Posted by Raimo on 18-12-2023 20:55
#4
Thanks John. We seems to have only two species in Sweden: myiopiformis and nivicola.
Posted by John Carr on 18-12-2023 21:33
#5
The key in
Die Fliegen (1949) says
1. Taster schwarz ... hiemalis Loew.
— Taster rotgelb ... 2
2. Abdomen und p rotgelb, 6 Schildchenborsten ... myiopiformis Rob.-Desv.
— Abdomen und p schwarzgrau, 4 Schildchenborsten ... cuniculorum Rob.-Desv.
So it keys to
Orbellia myiopiformis. The description says "Schulterbeulen rotgelb", "humeri reddish yellow", which I don't see. I have observed in
Dolichopus that humeri can appear yellowish under a microscope but black to a camera.
Edit: But
nivicola is not in that key, so you need better literature. It was considered a synonym of
O. myiopiformis.
Edited by John Carr on 18-12-2023 21:35
Posted by Raimo on 18-12-2023 21:39
#6
Thankyou John. I better keep it safe and call it a possible Orbellia myiopiformis then.
Posted by Andrzej on 18-12-2023 23:35
#7
... and in Gorodkov (1989) we have a key to both mentioned species...
Edited by Andrzej on 18-12-2023 23:37
Posted by Raimo on 20-12-2023 20:04
#8
Ok Andrzej, then it points to nivicola. It was not a small fly.