Diptera.info :: Identification queries :: Diptera (adults)
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Strange Fly, weird head!
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Tony T |
Posted on 28-04-2007 21:30
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Member Location: New Brunswick, Canada Posts: 662 Joined: 08.02.07 |
23 April 2007, New Brunswick, Canada. Body length (head to tip of abdomen) 3mm. 3rd femur enlarged, row of spines behind eye, spikey palps. Family or better? Tony T attached the following image: [44.41Kb] |
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jorgemotalmeida |
Posted on 28-04-2007 22:19
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Member Location: Viseu - PORTUGAL Posts: 9295 Joined: 05.06.06 |
Phoridae! perhaps Megaselia sp.??
Edited by jorgemotalmeida on 28-04-2007 22:20 |
Tony T |
Posted on 28-04-2007 22:50
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Member Location: New Brunswick, Canada Posts: 662 Joined: 08.02.07 |
Thanks Jorge, a new Fanmily for me |
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jorgemotalmeida |
Posted on 28-04-2007 23:03
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Member Location: Viseu - PORTUGAL Posts: 9295 Joined: 05.06.06 |
here phorid flies are very common (specially Megaselia sp.). I see them in window in very quick movements (hence the name scuttle flies), and with Citrus limon as well! They are attracted by white and yellow things.
Edited by jorgemotalmeida on 28-04-2007 23:03 |
Kahis |
Posted on 28-04-2007 23:44
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Member Location: Helsinki, Finland Posts: 1999 Joined: 02.09.04 |
Phoridae, but not Megaselia since it has strong setae on legs (in additional to spurs). It's a female which makes even generic placement dififcult. Diplonevra?
Kahis |
jorgemotalmeida |
Posted on 28-04-2007 23:51
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Member Location: Viseu - PORTUGAL Posts: 9295 Joined: 05.06.06 |
i think Sabine could provide the correct genus and perhaps species. |
Sabine Brenner |
Posted on 02-05-2007 17:53
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Member Location: Austria Posts: 5 Joined: 20.11.06 |
Hi everybody, I will do my best to help you. I was on holiday in the Netherlands the last two weeks to explain my late answer Its definitely not Megaselia and a female, you are right Kahis. I would say that it could be a Borophaga female. The swelling of vein 3 at the distal end, and the strong basal bent of the vein 4 seem very typical. To give you my assessment it eventually could be Borophaga femorata (Meigen 1830). But to be completely sure I would need a better picture of the wing and the tibias 1-3. I hope you are satisfied with my determinations. |
jorgemotalmeida |
Posted on 02-05-2007 19:14
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Member Location: Viseu - PORTUGAL Posts: 9295 Joined: 05.06.06 |
with this help, I will photo some more phorid flies. It would be great to have confirmation of Borophaga femorata! |
Tony T |
Posted on 04-05-2007 19:16
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Member Location: New Brunswick, Canada Posts: 662 Joined: 08.02.07 |
Sabine Brenner wrote: .... To give you my assessment it eventually could be Borophaga femorata (Meigen 1830). But to be completely sure I would need a better picture of the wing and the tibias 1-3. I hope you are satisfied with my determinations. Thank you, most helpful. Unfortunately these images are the best detail I can achieve with my camera. We have 5 species in NA: Borophaga clavata Loew 1866 (Phora) Borophaga fuscipalpis Schmitz 1952 (Borophaga) Borophaga subsultans Linnaeus 1766 (Musca) Borophaga tinctipennis Borgmeier 1963 (Borophaga) Borophaga verticalis Borgmeier 1962 (Borophaga). clavata appears to be the most probable based on distribution and the fact that it has been mis-identified in NA as femorata Tony |
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bbrown |
Posted on 05-01-2011 04:42
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Member Location: Los Angeles, California Posts: 103 Joined: 17.02.05 |
Sabine- it is Borophaga subsultans, a common species in the Maritimes. Brian Brian Brown Entomology NH Museum of Los Angeles Co. |
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