Thread subject: Diptera.info :: Black fly => Phania thoracica (Tachinidae)
Posted by RamiP on 04-07-2021 19:25
#1
4.7.21 in Jyväskylä, Finland
Edited by RamiP on 06-07-2021 20:31
Posted by RamiP on 04-07-2021 19:26
#2
2
Posted by Juergen Peters on 04-07-2021 20:22
#3
Hello RamiP.
would you please use the
complete URL in your posts? The pictures are not shown in all my browsers (newest versions of Firefox, Chrome, Edge and Opera). And if I choose "Open picture in new tab", the browser assumes a http
s adress and says: "404 Not Found".
I always have to edit the adress line manually to delete the 's' in https to see your photos. That is really annoying.
If you write http://www.hyonteiset.com/wp-content/uploads/DSC02229.jpeg for example, the browsers knows that there is no 's' and displays the image correctly. (Even better it would be, if you upload the pictures to the diptera.info server.)
Edited by Juergen Peters on 04-07-2021 20:22
Posted by RamiP on 04-07-2021 20:27
#4
Sorry Jürgen, I understood nothing. :o
Posted by Juergen Peters on 04-07-2021 20:32
#5
Hello RamiP,
so the short form: would you please use (for example):
http://www.hyonteiset.com/wp-content/uploads/DSC02229.jpeg
instead of
www.hyonteiset.com/wp-content/uploads/DSC02229.jpeg ?
In the last case your pictures are not shown in many browsers.
Posted by Paul Beuk on 05-07-2021 08:23
#6
The links are entered correct and fully. The problem is that the hosting server is not https enabled and most new browsers will not allow embedding of content that is stored on non-https servers. So, to see the embedded images it is either necessary for the viewer to use an older browser (something Juergen and all of us can do) or https should be enabled on www.hyonteiset.com (something that RamiP can do).
Posted by Xespok on 05-07-2021 08:27
#7
The fly is likely to be Phania funesta or close.
Posted by RamiP on 05-07-2021 19:21
#8
Thanks for everybody, especially for Gabor
Raimo
Posted by RamiP on 06-07-2021 20:30
#9
I will change it to Phania thoracica, which is common here in Middle-Finland. P. funesta lives only in South-Finland.
Theo confirmed it. Thanks.
Raimo
Posted by Zeegers on 07-07-2021 07:59
#10
Yes, I did. I am very busy with field work, diificult to keep up with you.
It is not funesta, it is difficult to see all the features of thoracica, but it makes total sense.
Theo