Thread subject: Diptera.info :: Probably common

Posted by Andre Jas on 17-08-2005 15:55
#1

This is probably common, but I can't find it on the net. Anyone?

Thanks,

Andr?
www.diptera.info/forim/7-0597-1.jpg
www.diptera.info/forim/7-0597-2.jpg

Posted by Mark van Veen on 17-08-2005 17:08
#2

Eristalis tenax

Posted by Andre Jas on 19-08-2005 15:42
#3

Can you explain to me why there are no horizontal white stripes on the body of my videograbs? Female, juv..?

Andr

Posted by Paul Beuk on 19-08-2005 16:54
#4

Maybe melanistic. In some species, the very dark specimens often are intersexes (Scaeva, Melanostoma, Pyrophaena, Parasyrphus). I do not know if the same thing happens in Eristalis.

Posted by Andre on 03-10-2005 13:36
#5

Well, this one is not melanistic. There is a shimmering red visible in the snapshot. This one can be a very fresh specimen, where colour has not fully formed yet. Also there seems to be a connection between bodycolour and temperature at emergence; the colder it was, the darker the specimen stays. In E. tenax the wide range between very red and very dark specimens is a normal phenomenon.

Posted by Andre Jas on 24-10-2005 10:58
#6

Thank you all.

Andr

Posted by Andre on 24-10-2005 15:21
#7

Did you know that among some alligator-species (like Aligator sinensis) temperature determines whether only males, only females or both emerge from the nests?
May be interesting how this works among insectspecies... I guess.
Well, so far my sidestep... B)

Posted by Gisela Merkel-Wallner on 24-10-2005 17:38
#8

In my region, the bavarian forest and eastern northbavaria, such dark spezimen of E. tenax are quite normal. I see them very often.

Gisela

Posted by Andre on 06-11-2005 17:35
#9

They are very common everywhere, jawohl :)