Thread subject: Diptera.info :: Scathophagidae, not Scathophaga.

Posted by Nikita Vikhrev on 09-05-2006 15:43
#1

Mosc. reg, 07 may, 4-4,5mm, in grass.
It is myfirst attempt to deal with Scathophagidae key.
My result - Amaurosoma flavipes.
Correct?

Posted by Paul Beuk on 09-05-2006 16:52
#2

In current nomenclature that would be Nanna flavipes and I think that is possible. Need to check, though, because maybe it could be N. inermis, as well.

Posted by Nikita Vikhrev on 09-05-2006 17:20
#3

Thank you Paul. I found Amaurosoma on Kahis'S site http://www.astro.helsinki.fi/~kahanpaa/diptera/list/online/node92.html and decided that I can stop nomenclature chsking:D.
In may key f1 yellow or with black line on dorsal part of f1. I decided that only black line is the case. If so - N. flavipes. N. inermis - f1 completely or mostly black.
Nikita
P.S. Spend a hell lot of time searching your Brachyopa elsewhere, but not in Syrphidae family:o

Posted by Kahis on 09-05-2006 18:04
#4

It seems that Nanna/Amaurosoma is a matter of opinion; I'm not quite sure which specialist to believe :D in this case. Sifner (2003) uses Amaurosoma and details why he think it is the valid name.

Sifner (2003), The family Scathophagidae (Diptera) of the Chech and Slovak Rebublics (with notes on selected Palaearctic taxa), Acta Mus. Nat. Pragae, Series B, Nat. Hist. 59(1-2):1-90 - an excellent paper, but suffering from unacceptably poor english (including some sections that simply make no sense at all:|)

Edited by Kahis on 09-05-2006 18:04

Posted by Nikita Vikhrev on 09-05-2006 23:36
#5

Thank you Kahis.
My choise - Amaurosoma (sounds better), but unfortunely I already printed labels with Nanna. Let it be so till experts's final decision.
Nikita

Posted by Nikita Vikhrev on 12-05-2006 15:35
#6

As usualy, collected by Black.
Another species I think.
Legs - all yellow, pleuras partly shining - N./A. brevifrons?

Posted by Robert Nash on 12-05-2006 17:53
#7

Noted Nikita's comment "Spend a hell lot of time searching your Brachyopa elsewhere, but not in Syrphidae family" In collections Brachyopa are often amongst undetermined Muscidae/Anthomyiidae. Perhaps not surprisingly They don't look like Syrphidae.
Sunny in Ireland today B) Robert Nice photo Nikita:p:p

Posted by Nikita Vikhrev on 12-05-2006 21:17
#8

Hi Robert. During long time you didn't appear at forum. Glad to hear you back!
Nikita