Posted by Stephen on 13-08-2006 17:55
#1
Here's a general question, no photo this time.
I notice when I am looking at gray bristly flies that resemble houseflies, sometimes they have tiny spines along the leading edge of the wing.
I found a reference that said Anthomyiid flies have spinules, and Dung Flies (Scathophagidae) usually don't.
Are the presence of these spines along the wing edge used to help ID other families? Do flies in Muscidae or Tachinidae or Calliphorida have spinules, always/sometimes/never?
Thanks for any guidance you can give about this.
Posted by Nikita Vikhrev on 13-08-2006 22:13
#2
Hi Stephen.
All Calyptrate flies have costal break and usualy stron seta /spine near this break. It isn't used for family ID, but sometimes for species level or genus level ID among Calyptrate.
Nikita
Posted by Stephen on 14-08-2006 19:59
#3
Nikita, Thanks for clarifying that for me.