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Eurithia anthophila, Tachinidae
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JariF |
Posted on 18-07-2009 13:32
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Member Location: Helsinki, Finland Posts: 2072 Joined: 20.01.06 |
Hi, these were flying with several Tachina grossa specimens. July 17.2009 Loviisa, Finland. Jari JariF attached the following image: [136.72Kb] Edited by JariF on 06-01-2010 10:22 |
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ChrisR |
Posted on 18-07-2009 19:12
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Administrator Location: Reading, England Posts: 7699 Joined: 12.07.04 |
Looks like a Eurithia sp. ... is it male and did you hook-out the genitalia?
Manager of the UK Species Inventory in the Angela Marmont Centre for UK Biodiversity at the Natural History Museum, London. |
JariF |
Posted on 18-07-2009 19:22
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Member Location: Helsinki, Finland Posts: 2072 Joined: 20.01.06 |
Genitalia noup I didn't know I should do that. Well, at the moment I would have no time to do that either. So very many flies to handle every day. I have just time to take some pictures of something that is somehow interesting or new for me. When the winter comes it will be time for genitalia work Jari |
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ChrisR |
Posted on 18-07-2009 20:51
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Administrator Location: Reading, England Posts: 7699 Joined: 12.07.04 |
Eurithia sp. don't *need* male genitalia (they usually have other good-enough features) but the male genitalia are so distinctive that it can save you a lot of hassle With male Eurithia all you have to do is to hook out the extremely large genital capsule so that the external genitalia are fully visible - nothing complicated. It is best done when the fly is soft and pliable because, like sarcophagids, the genitalia become pretty rigid once dry. As an aside, this is one reason that I micro-pin everything on its side onto flat foam sheets in plastic boxes. This allows me to hook-out any genitalia and pin them open while the fly dries. When I am ready to identify them I move the specimen to a foam stage-mount and it is ready to manipulate and curate As a general rule I hook-out *all* male genitalia on every fly I catch. You never know when they will be useful but they usually are at some point and it's better to have done them while the fly is "cooperative" than when it is pinned and a few years old Anyway, never mind - send it to me in the winter (with any tachs) and I will "butcher" it for you Edited by ChrisR on 18-07-2009 20:56 Manager of the UK Species Inventory in the Angela Marmont Centre for UK Biodiversity at the Natural History Museum, London. |
Zeegers |
Posted on 19-07-2009 08:47
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Member Location: Soest, NL Posts: 18546 Joined: 21.07.04 |
looks like anthophila Theo |
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JariF |
Posted on 19-07-2009 13:14
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Member Location: Helsinki, Finland Posts: 2072 Joined: 20.01.06 |
Thank's again. Shall I name it cf anthophila so far and rename it after the specimen is determined ? Jari |
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Zeegers |
Posted on 19-07-2009 16:45
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Member Location: Soest, NL Posts: 18546 Joined: 21.07.04 |
Yes,I'm not 100 % sure Theo |
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JariF |
Posted on 06-01-2010 10:21
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Member Location: Helsinki, Finland Posts: 2072 Joined: 20.01.06 |
And Eurithia anthophila it was. Jari |
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