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Diptera.info :: Identification queries :: Diptera (adults)
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Conopidae - Myopa occulta :)
jorgemotalmeida
#1 Print Post
Posted on 02-06-2007 23:52
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Location: Viseu - PORTUGAL
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Hi


* locality - Silgueiros - Viseu - PORTUGAL
* date - 2007.06.02
* size - 5 mm - 6 mm (medium fly)
* habitat - open land
* substrate - near river, and hovering above sand

two white spots in postpronotum (right/left); orange intumescence in posterior part of the head in each side; very clear wings; gena is very, very white and with few "microtrochia" (is this the correct word?) and as you can see the gena is broad but not salient/prominent; white halteres; abdomen with reddish hues on sternites, and much more black with some white stripes on tergite (specially more near extremity of abdomen); femur spinose in ventral part; ocelli present (so it cannot belongs to the Conopinae subfamily). Other thing: this fly doesn?t have dorsal preapical bristle in tibia (it seems..) - usually we find it in Myopa (but I don't know if there are exceptions..).

Sicus sp. ? But gena is very broad.. neither Conops neither Dalmannia (never this last, I'm sure.)... neither Psycocephala or Thecophora. So what this can be? Smile Myopa?? - the probability is that this species is common. Smile

Or it could be Melanosoma?

EDIT ---> Title changed from "new spectacular conopid. intriguing one. Wink" to "Conopidae - Myopa cf. occulta Smile" and finally to "Conopidae - Myopa occulta Smile"
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jorgemotalmeida
#2 Print Post
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jorgemotalmeida
#3 Print Post
Posted on 02-06-2007 23:53
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other.. Wink
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jorgemotalmeida
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other view.
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jorgemotalmeida
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#6 Print Post
Posted on 03-06-2007 00:33
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#7 Print Post
Posted on 03-06-2007 18:26
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no hints for this one? It is a good signal! CoolGrin
 
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David Clements
#8 Print Post
Posted on 03-06-2007 19:56
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This is a Myopa, possibly Myopa occulta.
 
jorgemotalmeida
#9 Print Post
Posted on 03-06-2007 20:07
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what must I look so we can final confirmation?
But this seems to be an exception to the rule: "they have dorsal preapical bristle in tibia" -- usually we find it in Myopa. I know there in Nature there are no absolut rules. It likes to be "out-of-law" Smile

 
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jorgemotalmeida
#10 Print Post
Posted on 03-06-2007 20:10
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if this is really Myopa occulta would be very great. Smile
 
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Zeegers
#11 Print Post
Posted on 03-06-2007 20:24
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It's Myopa occulta.
The spinulae on the tibiae are distinctive, at least according to Seguy.

Theo Zeegers
 
jorgemotalmeida
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Posted on 03-06-2007 20:32
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occulta in English means hidden/occult. My question: this could be due two hypothesis --- it is rare to spot this fly, so that name for species: occulta - hidden from us, as we can say... or it means that has some characteristic that we can see in all other Myopa and not in this one (perhaps that bristle in tibia absent??). Which of these hypothesis explain much better for "Myopa occulta"? Let me know. Thank you.

I wish to have that Seguy key. Smile

This is really an awesome fly. I tried to spot more today, but I didn't see this again. In next time. Wink
Edited by jorgemotalmeida on 03-06-2007 20:49
 
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Tony Irwin
#13 Print Post
Posted on 03-06-2007 20:33
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I presume that's spinulae on the femora, Theo? Wink
Tony
----------
Tony Irwin
 
jorgemotalmeida
#14 Print Post
Posted on 03-06-2007 20:36
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Tony Irwin wrote:
I presume that's spinulae on the femora, Theo? Wink


i think the same. Smile Femora. Smile
 
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Kahis
#15 Print Post
Posted on 04-06-2007 07:52
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jorgemotalmeida wrote:
occulta in English means hidden/occult. My question: this could be due two hypothesis --- it is rare to spot this fly, so that name for species: occulta - hidden from us, as we can say... or it means that has some characteristic that we can see in all other Myopa and not in this one (perhaps that bristle in tibia absent??). Which of these hypothesis explain much better for "Myopa occulta"? Let me know. Thank you.


Well, at least here in Finland M. occulta is very well hidden. So good in fact, that it has not been found in 150 years. Since it was known from a very small area and no suitable sites remain in this area, it's all but certainly extinct in this country Sad
Kahis
 
www.iki.fi/kahanpaa
Zeegers
#16 Print Post
Posted on 04-06-2007 18:00
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I'm so sorry, translating from French to English is not easy when you are dutch. Spinulae on the femora.

Theo
 
jorgemotalmeida
#17 Print Post
Posted on 04-06-2007 21:40
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here goes an amplification almost near 4:1, perhaps 3,5:1 (there is very little dof)

The gena is very white as I told before. So it is hard to avoid the flash there. The face looks alien.
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