Diptera.info :: Identification queries :: Diptera (eggs, larvae, pupae)
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Diptera Larva
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Xespok |
Posted on 13-10-2005 11:30
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Member Location: Debrecen, Hungary Posts: 5550 Joined: 02.03.05 |
I suspect this is a Diptera larva. Can someone say more about it? |
Paul Beuk |
Posted on 13-10-2005 12:27
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Super Administrator Location: Netherlands Posts: 19363 Joined: 11.05.04 |
Can you say more about it? Where did you find it. The substrate appears to be liquid but was it aquatic, living in wet rotting vegetable matter, ...
Paul - - - - Paul Beuk on https://diptera.info |
Xespok |
Posted on 13-10-2005 17:46
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Member Location: Debrecen, Hungary Posts: 5550 Joined: 02.03.05 |
There was an overflow of a small creek with a plastic thing attached to it, so that it would directly flow into some channel alongside the road. The plastic thing was grown in by some bacterial biofilm. The water on the biofilm was very thin, maybe thinner than the larva. The water was flowing slowly. To be honest id did not look like a very eutrophic environment, but the larva might have been washed down from the creak, which might have contained some more plant material. Possibly it is not important, but this fly was around in large numbers: http://xespok.net...1000028181 I do not really know what kind of fly this is. |
Paul Beuk |
Posted on 13-10-2005 22:40
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Super Administrator Location: Netherlands Posts: 19363 Joined: 11.05.04 |
I think the fly may be an ephydrid, but possibly Kahis can confirm that. I will look into the larva.
Paul - - - - Paul Beuk on https://diptera.info |
Paul Beuk |
Posted on 14-10-2005 08:22
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Super Administrator Location: Netherlands Posts: 19363 Joined: 11.05.04 |
The best I can do is a chironomid larva, though I cannot rule out Ceratopogonidae. There are many grazers in the Chironmidae of which the larvae go across submerged surfaces to graze the algae. Paul - - - - Paul Beuk on https://diptera.info |
Xespok |
Posted on 14-10-2005 12:07
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Member Location: Debrecen, Hungary Posts: 5550 Joined: 02.03.05 |
Yes, it is fully conceivable. In fact the morpholohy is quite similar to some other Chironomid larvae, that I had seen before, though the color of this larva is not red (the others I saw were red, likely larvae of C. yoshimatsui), possibly because this species lives in a more oxygen-rich environment. |
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