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Rhagionidae, Rhagio scolopaceus from Romania
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cosmln |
Posted on 12-08-2007 14:51
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Member Location: Romania Posts: 956 Joined: 18.03.07 |
Hi, photographed this in Retezat Mountain (~1100m) in 27.june.2007. size aprox 10mm. is this Rhagio scolopaceus? a male? thanks in advance, cosmln [EDIT] title changed cosmln attached the following image: [109.2Kb] Edited by cosmln on 12-08-2007 16:11 Cosmin-Ovidiu Manci biology & photography ********************** http://cosmln.nature4stock.com - cosmln's place http://dragonfly.nature4stock.com - Dragonflies of Romania http://insects.nature4stock.com - just insects http://mybiosis.org/nature/portal.php?pagename=firstpage - a romanian flora & fauna database and not only ********************** DSLR Collecting Saves Lives! ********************** " Only after the last tree has been cut down, only after the last river has been poisoned, only after the last fish has been caught, only then will you find that money can not be eaten. " an old indian saying |
cosmln |
Posted on 12-08-2007 14:53
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Member Location: Romania Posts: 956 Joined: 18.03.07 |
second and last view
cosmln attached the following image: [89.15Kb] |
Zeegers |
Posted on 12-08-2007 15:42
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Member Location: Soest, NL Posts: 18822 Joined: 21.07.04 |
I would think so Theo |
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cosmln |
Posted on 12-08-2007 16:09
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Member Location: Romania Posts: 956 Joined: 18.03.07 |
Zeegers wrote: I would think so Theo thanks Theo for confirmation cosmln |
jmajerj |
Posted on 07-09-2007 11:33
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Member Location: Posts: 4 Joined: 05.01.06 |
You are correct, it is a just emerged male of Rhagio scolopaceus (Linn?, 1758). /He probably developed in the mountain are, because they are darker than the pattern of lowland specimens have. |
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jmajerj |
Posted on 07-09-2007 11:34
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Member Location: Posts: 4 Joined: 05.01.06 |
You are correct, it is a just emerged male of Rhagio scolopaceus (Linn?, 1758). /He probably developed in the mountain are, because they are darker than the pattern of lowland specimens have. |
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jmajerj |
Posted on 07-09-2007 11:37
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Member Location: Posts: 4 Joined: 05.01.06 |
It is a Rhagio scolopaceus. There is a great probality it may be R. scolopaceus var hahnlei Lindner, 1923B. |
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jmajerj |
Posted on 07-09-2007 11:38
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Member Location: Posts: 4 Joined: 05.01.06 |
You are correct, it is a just emerged male of Rhagio scolopaceus (Linn?, 1758). /He probably developed in the mountain are, because they are darker than the pattern of lowland specimens have. |
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