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Asilidae copula - Neoepitriptus setosulus
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Sundew |
Posted on 23-10-2018 00:15
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Member Location: Berlin and Baden-Württemberg, Germany Posts: 3915 Joined: 28.07.07 |
Hi, I'm in trouble with this couple! I saw it in Berlin in July 2010. Somehow I am not able to find a good genus for these red-legged ones. Please help! Thanks in advance, Sundew Sundew attached the following image: [233.46Kb] Edited by Sundew on 24-10-2018 00:25 |
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Sundew |
Posted on 23-10-2018 00:16
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Member Location: Berlin and Baden-Württemberg, Germany Posts: 3915 Joined: 28.07.07 |
Some more details.
Sundew attached the following image: [230.39Kb] |
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piros |
Posted on 23-10-2018 01:07
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Member Location: Szeged, Hungary Posts: 1766 Joined: 04.01.12 |
How about Neoepitriptus setosulus ? Greetings, Henrik |
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Sundew |
Posted on 23-10-2018 02:07
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Member Location: Berlin and Baden-Württemberg, Germany Posts: 3915 Joined: 28.07.07 |
Ah - you posted a very similar couple here: https://www.flick...8338925526! I thought of Neoepitriptus, but in Reinoud's photo guide (https://waarnemin...ilidae.pdf) N. setulosus is described as "femora black with a red stripe on the backside; red tibiae apically black with darkened backside" - the pictured flies look dark grey, even the wings, while ours have a red/brown appearance. I wonder if the colouration might be thus variable. Maybe Reinoud will enlighten us. BTW, Neoepitriptus seems to be included in Machimus now, as is Tolmerus. Many thanks for your hint! Regards, Sundew Edited by Sundew on 23-10-2018 19:36 |
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piros |
Posted on 23-10-2018 14:28
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Member Location: Szeged, Hungary Posts: 1766 Joined: 04.01.12 |
These are Neoepitriptus setosulus for sure, because the ID is based on actual, captured specimens, and the fist link leads pictures of specimens that were eventually seen by Reinoud: https://diptera.info/forum/viewthread.php?thread_id=74366 and the other: https://diptera.info/forum/viewthread.php?thread_id=86472 I think your flies match N. setosulus quite nicely. Edited by piros on 23-10-2018 14:33 |
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Sundew |
Posted on 23-10-2018 20:09
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Member Location: Berlin and Baden-Württemberg, Germany Posts: 3915 Joined: 28.07.07 |
That is very convincing, dear Henrik, but I wonder whether Machimus arthriticus can be excluded with absolute certainty. Its ground colouration is reddish, too. Well, the black hairs on top of the occiput of M. arthriticus are lacking in my flies. So Neoepitriptus setosulus is the best choice indeed -thanks again! |
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Quaedfliegh |
Posted on 23-10-2018 23:35
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Member Location: Tilburg Netherlands Posts: 2208 Joined: 18.05.10 |
In my opinion Henrik is right, this has to be N. setosulus. M. arthriticus is almost twice as big, has entirely black femora, dark tibiae and a more true Machimus appearance. As is usual with these genera there is quite some variability which makes it difficult to give an accurate description that fits all individual specimens :-) The shape of the genitalia is more important and in these pictures, the shape confirms ID....
Greetings, Reinoud Field guide to the robber flies of the Netherlands and Belgium: https://www.jeugdbondsuitgeverij.nl/product/field-guide-to-the-robberflies-of-the-netherlands-and-belgium/ https://www.nev.nl/diptera/ |
Sundew |
Posted on 24-10-2018 00:24
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Member Location: Berlin and Baden-Württemberg, Germany Posts: 3915 Joined: 28.07.07 |
And this is the final expert's statement - thank you, Reinoud! |
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piros |
Posted on 24-10-2018 01:05
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Member Location: Szeged, Hungary Posts: 1766 Joined: 04.01.12 |
I changed the title of those two threads relevant to this topic, so that others can find it more easily... There are three threads now dealing with this not-so-common sp Regards, Henrik Edited by piros on 24-10-2018 01:12 |
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