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Diptera.info :: Miscellaneous :: The Lounge
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Gordon's Thai Project.
Gordon
#1 Print Post
Posted on 07-09-2010 12:50
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Location: Lake Kerkini, Greece
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I guess this should be in general whatsitsAngry but I said I would put it here so I have.

To collect legally in Thailand you need to have a government approved project. I am hoping that by being a full-time resident and by working in harmony with only a couple of local National Parks, ones that are not as well studied as Doi Inthanon, that I will be able to get such a project together. With luck this will allow me to collect in some nice habitats here in far northern Thailand.

As you all know, when dealing with bureaucracyAngry it is best to have grand sounding names etc. I will be working partly with the NHM London, they will get most of the beetles, and a group of Romanian microhymenopterists (whom some of you now know) So I will present the project with a list of associates and (where possible) their institutes. I am sure some of you would like to receive material as well.

So if you would like to be in on the submitted project add your name, institute and group below. I am sorry I will not have time to dry and pin stuff. I will most likely be restricted to Yellowpan trapping and hand netting (because of lack of funds). Also I will be sorting with a x10 hand lens only, unless I find a microscope somewhere that I can use. So separating out the smaller acalyptrata may be problematical, you know I am not much good as a dipterist reallyWink.

I am sure promising to return info to the relevant authorities of Lam Nam Kok National Park will help, and perhaps some determined material to Chiang Mai University, so there will be a commitment to get some stuff determined fairly quickly.

I will keep people informed as things develop.Grin or don'tSad
Edited by Gordon on 07-09-2010 14:35
Gordon
 
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ChrisR
#2 Print Post
Posted on 07-09-2010 13:19
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It's interesting but I should really pass on oriental tachinids, as I am spread so thinly on the neotropical already Grin

Theo might like to give them a try, because they should be identifiable to genus using Crosskey and perhaps other papers. But if he passes you should really try Hiroshi Shima, as he is the local expert on the oriental tachinids. Smile

EDIT: Unless I am reading it incorrectly you should change Greece to Thailand in the second paragraph Wink
Edited by ChrisR on 07-09-2010 13:20
Manager of the UK Species Inventory in the Angela Marmont Centre for UK Biodiversity at the Natural History Museum, London.
 
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Gerard Pennards
#3 Print Post
Posted on 07-09-2010 13:33
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Location: Amersfoort
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Hey Gordon,
Yes, I would be interested in identifying the Thai syrphids that you catch!
Name: Gerard Pennards
Institute: Dutch Entomological society and Nederlands Centrum Biodiversiteit (NCB- Naturalis) Leiden
Group: Syrphidae
Greetings
Greetings,
Gerard Pennards
 
Gordon
#4 Print Post
Posted on 07-09-2010 14:38
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ChrisR wrote:
................. But if he passes you should really try Hiroshi Shima, as he is the local expert on the oriental tachinids. Smile
Wink

Thanks Chris, but this time I'm not really worried what gets determined and what doesn't. If people are interested, and if I can get the project off the ground, then I will send stuff, but really I am only offering to collect because some people asked me to.
Wink
ChrisR wrote:
EDIT: Unless I am reading it incorrectly you should change Greece to Thailand in the second paragraph

Wink

Your reading is fine, and it is fixed. Thanks
Gordon
 
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Gordon
#5 Print Post
Posted on 07-09-2010 14:40
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OK Gerard, I will include you in the proposition.
Gordon
 
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Paul Beuk
#6 Print Post
Posted on 07-09-2010 15:15
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Dr Paul L.Th. Beuk
Natuurhistorisch Museum Maastricht
Empidoidea

I can probably pass on the Dolichopodidae that are included in Empidoidea to Marc Pollet, but if he or someone else offers him/herself for the Dolichopodidae and you sort them out, they can be excluded from the Empidoidea.

Though many groups are of interest to me I will not vollunteer for them (yet Wink) but perhaps wait till any unsorted material is delivered. Grin
Paul

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Andrzej
#7 Print Post
Posted on 07-09-2010 17:54
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Location: Poland
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Heleomyzidae, Piophilidae , Pseudopomyzidae, if any will be taken :-)
dr. A. J. Woznica, Institute of Environmental Biology, Wroclaw University of Environmental & Life Sciences
 
libor
#8 Print Post
Posted on 07-09-2010 20:05
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Libor Dvorak
Municipal Museum Marianske Lazne (Marienbad)
Hymenoptera: Vespidae
 
Nosferatumyia
#9 Print Post
Posted on 08-09-2010 06:44
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Pyrgotidae (at black light, along w/moths and on flowers) is the main target now, as I am doing a revision of the Old World genera. I can also help with Oriental Tephritidae, incl. bamboo ones, Ulidiidae/Otitidae and Platystomatidae.

