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Small Brachycera from 17.04.23 --> Drosophila cf. funebris
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Juergen Peters |
Posted on 18-04-2023 18:26
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Member Location: northwest Germany Posts: 13920 Joined: 11.09.04 |
Hello, a 3.5 mm fly from our housewall (northwest Germany). Possibly Chloropidae (Elachiptera?)? Juergen Peters attached the following image: [48.2Kb] Edited by Juergen Peters on 19-04-2023 17:34 Best regards, Jürgen -=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-= Juergen Peters Borgholzhausen, Germany WWW: http://insektenfo... -=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-= |
Tony Irwin |
Posted on 18-04-2023 20:22
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Member Location: Norwich, England Posts: 7234 Joined: 19.11.04 |
From first impressions, I would say this is a Drosophila.
Tony ---------- Tony Irwin |
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Juergen Peters |
Posted on 18-04-2023 20:29
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Member Location: northwest Germany Posts: 13920 Joined: 11.09.04 |
Tony Irwin wrote: From first impressions, I would say this is a Drosophila. Thanks, Tony! Actually I first stored it as one of the bigger Drosophila, but then on the PC it appeared too slender to me. Best regards, Jürgen -=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-= Juergen Peters Borgholzhausen, Germany WWW: http://insektenfo... -=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-= |
Tony Irwin |
Posted on 18-04-2023 20:54
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Member Location: Norwich, England Posts: 7234 Joined: 19.11.04 |
One of the things that sets Elachiptera apart is that they tend to have a thickened arista - much thicker than the ones on this fly.
Tony ---------- Tony Irwin |
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Juergen Peters |
Posted on 18-04-2023 22:09
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Member Location: northwest Germany Posts: 13920 Joined: 11.09.04 |
Tony Irwin wrote: One of the things that sets Elachiptera apart is that they tend to have a thickened arista - much thicker than the ones on this fly. Thanks again, Tony! Best regards, Jürgen -=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-= Juergen Peters Borgholzhausen, Germany WWW: http://insektenfo... -=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-= |
Jan Maca |
Posted on 19-04-2023 12:43
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Member Location: Posts: 1205 Joined: 25.03.10 |
Perhaps, perhaps! it might be Drosophila funebris. Difficult to identify, if there is not a better photo or a preserved specimen. |
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Juergen Peters |
Posted on 19-04-2023 17:34
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Member Location: northwest Germany Posts: 13920 Joined: 11.09.04 |
Jan Maca wrote: Perhaps, perhaps! it might be Drosophila funebris. Thanks, Jan! That was my first guess, too, after I knew it was a Drosophila. Best regards, Jürgen -=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-= Juergen Peters Borgholzhausen, Germany WWW: http://insektenfo... -=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-= |
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