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Hilara albiventris
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conopid |
Posted on 10-11-2006 12:57
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Member Location: United Kingdom Posts: 1039 Joined: 02.07.04 |
Hi, Does this look anything like Hilara albiventris? conopid attached the following image: [39.63Kb] Nigel Jones, Shrewsbury, United Kingdom |
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rvanderweele |
Posted on 10-11-2006 17:53
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Member Location: Zoelmond, the Netherlands Posts: 1984 Joined: 01.11.06 |
Paul, do you have the new Hilara key at hand? Seeing this lateral picture I would guess indeed H. albiventris or rather H. cingulata. But, as we say here, I am not going to put my hand into the fire for it.
ruud van der weele rvanderweele@gmail.com |
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Paul Beuk |
Posted on 10-11-2006 19:48
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Super Administrator Location: Netherlands Posts: 19365 Joined: 11.05.04 |
In that key I cannot find anything that would suggest otherwise than H. albiventris.
Paul - - - - Paul Beuk on https://diptera.info |
rvanderweele |
Posted on 10-11-2006 21:08
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Member Location: Zoelmond, the Netherlands Posts: 1984 Joined: 01.11.06 |
I do not have the key (yet). I just looked into the British Flies. On page 674 till 677 you`ll find the description of both species. My thought that the specimen may belong to H. cingulata just came by the fact that COllin mentions of albiventris that the first five abdominal segments are whitish yellow, while cingulata has just the basis of the abdomen paler, while sometimes all pale, except hypogonium. Looking at the photo I see that only the first segments are pale, while the remaining are just ventrally pale. ruud van der weele rvanderweele@gmail.com |
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rvanderweele |
Posted on 12-11-2006 19:26
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Member Location: Zoelmond, the Netherlands Posts: 1984 Joined: 01.11.06 |
Paul, I guess you are right. I was just reading the revision of the European species of Hilara flavipes group by Chvala in Studia dipterologica 4(1997) heft 2 pg 463-472. It is important to buy the new key of Hilara by Chvala, since Collin`s work is a bit outdated. H. cingulata is a syn of H. flavipes. It is a pity it is not possible to look at the fly under the microscope, but I think you will come out at H. albiventris.
ruud van der weele rvanderweele@gmail.com |
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conopid |
Posted on 12-11-2006 20:20
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Member Location: United Kingdom Posts: 1039 Joined: 02.07.04 |
Thanks Ruud and Paul, I keyed this out as albiventris with Collin, but was unsure because the pale abdominal segments are limited to the first few segments. I will call it H albiventris based on the discussion here and my ID with Collin. I will invest in Chvala some time - I might even convince the family that it will make a good Christmas gift Nigel Nigel Jones, Shrewsbury, United Kingdom |
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rvanderweele |
Posted on 12-11-2006 20:37
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Member Location: Zoelmond, the Netherlands Posts: 1984 Joined: 01.11.06 |
Nigel, I am thinking about the same, though I also would like the key of Platyzpezidae and Drosophilidae. I am just wondering why a book like the key on Hilara is so very expensive. I think it is for entomology important that amateurs will be able to use the work and, thus, take care for progress in this science.
ruud van der weele rvanderweele@gmail.com |
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Paul Beuk |
Posted on 13-11-2006 08:11
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Super Administrator Location: Netherlands Posts: 19365 Joined: 11.05.04 |
Expensive because: Luxury print, small number of copies, expensive publisher.
Paul - - - - Paul Beuk on https://diptera.info |
conopid |
Posted on 13-11-2006 09:11
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Member Location: United Kingdom Posts: 1039 Joined: 02.07.04 |
Yes the price of many key works is very expensive. It would be great if new keys could all be produced on CD as well as in book form, and sold at a cheaper price, so that amateurs can afford them. We can live in hope! Nigel Jones, Shrewsbury, United Kingdom |
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crex |
Posted on 13-11-2006 11:45
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Member Location: Sweden Posts: 1996 Joined: 22.05.06 |
More PDF keys to the people |
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