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Chymomyza amoena, Oct.22, 2006
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Dmitry Gavryushin |
Posted on 24-10-2006 09:24
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Member Location: Moscow region, Russia Posts: 3308 Joined: 17.10.05 |
Found at my balcony, size a bit less than 3mm. First I thought it's a G. tripunctata, but now I'm not so sure... [Subject changed from Geomyza?] Dmitry Gavryushin attached the following image: [88.79Kb] Edited by Dmitry Gavryushin on 24-10-2006 15:31 |
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Dmitry Gavryushin |
Posted on 24-10-2006 09:25
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Member Location: Moscow region, Russia Posts: 3308 Joined: 17.10.05 |
Another view.
Dmitry Gavryushin attached the following image: [90.38Kb] |
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Paul Beuk |
Posted on 24-10-2006 09:47
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Super Administrator Location: Netherlands Posts: 19365 Joined: 11.05.04 |
Make it Drosophilidae: Chymomyza amoena. Imported from North America.
Paul - - - - Paul Beuk on https://diptera.info |
Dmitry Gavryushin |
Posted on 24-10-2006 15:28
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Member Location: Moscow region, Russia Posts: 3308 Joined: 17.10.05 |
Many thanks Paul. My only (poor) excuse's I'm not the only one @ diptera.info who took this nice fly for a Opomyzidae . Nearctic Chymomyza amoena is the only drosophilid to breed in fallen parasitized substrates (plums, unripe and ripe apples, crabapples, acorns, black walnut hulls). Minimum generation time is 30 days. The breeding season extends from May into October. The species is coldhardy; 3rd instar larvae overwinter in fruits or nuts. Chymomyza amoena was discovered in the former Czechoslovakia in 1975, spread rapidly, entered Switzerland in 1988 and was reared from parasitized chestnuts, acorns and soft fruits in 1990/1991 in Canton Ticino. Later work in Switzerland showed C. amoena still bred in parasitized apples in addition to chestnuts and acorns. We predicted and verified it moved north into cider apple orchards on the Swiss/German border and south into northern Italy, also from Vienna into southern Austria and in France from Jura, Ain, Rhone and Is P re into the Ardeche region. Pest larvae exit chestnuts in autumn; C. amoena may use them into July, then breeds in apples. We investigated overwintering in chestnuts in March 2004 in southern Switzerland, northern Italy and the Ardeche and in acorns in southern Switzerland. Parasitized chestnuts were empty; C. amoena larvae were in acorns along with Cydia splendana caterpillars. Europe?s hot summer in 2003 delayed chestnut drop but adds evidence this represents a vacant niche for C. amoena. Breeding in parasitized acorns and apples may account for C. amoena?s spread in Germany and throughout Europe. Vacant niches, behavioral constancy and the spread of Nearctic Chymomyza amoena (Loew) (Diptera: Drosophilidae) in Europe: Evidence from overwintering studies, by H. T. Band, R. Neal Band and G. B?chli (Michigan Sstate University's 2006 Invasive species symposium papers) |
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Susan R Walter |
Posted on 25-10-2006 13:35
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Member Location: Touraine du Sud, central France Posts: 1802 Joined: 14.01.06 |
Hey! Stylish new monogram
Susan |
Dmitry Gavryushin |
Posted on 25-10-2006 14:36
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Member Location: Moscow region, Russia Posts: 3308 Joined: 17.10.05 |
Thanks Susan - an EPS file was dormant on a backup disk from one of my older PCs - this logo reflects my then musical preferences and maybe some basic views on life (these were much darker than present ones...) |
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Tony Irwin |
Posted on 25-10-2006 15:49
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Member Location: Norwich, England Posts: 7234 Joined: 19.11.04 |
And I noticed the new avatar - excellent choice!
Tony ---------- Tony Irwin |
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Susan R Walter |
Posted on 26-10-2006 12:30
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Member Location: Touraine du Sud, central France Posts: 1802 Joined: 14.01.06 |
So - flies are life enhancing
Susan |
Dmitry Gavryushin |
Posted on 26-10-2006 17:16
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Member Location: Moscow region, Russia Posts: 3308 Joined: 17.10.05 |
Absolutely no doubt Susan . |
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