Thread subject: Diptera.info :: Black metalic 3 mm
Posted by BubikolRamios on 08-05-2013 18:52
#1
Loc.: Slovenia
Posted by Paul Beuk on 08-05-2013 22:10
#2
Protearomyia nigra of the Lonchaeidae might be an option.
Posted by BubikolRamios on 08-05-2013 22:22
#3
if this:
http://www.comman...nigra.html is p.t, then not ?
See reverse coloring of legs on my image and that on link.
Posted by Paul Beuk on 08-05-2013 22:34
#4
Ah, memory is always playing tgricks:
Chaetolonchaea dasyops
Posted by BubikolRamios on 09-05-2013 06:45
#5
You sound sure, so I'm going to belive you (-:
Thanks.
Posted by mcerny on 09-05-2013 06:56
#6
Female
Melanagromyza sp. Agromyzidae.
Miloš
Posted by BubikolRamios on 09-05-2013 08:02
#7
hmm ... (-:
BTW, Paul, for some reason no mail notificatin on your post at 08-05-2013 23:34.
Edited by BubikolRamios on 09-05-2013 08:03
Posted by Iain MacGowan on 09-05-2013 09:39
#8
I agree - its not Lonchaeidae ...... Iain
Posted by von Tschirnhaus on 12-05-2013 13:33
#9
Agromyzidae: Melanagromyza sp., female, I confirm with Milos. Lonchaeidae only possess one orbital bristle in the upper part of the orbits (in the image 2 upper reclinate and two lower incurved orbital bristles; the female oviscape is not [as in all world Agromyzidae]conical (or rarely cylindrical) but depressed, the subcosta runs separately to the costa, in the image it is fused with the R1 and typical slightly thickened. Two dorsocentrals are seen and if you look very carefully you detect one posterolateral seta on the mid-tibia in both images (in the upper picture it appears light), typical for most Agromyzinae. Metallic sheen and black halteres let beginners mix up certain Agromyzidae with Lonchaeidae.