Gallery Links
Users Online
· Guests Online: 39

· Members Online: 0

· Total Members: 5,049
· Newest Member: pdeknijff
Forum Threads
Theme Switcher
Switch to:
Last Seen Users
· evdb< 5 mins
· John Carr00:29:35
· weia00:47:12
· Tony Irwin01:04:11
· Sandro Kiladze01:29:03
· Woodmen01:42:16
· BartNap01:44:18
· Moumoule01:54:15
· smol02:06:20
· Louis Boumans02:09:40
Latest Photo Additions
View Thread
Diptera.info :: Identification queries :: Diptera (adults)
Who is here? 1 guest(s)
 Print Thread
Can anyone identify this fly?
jezlee
#1 Print Post
Posted on 05-08-2008 18:05
User Avatar

Member

Location: West Midlands, UK
Posts: 195
Joined: 12.06.06

Hello everyone ? can anybody point me in the right direction with this fly? I would guess it's a tachinid of some sort - am I right? It looks very similar to the one in my avatar ... Smile
jezlee attached the following image:


[115.54Kb]
Jez Lee
www.uknature.co.uk
 
www.uknature.co.uk
Tony Irwin
#2 Print Post
Posted on 05-08-2008 18:21
User Avatar

Member

Location: Norwich, England
Posts: 7291
Joined: 19.11.04

Musca autumnalis - one of the muscids with a deceptively bent vein M!
Tony
----------
Tony Irwin
 
jezlee
#3 Print Post
Posted on 05-08-2008 19:53
User Avatar

Member

Location: West Midlands, UK
Posts: 195
Joined: 12.06.06

Thanks for the ID, Tony ? could you elucidate on the 'Vein M' remark for this interested newbie? Smile
Jez Lee
www.uknature.co.uk
 
www.uknature.co.uk
Tony Irwin
#4 Print Post
Posted on 05-08-2008 23:12
User Avatar

Member

Location: Norwich, England
Posts: 7291
Joined: 19.11.04

Look at http://www.dipter...ad_id=8574. The penultimate picture has the veins labelled. (Each vein is given a letter or letter and number code - from these we can work out equivalent veins in other families.) Anyway, you'll see that vein M is angled, as in your specimen. Most Muscidae have a straight vein M - see http://www.dipter...d_id=15156 for instance, but there are exceptions. Generally speaking, a calypterate (big bristly) fly with a straight vein M is a scathophagid, muscid or anthomyiid. If it has a bent vein M, it is a tachinid, calliphorid or sarcophagid. The exceptions are usually easy to recognise, but we all get fooled sometimes! Pfft
Tony
----------
Tony Irwin
 
jezlee
#5 Print Post
Posted on 06-08-2008 17:00
User Avatar

Member

Location: West Midlands, UK
Posts: 195
Joined: 12.06.06

Thanks for the lesson, Tony - consider me enlightened! Smile
Jez Lee
www.uknature.co.uk
 
www.uknature.co.uk
Jump to Forum:
Similar Threads
Thread Forum Replies Last Post
Anthomyidae from Canada to be identify Diptera (adults) 7 06-07-2024 11:42
Help to identify this Drosophilid species.. Diptera (adults) 5 23-03-2024 19:41
Help to identify this unknown species.. Diptera (adults) 3 23-03-2024 13:58
Help to identify this unknown species.. Diptera (adults) 2 21-03-2024 00:57
Help to identify this unknown species.. Diptera (adults) 6 08-03-2024 21:04
Date and time
31 July 2025 15:13
Login
Username

Password



Not a member yet?
Click here to register.

Forgotten your password?
Request a new one here.
Temporary email?
Due to fact this site has functionality making use of your email address, any registration using a temporary email address will be rejected.

Paul
Donate
Please, help to make
Diptera.info
possible and enable
further improvements!
Latest Articles
Syrph the Net
Those who want to have access to the Syrph the Net database need to sign the
License Agreement -
Click to Download


Public files of Syrph the Net can be downloaded HERE

Last updated: 25.08.2011
Shoutbox
You must login to post a message.

23.06.25 18:10
If you have some spare money, there is a copy (together with keys to pupae and larvae) for sale by Hermann L. Strack, Loguivy Plougras, France

23.06.25 11:18
Appreciate it, Tony Irwin! I got the hint to use the key next to Langton and Pinder key for females of Chironomidae. So no specific queries, except the keys... I will keep this on my list and hope th

19.06.25 15:33
I have the hard copy book, if you have any specific queries, but I'm not scanning the 500+ pages!

02.06.25 18:26
Anyone has "Chironomidae of the Holarctic region. Keys and diagnoses. Part 3. Adult Males Entomologica Scandinavica Supplement 34"? smolwaarneming@gma
il.com

28.05.25 20:57
I have Russian Coenosia. nikita6510@ya.ru

28.05.25 12:25
Is someone able to share with me "A key to the Russian species of the genus Coenosia"?

08.05.25 18:22
I have

03.05.25 08:35
Does someone has a scan of Nartshuk E.P. 2003. Key to families of Diptera (Insecta) of the fauna of Russian and adjacent countries. Proceedings of the Zoological Institute Vol. 294: 1-252 for me?

10.03.25 18:02
We are looking for a new webmaster https://diptera.in
fo/forum/viewthrea
d.php?thread_id=11
5023&rowstart=20

04.03.25 17:10
Please use the link posted below to remember and honour Paul, if you wish

Render time: 2.64 seconds | 233,865,273 unique visits