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Ulidiidae -> Homalocephala biumbrata
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Marion Friedrich |
Posted on 24-05-2022 23:11
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Member Location: Saxony, Germany Posts: 1151 Joined: 07.10.09 |
Hi, I found this fast fly on a dead Aspen in a forest. Is species ID possible? Thank you, Marion Germany, Saxony, ca. 350 m, 22.05.2022. Marion Friedrich attached the following image: [180.35Kb] Edited by Marion Friedrich on 09-01-2023 16:53 |
Marion Friedrich |
Posted on 24-05-2022 23:12
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Member Location: Saxony, Germany Posts: 1151 Joined: 07.10.09 |
2nd picture
Marion Friedrich attached the following image: [171.25Kb] |
Marion Friedrich |
Posted on 08-07-2022 23:14
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Member Location: Saxony, Germany Posts: 1151 Joined: 07.10.09 |
In the meantime I took some more fly photos on the same aspen which may be helpful for ID.
Marion Friedrich attached the following image: [194.23Kb] |
Marion Friedrich |
Posted on 08-07-2022 23:17
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Member Location: Saxony, Germany Posts: 1151 Joined: 07.10.09 |
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Marion Friedrich attached the following image: [178.49Kb] |
Marion Friedrich |
Posted on 08-07-2022 23:18
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Member Location: Saxony, Germany Posts: 1151 Joined: 07.10.09 |
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Marion Friedrich attached the following image: [191.98Kb] |
tristram |
Posted on 09-07-2022 11:13
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Member Location: Reading, UK Posts: 1330 Joined: 27.06.10 |
Maybe Ulidiidae |
Jan Maca |
Posted on 09-07-2022 12:11
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Member Location: Posts: 1189 Joined: 25.03.10 |
Yes, I would say it is Seioptera vibrans. |
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Marion Friedrich |
Posted on 09-07-2022 15:37
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Member Location: Saxony, Germany Posts: 1151 Joined: 07.10.09 |
Thank you very much. Seioptera vibrans seems to be variable in colour. I overlooked it in the gallery because of the relatively dark and less reddish frons of my flies. Greetings, Marion |
Marion Friedrich |
Posted on 24-10-2022 14:38
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Member Location: Saxony, Germany Posts: 1151 Joined: 07.10.09 |
I looked at Seioptera vibrans again. In the Seioptera vibrans pictures in the gallery veins R4+5 and M1 converge to the wing tip. In my pictures, the veins R4+5 and M1 are almost parallel at the tip. So I suspect it might be a different species. The tribe Seiopterini includes in Europe Seioptera vibrans, Pseudoseioptera demonstrans and some species of the genus Homalocephala (Fauna Europaea). Together with Seioptera vibrans Homalocephala albitarsis, H. biumbrata and H. mamaevi are recorded in Germany. In the key of UK species is mentioned that larvae of Homalocephala biumbrata develop under the bark of fallen aspen. The 2 UK species differ in the color of legs (H. albitarsis: completely reddish and H. biumbrata: dark-brown to black) and in the restriction of brown coloration to cell Sc (H. albitarsis) or further extension to r-m (H. biumbrata). Could the flies shown here belong to the genus Homalocephala, perhaps H. biumbrata? If so, the yellow halteres would speek for biumbrata and exclude H. mamaevi with dark brown halteres.(Homalocephala key of E. P. Kameneva & V. A. Korneyev) But H. biumbrata I could neither find in the Catalogue of Life nor in Systema Dipterorum. A search for the basiomym Psairoptera biumbrata Wahlberg, 1839 in Systema Dipterorum resulted in the valid name Homalocephala albitarsis Zetterstedt. Now I am puzzled. Marion |
Nosferatumyia |
Posted on 08-01-2023 02:03
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Member Location: Posts: 3441 Joined: 29.12.07 |
Certainly a Homalocephala. ID with the key by Kameneva & Korneyev gives definite nomenclature. Systema Dipterorum has big gaps in Ulidiidae Val |
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Marion Friedrich |
Posted on 09-01-2023 13:04
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Member Location: Saxony, Germany Posts: 1151 Joined: 07.10.09 |
Thanks for the confirmation of the Homalocephala and the explanation. Greetings, Marion |
Nosferatumyia |
Posted on 09-01-2023 14:22
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Member Location: Posts: 3441 Joined: 29.12.07 |
Homalocephala biumbrata Wahlberg, indeed.
Val |
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Marion Friedrich |
Posted on 09-01-2023 16:52
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Member Location: Saxony, Germany Posts: 1151 Joined: 07.10.09 |
Thanks again for species ID. Marion |
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