids are found throughout the tropics and subtropics. The limits of
  
  their overall geographic range roughly correspond with the winter isotherm
  
  of 10 oC, the temperature at which bats begin to 
  hibernate. From the New World about 150 species in 26 genera and 3 subfamilies
  
  have been reported; all New World genera and subfamilies are endemic, and
  
  most species are parasitic on bats of the family Phyllostomatidae. About
  
  70 species in 6 genera and 2 subfamilies are known from the Old World. Among
  
  them only 1 genus is endemic to the Afrotropical Region and another to the
  
  Oriental Region.
  Ref.: Jobling (1951, partial rev.).
  
BRACHYTARSINA Macquart, 1851: 280(307). Type species: Brachytarsina
  
  flavipennis Macquart, 1851, mon.
  NYCTERIBOSCA Speiser, 1899b: 46. Type species: Raymondia kollari Frauenfeld, 1855 [= Brachytarsina flavipennis Macquart, 1851], des.
  
  Séguy, 1936: 122.
  adversa Maa & Marshall, 1981: 220. Vanuatu.
  amboinensis Rondani, 1878: 166. Indonesia (Maluku); Australia (NSW,
  
  Qld, WA), New Caledonia (Loyalty Is, New Caledonia), Vanuatu; widesp. Oriental
  
  Reg.
MEGASTREBLA Maa, 1971c: 213. Type species: Nycteribosca gigantea Speiser, 1899, orig. des.
    gigantea Speiser, 1899b: 47, 60 (Nycteribosca). PNG (Bismarck
    
    Arch); Indonesia (Irian Jaya), PNG (Bougainville I, PNG), Solomon Is.
  
RAYMONDIA Frauenfeld, 1855: 320, 323. Type species: Raymondia
    
    huberi Frauenfeld, 1855, des. Speiser, 1899b: 49.
    pagodarum Speiser, 1899b: 50. India; Australia (Qld), Indonesia (Irian
    
    Jaya, Maluku), PNG (PNG); Burma, Indonesia (Nusa Tenggara), Malaysia (Pen),
    
  Sri Lanka.
  
ASCODIPTERON Adensamer, 1896: 400. Type species: Ascodipteron
    
    phyllorhinae Adensamer, 1896, mon.
    archboldi Maa, 1971a: 16. Australia (Qld).
    speiserianum Muir, 1911: xvii [1912: 352]. Indonesia (Maluku); Australia (Qld), Indonesia (Papua), PNG (PNG); Burma, China, Japan, Philippines, Taiwan, Thailand.
         australiansi Muir, 1912: 366. Australia (Qld).
       australiense, error for australiansi.  
  
      
  Genus MAABELLA Hastriter & Bush  
  
MAABELLA Hastriter & Bush, 2006: 33. Type species: Maabella stomalata Hastriter & Bush, 2006, mon.
        stomalata Hastriter & Bush, 2006: 33. Vietnam; PNG (PNG); Borneo, China, Indonesia, Philippines.