Thread subject: Diptera.info :: Tolmerus?

Posted by Kirsten Eta on 04-07-2014 16:08
#1

Hello together,

this morning in my garden (Hamburg, West Germany, MTB 2424) I found this about 20mm Assilidae. The long wings where all the time open, what I've never seen at this flies. Is a indentification possible?

Friendly greetings

Kirsten

Edited by Kirsten Eta on 04-07-2014 16:10

Posted by Kirsten Eta on 04-07-2014 16:08
#2

Second pic

Edited by Kirsten Eta on 04-07-2014 16:09

Posted by Kirsten Eta on 04-07-2014 16:09
#3

Number 3

Posted by ValerioW on 04-07-2014 16:13
#4

Hello Kirtsten. What about Machimus female?

Posted by Kirsten Eta on 04-07-2014 16:33
#5

Hi Valerio,

thank you, I'm not against ;-) . Up till now I've seen one Machimus in 2005 an made realy bad pics. Is there a chance for a nearer identification today?

Posted by ValerioW on 04-07-2014 16:44
#6

Initially was thinking about Philonicus albiceps, but it doesn't convince

Edited by ValerioW on 04-07-2014 17:03

Posted by Mark van Veen on 04-07-2014 17:41
#7

Eutolmus rufibarbis, I would say. The ovipostor (it is a female) is laterally flattened, and the dorsocentral bristles on the thoracic dorsum are not present at the front.

Posted by Kirsten Eta on 04-07-2014 21:46
#8

Hello Mark,

that looks great.

Thanks to both of you

Edited by Kirsten Eta on 04-07-2014 21:47

Posted by ValerioW on 04-07-2014 23:12
#9

Mark van Veen wrote:
Eutolmus rufibarbis, I would say. The ovipostor (it is a female) is laterally flattened, and the dorsocentral bristles on the thoracic dorsum are not present at the front.



Theorically ovipositor is also somehow narrowed even in Machimus complex. Of course here is greatly compressed.

But is the overall shape of this female that made me converted to your idea about Dysmachus complex (which for some authors includes Eutolmus sp.). The kind of constriction in the ventral surface of the ovipositor really reinforces E. rufirbarbis ID (+ scarcity of acr & dc pre-sut.).