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Elegant fly
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Robert Heemskerk |
Posted on 13-04-2006 01:00
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Member Location: Amsterdam, Netherlands Posts: 2082 Joined: 17.10.05 |
hi Flyforum, Yesterday I found this fly in some grass and Brassica napus. It is a elegant fly, the wing is long-oval shaped. Black thorax with some strong black or dark hairs. The legs are yellow/braunish and the arista is fine and long. The fly was about 4-5 mm What fly is this? greeting, Robert Robert Heemskerk attached the following image: [40.94Kb] |
Robert Heemskerk |
Posted on 13-04-2006 01:02
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Member Location: Amsterdam, Netherlands Posts: 2082 Joined: 17.10.05 |
another view - from above -
Robert Heemskerk attached the following image: [54.06Kb] |
Jan Willem |
Posted on 13-04-2006 08:29
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Member Location: Waalwijk, The Netherlands Posts: 2136 Joined: 24.07.04 |
Hi Robert, It is a female Lonchoptera (Lonchopteridae). I don't have the literature for identification to species level at hand now, but I will try to give you a species name later. Jan Willem |
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Nikita Vikhrev |
Posted on 13-04-2006 08:30
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Member Location: Moscow, Russia Posts: 9336 Joined: 24.05.05 |
Hello Robert. 1. It is Lonchoptera sp.. On second image venation show that it is female. 2. Your S. punctum and other Sepsidae - such a wonderful flies! Nikita Nikita Vikhrev - Zool Museum of Moscow University |
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Nikita Vikhrev |
Posted on 13-04-2006 09:10
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Member Location: Moscow, Russia Posts: 9336 Joined: 24.05.05 |
Lonchoptera venation: 2 - female, 3 - male. Nikita Vikhrev attached the following image: [13.58Kb] Nikita Vikhrev - Zool Museum of Moscow University |
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Robert Heemskerk |
Posted on 15-04-2006 22:11
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Member Location: Amsterdam, Netherlands Posts: 2082 Joined: 17.10.05 |
Jan and Nikita, Thank you very much, also for that wing-illustration. That's makes it clear and it is nice to know this! greeting Robert, |
Jan Willem |
Posted on 16-04-2006 18:04
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Member Location: Waalwijk, The Netherlands Posts: 2136 Joined: 24.07.04 |
Hi Robert, I think it is a rather dark specimen of Lonchoptera lutea, but I have to admit that I am not sure about it. Jan Willem |
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Louis Boumans |
Posted on 16-04-2006 19:50
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Member Location: NO Oslo Posts: 262 Joined: 09.06.04 |
Yeah, one of my little frustrations is that i've never been able to find other species than L. lutea and females of L. bifurcata (in the NL). The latter species is parthenogenetic, at least in GB and the NL. L. bifurcata has pale vertical britles, pale basal segment of antennae, and partiall dark potocular cilia (Smith '69), so most likely it is a dark specimen of L. lutea as JW said. cheers, Louis |
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LordV |
Posted on 16-04-2006 20:41
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Member Location: Posts: 671 Joined: 06.09.05 |
Just out of interest is this the same species? Brian V. |
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Jan Willem |
Posted on 17-04-2006 20:27
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Member Location: Waalwijk, The Netherlands Posts: 2136 Joined: 24.07.04 |
Hi Brian, Yes it is. Very nice picture! Jan Willem |
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