The vestiture, or hairlike projections of the cuticle, in Anastrepha and Toxotrypana include macrotrichia (setae or setulae), which have an alveolus (socket), and microtrichia, which do not have an alveolus. Microtrichia are usually extremely small and cannot be seen individually except with high powered microscopes or scanning electron microscopes. They occur in patterns so that some surface areas may appear duller or pruinose versus shiny areas that lack them. Microtrichial patterns are very difficult if not impossible to see in specimens in fluid. On dry specimens they are best observed with the surface held at an oblique angle to the light source. The postpronotal lobe is a rounded rectangular sclerite on the anterolateral corner on the dorsum of the thorax. It normally bears a single postpronotal seta. The notopleuron is a narrow, more or less triangular sclerite posterior to the postpronotal lobe and between the scutum and the anepisternum. It normally has 2 setae.