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Diptera.info :: Identification queries :: Diptera (adults)
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Unknown fly
Isidro
#1 Print Post
Posted on 17-09-2007 12:37
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Location: Zaragoza, Spain
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Yesterday, Sabi?anigo, aragon, Spain, pre-Pyrenees, mountain mediterranean climate. Habitat river, quiet water, with many algae and low level, contaminated. Very low level of water. In a stone of the river, and sucking the water of the lime. Size: about 6-7 mm.

aycu09.webshots.com/image/26248/2001143525006125153_rs.jpg

Thanks Wink
 
Paul Beuk
#2 Print Post
Posted on 17-09-2007 12:41
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Ephydridae?
Paul

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Isidro
#3 Print Post
Posted on 17-09-2007 14:42
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Maybe...

The pic is bad but I think that the bright colours of the fly are distinctive... can be known...

Thanks!
 
Tony Irwin
#4 Print Post
Posted on 17-09-2007 18:18
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Paul Beuk wrote:
Ephydridae?

Not one that I've ever seen before Frown
I know it seems an unlikely habitat, but I wonder whether it could be Odiniidae?
Edited by Tony Irwin on 17-09-2007 18:24
Tony
----------
Tony Irwin
 
Paul Beuk
#5 Print Post
Posted on 17-09-2007 19:10
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No, these usually have banded legs. I was first thinking of Leucophenga maculata but the had is not enopugh in focus to check the setae, the wing venation does not wuite seem to fit and the habitat is off.
Paul

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Nikita Vikhrev
#6 Print Post
Posted on 17-09-2007 20:30
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Lauxaniidae?
Nikita Vikhrev - Zool Museum of Moscow University
 
jorgemotalmeida
#7 Print Post
Posted on 17-09-2007 20:47
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it appears to be an Odiniidae fly! But not sure...
 
http://www.flickr.com/photos/superegnum
Isidro
#8 Print Post
Posted on 17-09-2007 21:42
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Two votes for Odiniidae, one for Lauxaniidae and one for Ephydridae... it looks impossible!
 
crex
#9 Print Post
Posted on 17-09-2007 22:00
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Paul Beuk wrote:
No, these usually have banded legs. ...

"... legs sometimes banded" (Oosterbroek)
 
Steve Gaimari
#10 Print Post
Posted on 17-09-2007 22:13
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This is Prosopomyia pallida Loew (Lauxaniidae)!!Smile
Steve Gaimari
Plant Pest Diagnostics Lab, CDFA
3294 Meadowview Road
Sacramento, CA 95832-1448, USA
 
http://www.cdfa.ca.gov/pla/ppd/staff/sgaimari.html
Paul Beuk
#11 Print Post
Posted on 18-09-2007 07:20
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Thanks, Steve. The species was completely unknown to me. Now I at least have the general impression. Smile
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Nikita Vikhrev
#12 Print Post
Posted on 18-09-2007 15:15
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It is what I meaned, this fly looks and act exactly as Cestrotus, which I know from river stones in Thailand
Nikita Vikhrev - Zool Museum of Moscow University
 
Isidro
#13 Print Post
Posted on 18-09-2007 15:56
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Location: Zaragoza, Spain
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My answer flied ShockShockSad

I said: Thanks, Steve! Four you, nothing is impossible!!!

Thanks also to Nikita, as Thailand i very far Wink I put it as Prosopomyia.
 
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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?

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04.03.25 17:10
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