Thread subject: Diptera.info :: eggs
Posted by BubikolRamios on 15-01-2010 05:54
#1
1 mm, Slovenia, 13.06.09, no idea if this belongs to diptera, but mybe ...
?
Edited by BubikolRamios on 15-01-2010 06:08
Posted by pwalter on 15-01-2010 12:18
#2
1 mm is big! So maybe a buterfly. I think dipterans do nat lay eggs on leaves, maybe only Syrphidae (which have aphid-eating larvae). Others may lay eggs in the tissue of leaves (those making mines) and the wast majority lay egs in soil, leaf litter, decaying material...
Posted by pierred on 20-01-2010 08:58
#4
Hello,
After looking at both pictures on flickr, I remembered some photos of last year, in particular this one:
Pierre Duhem : France : 3/7/2009 : Paris : 75018
altitude : 50 m - taille : 1 mm
ref:47081
The eggs were more reddish and not so regular, but this could be a solution.
Posted by BubikolRamios on 20-01-2010 09:14
#5
could be, coz I can find it here:
http://www2.pms-l...liohya.htm
site run by bunch of professionals.
Thanks!
Posted by pwalter on 20-01-2010 09:21
#6
So, it must be a bug than...
Posted by Paul Beuk on 20-01-2010 09:39
#7
I'd say Coreidae.
Posted by BubikolRamios on 20-01-2010 10:54
#8
acording to this:
http://www.cababs...0043144033
The eggs of C. marginatus were singly laid in cotton batting and were usually separated from each other. On the average, the elongated eggs were 1.72±0.01 mm long and 1.08±0.01 mm wide. The eggs were yellow upon deposition but changed to brown after embryonic development. Variable shaped polygons were observed on the egg surface. A ring of widely separated aero-micropylar tubercles was observed and well-marked operculum intersects the ring micropyles. The hatching line was cracked in a circular shape by an egg burster.
You might be reight, especialy as the thing lives here.
Tere is my colection of images from egg,imph to adult:
http://agrozoo.ne...&l2=en
Edited by BubikolRamios on 20-01-2010 11:14