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Sphaeroceridae
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krafttho |
Posted on 29-12-2015 10:36
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Member Location: Posts: 123 Joined: 03.01.12 |
Can someone ID this fly that I think is a Sphaeroceridae? Near the sea, south of Sweden, December 20. Best regards, Thomas
krafttho attached the following image: [189.81Kb] |
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krafttho |
Posted on 29-12-2015 10:36
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Member Location: Posts: 123 Joined: 03.01.12 |
Pic. 2. The fly is around 3 mm
krafttho attached the following image: [170.3Kb] |
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krafttho |
Posted on 29-12-2015 10:39
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Member Location: Posts: 123 Joined: 03.01.12 |
Similar to pictures I have seen of Crumomyia pedestris, but I do not know if there are other similar species. |
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John Carr |
Posted on 29-12-2015 14:10
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Member Location: Massachusetts, USA Posts: 10172 Joined: 22.10.10 |
The only wingless European Sphaeroceridae I know of is Aptilotus paradoxus. Marshall (1999) gave a generic diagnosis here: http://www.biodiv...part/55699. (Edit: Based on above comment Crumomyia pedestris is a wingless European Sphaeroceridae I do not know of. Looks similar, although reduced forms often converge on similar appearance.) Edited by John Carr on 29-12-2015 14:13 |
Ectemnius |
Posted on 30-12-2015 13:39
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Member Location: The Netherlands Posts: 846 Joined: 22.11.11 |
Hello, This is indeed a Sphaeroceridae of the subfamily Copromyzinae. Specimens can be anything from nearly apterous to fully winged in some species. This looks very much like Crumomyia pedestris, however more species can have reduced wings. See: http://www.aemnp...._2_535.pdf Greetings, Ectemnius |
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krafttho |
Posted on 30-12-2015 20:55
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Member Location: Posts: 123 Joined: 03.01.12 |
Thanks for your comments! |
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Paul Beuk |
Posted on 04-01-2016 21:40
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Super Administrator Location: Netherlands Posts: 19363 Joined: 11.05.04 |
this is Crumomyia pedestris.
Paul - - - - Paul Beuk on https://diptera.info |
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