Thread subject: Diptera.info :: Huge thorax and skinny little abdomen
Posted by Stephen on 27-05-2007 19:46
#1
I like how this fly is hugely robust on the thorax and then has a thin little abdomen. Scathophagidae, right? Can anyone shed any light on ID to genus?
West Virginia USA, 26 May 2007, alongside a very small woodland stream. Length about 6.4 mm.
Posted by Stephen on 27-05-2007 19:47
#2
Here is a frontal view of this fly.
Posted by jorgemotalmeida on 27-05-2007 19:49
#3
Lauxaniidae... Sapromyza sp. ? (it is a test, as Nikita used to says) :D
Posted by Stephen on 27-05-2007 20:02
#4
And just to make it interesting, is this one same family? It is a different individual. What huge eyes (so, a male?)
This one has an even smaller abdomen that doesn't seem to match the huge thorax.
Same location as the first fly, a couple of days earlier, size just a little smaller.
Posted by Stephen on 27-05-2007 20:03
#5
Here is a look at the front of fly #2.
Posted by jorgemotalmeida on 27-05-2007 20:22
#6
different sexes. one female and the other is male. :D let?s go wait for real experts. :D
Posted by Nikita Vikhrev on 27-05-2007 20:29
#7
I think it is Anthomyiidae, genus
Pegomya. It looks very much alike our Pegomya testacea, which is only Palearctic species.
Nikita
Posted by jorgemotalmeida on 27-05-2007 20:32
#8
in the first case, anal vein doesn?t reach wing margin. is it one of exceptions among Anthomyiidae? :)
Posted by Stephen on 28-05-2007 11:09
#9
Thank-you Jorge, Nikita! Time for me to go and look at some pictures.
Posted by Nikita Vikhrev on 03-06-2007 12:40
#10
I'd cancel my compare with P. testacea, but I still think it is some Pegomya of Anthomyiidae.
Jorge: the fact that it seems by photo that
anal vein doesn?t reach wing margin
doesn't mean that it doesn't reach it really, it is bad visible character for photo...