Dolichopodidae are a family of flies ranging in size from minute to medium-sized (1mm to 9mm). They have characteristically long and slender legs, though their leg length is not as striking as in families such as the
Tipulidae. Their posture often is stilt-like standing high on their legs, with the body almost erect. In colour most species have a green-to-blue metallic lustre, but various other species are dull yellow, brown or black. The frons in both sexes is broad. The eyes are separated on the frons of males, except in some species of
Diaphorus and
Chrysotus in which eyes touch above the antennal insertion. On the heads of most species the ocellar bristles and outer vertical bristles are well developed. The face of some species is entire; in others it is divided into two sections: the epistoma and the clypeus. The largest antennal segment is the third; in most species it bears a long arista, which is apical in some species, dorsal in others. In most species the mouthparts are short and have a wide aperture as an adaptation for sucking small prey. The legs are
gracile and the tibiae usually bear long bristles. In some genera the legs are
raptorial. In some species the tibiae of the males have modifications. The abdomen is elongate-conical or flat. The genitalia of the male often are free and borne on a petiole, with tergite 8 being asymmetrical, lying on the left side of the epandrium. They are also rotated dextrally between 90° and 180°, including segment 8 and sometimes segment 7, which makes them distinguishable from the family
Hybotidae. Males of most species have well-developed gonopods of two or three lobes on the distal margin of the epandrium. The gonopods may fuse with the epandrium in genera such as
Hydrophorus,
Thrypticus and
Argyra, or there may be a suture, as in the genera
Porphyrops,
Xiphandrium and
Rhaphium. In some genera, such as
Hypophyllus and
Tachytrechus, the surstyli are well-developed as secondary outgrowths of the epandrium. In genera such as
Tachytrechus, there are two pairs of surstyli—one proximal and one distal. The hypandrium in most species is a small sclerite, which may be asymmetrical as in the genera
Porphyrops and
Tachytrechus. Males of many species have highly developed cerci. Development of the phallus varies considerably between genera. ==Biology==