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Diptera.info :: Identification queries :: Diptera (eggs, larvae, pupae)
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Plastered egg clutch
HDumas
#1 Print Post
Posted on 25-06-2015 15:55
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Location: Southern France
Posts: 184
Joined: 24.04.09

Hello,
This cluster of eggs, covered with a kind of plaster, was found under a leaf of a weed (Lactuca?).
Tens of larvae emerged on the same day, breaking a piece of the "plaster".
We hope we are right and they are Diptera indeed, but we can't figure out more about them. Can you maybe tell us more?
Thanks for your help!

www.galerie-insecte.org/galerie/image/dos143/big/ponte.jpg.jpg
H.Dumas : France : La Ciotat : 13600 : 08/06/2015
Altitude : NR - Taille : 8 x 5 x 4 mm
Réf. : 143168

www.galerie-insecte.org/galerie/image/dos143/big/larve.jpg
H.Dumas : France : La Ciotat : 13600 : 19/06/2015
Altitude : NR - Taille : Larve: 2.5 mm
Réf. : 143176
Greetings from Provence
 
Tony Irwin
#2 Print Post
Posted on 25-06-2015 17:19
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Location: Norwich, England
Posts: 7193
Joined: 19.11.04

The egg mass looks very like those produced by some Tabanidae and Rhagionidae, but I don't know of any that coat it in plaster
Tony
----------
Tony Irwin
 
HDumas
#3 Print Post
Posted on 26-06-2015 17:14
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Location: Southern France
Posts: 184
Joined: 24.04.09

It was in a dry and wild garden, where I've never noticed any Tabanidae, but I did see several species of Rhagionidae.
So could it be more probably a Rhagionidae?
Greetings from Provence
 
atylotus
#4 Print Post
Posted on 27-06-2015 06:55
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Location: Amsterdam, NL
Posts: 1119
Joined: 29.05.09

larvae is Tabanidae and the fact that the eggs are laid in a single layer my first guess was Chrysops spec. However I cannot rule out Haemotopota or perhaps even Philipomyia/Silvius ? Chrysops prefer more or less moist habitats, while the other are more found in arid/dry areas. I'm not that familiar with egg cases within Tabanids but the number of layers differ with genera.
 
HDumas
#5 Print Post
Posted on 28-06-2015 15:11
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Location: Southern France
Posts: 184
Joined: 24.04.09

Thanks Atylotus. I'll keep on searching with these hints.

Greetings from Provence
 
HDumas
#6 Print Post
Posted on 10-07-2019 12:17
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Location: Southern France
Posts: 184
Joined: 24.04.09

A few years later...
I found no clue among Tabanidae.
But what about Asilidae?
Some Asilinae genera (i.e., Mallophora, Megaphorus, Porasilus) that deposit their eggs in a frothy or chalky-white “case,” oviposit from 32 to 729 eggs.
In: Dennis, D. S., J. K. Barnes and L. Knutson. 2013. Review and analysis of information on the biology and morphology of immature stages of robber flies (Diptera: Asilidae). Zootaxa 3673: 1–64

About Mallophora orcina:
Oviposition occurred on vegetation 1–3 m above the ground with approximately 188–323 eggs deposited in layers in a chalky-white albumin.
In: Dennis, D. S. (2015). Oviposition, Eggs, and First Instar Larvae of Mallophora orcina (Wiedemann, 1828)(Diptera: Asilidae). Proceedings of the Entomological Society of Washington, 117(3), 269-280.

A few pics of Mallophorina egg cases: here and there.

As far as I know, none of these genera occur in Europe. So???
Edited by HDumas on 10-07-2019 12:23
Greetings from Provence
 
HDumas
#7 Print Post
Posted on 16-07-2019 10:01
Member

Location: Southern France
Posts: 184
Joined: 24.04.09

I've contacted S. Dennis, and according to him this egg mass in not from a robber fly.
Thanks to him.

Greetings from Provence
 
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