Thread subject: Diptera.info :: Which Nematocera family? --> Cecidomyiidae: Lestremiinae, cf. Anarete
Posted by rafael_carbonell on 17-10-2015 19:44
#1
Hi, I found this tiny fly (about 1 mm) drowned in an abandoned pool in an oak forest environment. Even the pics are not very well, the antennal fist articles are round like Phoridae, the others verticillate like Chironomidae, the wing venation is like Scatopsidar-Lestremiinae, but no idea what could it be (Iberian peninsula: Catalogne: Girona province: Beuda / 2015: 08: 25 / 400 masl)
Edited by rafael_carbonell on 18-10-2015 17:25
Posted by rafael_carbonell on 17-10-2015 19:45
#2
Another view
Posted by rafael_carbonell on 17-10-2015 19:46
#3
An interpretation of wing venation (may be uncorrect)
Posted by rafael_carbonell on 18-10-2015 14:22
#4
Even I can not see if there are ocelli or not, Mycomyia (Cecidomyiidae) has the same kind of antenna (as drawn in Manual of Nearctic Diptera) so Cecidomyiidae can be a good clue.
Posted by John Carr on 18-10-2015 16:51
#5
Maybe an
Anarete.
Posted by rafael_carbonell on 18-10-2015 17:23
#6
Thanks John. I was just going to suggest that genus. Studying the Manual of Nearctic Diptera, I arrived to that genus (despite there are some european genus i do not know which tribe they are). The decreasing size of the floagellomeres is quite characteristic. May interpretation of wing venation was wrong. Here is one more correct.
Posted by John Carr on 16-12-2015 04:14
#7
An enlarged pedicel is associated with male swarming, but is also present to a lesser degree in females of swarming species. In Lestremiinae the swarming genera are
Anarete and
Conarete.
Posted by rafael_carbonell on 25-01-2023 23:56
#8
Thanks!