Thread subject: Diptera.info :: Urophora ID
Posted by prirodnick on 26-10-2021 17:35
#1
Samara region, near Alekseevka, 1970
Thank for ID
Edited by prirodnick on 28-10-2021 04:31
Posted by prirodnick on 26-10-2021 17:36
#2
prirodnick wrote:
Samara region, near Alekseevka, 1970
Thank for ID
Posted by prirodnick on 26-10-2021 17:36
#3
prirodnick wrote:
Samara region, near Alekseevka, 1970
Thank for ID
Posted by Ben Hamers on 27-10-2021 22:59
#4
Urophora sp.
Ben
Posted by prirodnick on 28-10-2021 04:30
#5
Thaks, Ben!
In the next photo, the same Urophora sp. or can it be identify more precisely, up to the species?
Posted by Ben Hamers on 28-10-2021 23:21
#6
With my knowledge it ends at Urophora sp.
Ben
Posted by prirodnick on 05-11-2021 09:32
#7
How about Urophora stylata?
Posted by libor on 05-11-2021 10:17
#8
I do not think so... Se wing pattern forming two "U" curves. So, it is Urophora quadrifasciata for me. Am I right, Valery?
Libor
Posted by prirodnick on 05-11-2021 10:24
#9
Libor, similar to the
quadrifasciata, only a little confused by the thickness of these curves.
Posted by Nosferatumyia on 13-12-2021 08:53
#10
Either
Urophora solstitialis or, (45/55%)
U. cuspidata. Carduus vs. Centaurea scabiosa; the latter may be more common in Volga steppes. Otherwise, they differ in tiny details of the ovipositor very apex (see Korneyev & White, 1996, Entomologicheskoe obozrenie)