Valery A. Korneyev, DSc, PhD
Head, General and Applied Entomology Section
I.I.Schmalhausen Institute of Zoology
National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine
Bogdan Chmielnicki St. 15
01601 Kiev UKRAINE
http://sites.google.com/site/nosferatumyiano/


Val
 
Gordon
#10 Print Post
Posted on 08-09-2010 12:24
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OK - it is nice to see some people coming on board, but it is not live yet, Thailand can be even more lethargic, bureaucratically than in Greece - still you know I will do my best.Grin
Gordon
 
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Gordon
#11 Print Post
Posted on 08-09-2010 13:56
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Here's a vespid for you Dvorak.
Gordon attached the following image:


[95.95Kb]
Edited by Gordon on 08-09-2010 14:01
Gordon
 
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libor
#12 Print Post
Posted on 08-09-2010 15:26
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Vespidae: Polistinae: Polistes (Gyrostoma) rothneyi ssp. ??? Need to have it in hands for absolutely exact ID.
Libor
 
Steve Gaimari
#13 Print Post
Posted on 08-09-2010 18:10
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Hi Gordon - I'm involved in another Thailand survey project too, so would be delighted with any lauxanioids (lauxaniids, chamaemyiids, celyphids), as well as odiniids, therevids and scenopinids! Smile
Steve Gaimari
Plant Pest Diagnostics Lab, CDFA
3294 Meadowview Road
Sacramento, CA 95832-1448, USA
 
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Gordon
#14 Print Post
Posted on 09-09-2010 11:50
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Libor wrote:
Vespidae: Polistinae: Polistes (Gyrostoma) rothneyi ssp. ??? Need to have it in hands for absolutely exact ID.
Libor


Thanks Libor, that will do me for a photo.
Gordon
 
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Gordon
#15 Print Post
Posted on 09-09-2010 11:56
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OK Stephen, I will add your name.

The good news is that Max Barclay's contact here, Mark Isenstadt has offered a Malaise trap, tubes and the loan of a microscope as well as helping to get the permission, so this project might fly yet. Also it turns out that a Thai birding friend of mine in BKK has as his boss a woman who is responsible for giving out permissions.Wink So I'm feeling mildly hopeful at the moment.
Edited by Gordon on 09-09-2010 11:58
Gordon
 
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Christian Kehlmaier
#16 Print Post
Posted on 09-09-2010 12:16
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I'd have a look at any Pipunculidae and Vermileonidae.

Dr. Christian Kehlmaier
Senckenberg Natural History Collections Dresden
Museum of Zoology
Dresden, Germany
 
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Iain MacGowan
#17 Print Post
Posted on 09-09-2010 12:37
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Hi Gordon

Always interested in Lonchaeidae from Thailand as I have already done quite a lot of work on them - see:
http://lonchaeidae.myspecies.info/lonchaeidae-thailand

Iain MacGowan
Scottish Natural Heritage
Battleby, Redgorton
Perth PH1 3EW
Scotland
Iain MacGowan
 
Gordon
#18 Print Post
Posted on 09-09-2010 12:51
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Paul Beuk wrote:
Dr Paul L.Th. Beuk
Natuurhistorisch Museum Maastricht
Empidoidea

Though many groups are of interest to me I will not volunteer for them (yet Wink) but perhaps wait till any unsorted material is delivered. Grin


Ahh Paul,
I assume this means you have finished all my Greek EmpidsShock and will be sending me a list soon. Wink
Gordon
 
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Paul Beuk
#19 Print Post
Posted on 09-09-2010 12:58
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I am working on it, my dear man, yet I have numerous unidentifiable species to deal with, any number of which may be new to science. In addition it appears the Greek material expands the known colour variation of some species, adding to the confusion.
Edited by Paul Beuk on 09-09-2010 13:04
Paul

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phil withers
#20 Print Post
Posted on 09-09-2010 15:51
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Location: Lyon, France
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Dare I be terribly unhip and ask for the psychodids - if you can be arsed to sort them, that is
 
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