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Diptera.info :: Identification queries :: Diptera (adults)
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please help me to identify this one...
odile
#1 Print Post
Posted on 17-01-2007 19:42
Member

Location: French Guiana
Posts: 4
Joined: 17.01.07

hello
I took those pictures in my kitchen last saturday. I'm leaving in Mana, a small town in French Guiana,South America, near the cost. What is name ? group ?
Thank you.
svtonweb.free.fr/jalbum/faune/insectes/diptere/slides/diptere-profil.jpg
svtonweb.free.fr/jalbum/faune/insectes/diptere/slides/diptere_dos.jpg
 
jorgemotalmeida
#2 Print Post
Posted on 17-01-2007 20:14
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Location: Viseu - PORTUGAL
Posts: 9296
Joined: 05.06.06

i think this belongs to the Tephritidae family... very strange fly, indeed...
 
http://www.flickr.com/photos/superegnum
Nikita Vikhrev
#3 Print Post
Posted on 17-01-2007 20:18
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Location: Moscow, Russia
Posts: 9475
Joined: 24.05.05

Hi.
Comme j'aime Guiane! I think that French Guiana is the best place in the world. I visited it twice (unfortunely this time I wasn't entomologist yetSad). But I'm always dreaming to visit it again and again!
As for fly, I think it is Tephritidae, Dacinae. But I'm not expert.
Nikita
Nikita Vikhrev - Zool Museum of Moscow University
 
odile
#4 Print Post
Posted on 17-01-2007 20:20
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Location: French Guiana
Posts: 4
Joined: 17.01.07

Thank you
very strange indeed, its abdomen looks like a second head.
 
jorgemotalmeida
#5 Print Post
Posted on 17-01-2007 20:29
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Location: Viseu - PORTUGAL
Posts: 9296
Joined: 05.06.06

Nikita Vikhrev wrote:
Hi.
Comme j'aime Guiane! I think that French Guiana is the best place in the world. I visited it twice (unfortunely this time I wasn't entomologist yetSad). But I'm always dreaming to visit it again and again!
As for fly, I think it is Tephritidae, Dacinae. But I'm not expert.
Nikita


j'adore Guiane Fran?aise. Smile But I never went there. Smile lol

there was an annular eclipse in last September... but unfortunately, the airplane prices are not cheap. Sad((

all members of diptera.info should have the right to receive a free ticket to French Guiana. GrinGrin why not? Smile
 
http://www.flickr.com/photos/superegnum
odile
#6 Print Post
Posted on 17-01-2007 20:55
Member

Location: French Guiana
Posts: 4
Joined: 17.01.07

Yes, you will be welcome here Smile There is so much to do to ID...
Fruit fly seems a good name, and for the family, Dacinae, i will research more information on the web.
Thank you for All
Odile

 
jorgemotalmeida
#7 Print Post
Posted on 17-01-2007 21:59
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Location: Viseu - PORTUGAL
Posts: 9296
Joined: 05.06.06

odile wrote:
Yes, you will be welcome here Smile There is so much to do to ID...
Fruit fly seems a good name, and for the family, Dacinae, i will research more information on the web.
Thank you for All
Odile



so you have a great chance to show us the beauties of French Guiana! Please consider to photograph all you can. Smile not just dipters (spiders, wasp, ants, etc etcSmile

Thank you! Smile

Jorge
 
http://www.flickr.com/photos/superegnum
John Smit
#8 Print Post
Posted on 17-01-2007 22:17
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Location: Utrecht
Posts: 565
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Hi All,

I don't think this is a Tephritid. The vein Sc, in the pterostigma, is not abruptly bent upwards, characteristically in 90 degrees. In this picture you can just make out that is bent more gently towards the costa.
Therefore this must be something like Platystomatidae of Ulidiidae, preferably Platystomatidae for the seemingly lacking of the costal break and it looks like the ocellar bristels are lacking as well.
But I must say I am not familiar with the fauna.

Cheers,

John
 
http://science.naturalis.nl/smitj
Eric Fisher
#9 Print Post
Posted on 18-01-2007 02:11
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Location: California
Posts: 435
Joined: 19.05.06

Odile,

This fly is a member of the family Richardiidae, which is a close relative of the Tephritidae, Ulidiidae, etc. They family is mainly found in the American tropics. Unfortunately, I can't tell you even which genus it may be -- as I am away from all my main references. Hopefully, I (or someone else) will send you more information soon.

Eric
 
Eric Fisher
#10 Print Post
Posted on 18-01-2007 18:26
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Location: California
Posts: 435
Joined: 19.05.06

Odile,

I have my reference material now. This fly is Coilometopia trimaculata (Fabricius) - Richardiidae; the species is widespread in northern S. America. The head and wing are illustrated in "Genera Insectorum" 113, by Hendel, 1911. One striking characteristic of this species can just be seen in your photos - a longitudinal black band down the middle of the yellow scutellum (the rest of the thorax being yellow also).

Eric
 
odile
#11 Print Post
Posted on 18-01-2007 22:32
Member

Location: French Guiana
Posts: 4
Joined: 17.01.07

Hello Eric

Thank you so much , and thanks to all of you .
Last few days, I spent lot of time searching on the web, information about this funny fly .
I don't know yet a lot about diptera, but I will go on take pictures and learn more and more.

All the best

odile
 
crex
#12 Print Post
Posted on 19-01-2007 09:41
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Location: Sweden
Posts: 1996
Joined: 22.05.06

Interesting looking fly. Thanx for showing it. I'm hoping to see more photos from French Guiana!
 
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