Thread subject: Diptera.info :: Symphyta sp

Posted by tarsiger on 06-02-2008 03:00
#1

August 19th 2007 Dalstorp Sweden

/janis

all for today... :-)

Edited by tarsiger on 07-02-2008 01:26

Posted by Jan Willem on 06-02-2008 09:00
#2

Looks more like Symphyta to me.

Posted by mgk1956 on 06-02-2008 11:58
#3

cant be symphyta, Jan the halteres are prominent

Posted by Jan Willem on 06-02-2008 13:07
#4

mgk1956 wrote:
cant be symphyta, Jan the halteres are prominent


Well if the halteres are that prominent, please point them out to me. I still go for Symphyta (Tenthredinidae). But I've been totally wrong in other cases:(.

Edited by Jan Willem on 06-02-2008 13:52

Posted by Andre on 06-02-2008 13:57
#5

It's Symphita, one of the small orange species. Indeed no halteres visible. Instead, a bit of a hind wing seems to stick out above the abdomen...

Posted by tarsiger on 06-02-2008 14:43
#6

Thx all of you!

Is it possible to id them from a photo? (not one from a microscope... ;-)

janis

Posted by Sundew on 06-02-2008 16:20
#7

Is "Symphita" a genus indeed? Otherwise, if you speak of the suborder Symphyta (which I suppose, the sawflies), you need not use italics, and you have to replace the i with an y.
Regards, Sundew

Posted by crex on 06-02-2008 17:12
#8

... and Symphyta belongs to Hymenoptera, not Diptera B)

Posted by jorgen on 01-03-2008 19:28
#9

A good view of the wings is mostly needed to identify sawflies. At species level you have many chance that you need to check the genitals to be sure.