Thread subject: Diptera.info :: One more picture
Posted by Josef Buecker on 05-02-2008 18:52
#1
I dont know how to add more than one picture in one thread.
Posted by jorgemotalmeida on 05-02-2008 18:57
#2
hymenoptera. Bee..two pair of wings.
Posted by crex on 05-02-2008 18:59
#3
Diptera seldom (never?) has that kind of antenna.
Posted by jorgemotalmeida on 05-02-2008 19:01
#4
to post more photos in the same thread simply press the POST REPLY button. :)
Posted by Josef Buecker on 05-02-2008 19:06
#5
Thaks also to crex
Posted by Cor Zonneveld on 05-02-2008 20:08
#6
I'ld say a bumblebee, Bombus. Those are difficult to ID from photo. Your photo gives the impression of largely black with red-tipped abdomen. If that is correct, I'ld say Bombus lapidarius.
Regrettably, there is no hymenoptera.info, something I would greatly enjoy:(
Posted by cthirion on 05-02-2008 20:13
#7
Apidae Bombus which took a bath!
Posted by Susan R Walter on 05-02-2008 20:49
#8
You can't say for sure from this photo that it is
B lapidarius. There are other very similar species with red tipped abdomens, and there is not enough detail in this photo to rule them out.
Posted by Christian Schmid-Egger on 06-02-2008 09:03
#9
Bombus lapidarius is the most probable species, to about 98%. In lowlands of northern Germany, no other red tipped Bombus comes into account, or these are very rare. Also B. lapidarius from a main aspect is longer and narrower than similar species, and similar to the species on the photo.
Regards, Christian
Posted by Andre on 06-02-2008 13:48
#10
Looking at the size and shape of the abdomen, I would think it's a cuckoo-bumblebee (former genus
Psithyrus).
Better wait for a specialist...
Posted by Christian Schmid-Egger on 06-02-2008 14:20
#11
Look to the hindleg in the first picture. Its a typical large and broad hindleg of a Bombus s.str.. Bombus (former Psithyrus) rupestris, what do you probably mean, looks different.
Regards, Christian
Posted by Josef Buecker on 08-02-2008 17:09
#12
To all contributers,
thanks for help. I think Bombus lapidarius is the most probable identification.
I have several hymenoptera, which I am not sure about. I hope for further support.
My E-Contact was an phone contact was broken the last two days, so this answer was waiting that long period. Sorry.
Josef