Thread subject: Diptera.info :: First Conopidae 2008 - Myopa palliceps (=minor)
Posted by jorgemotalmeida on 20-03-2008 20:21
#1
Hooray! A new Myopa for me... I think. :D
Spotted today near Póvoa Dão. Around 6 mm size. I saw about 10 bombyliids, dozens of tachinids (mainly Tachina spp.), Rhamphomyia spp.;
etc etc.
EDIT 2: Title changed from "First Conopidae 2008 - Awesome Myopa cf. palliceps." to "First Conopidae 2008 - Myopa minor (=palliceps)"
EDIT: Title changed from "First Conopidae 2008 - Awesome Myopa sp." to "First Conopidae 2008 - Awesome Myopa cf. palliceps"
Edited by jorgemotalmeida on 10-04-2010 04:39
Posted by jorgemotalmeida on 20-03-2008 20:52
#2
another photo...
Posted by jorgemotalmeida on 20-03-2008 21:40
#3
another shot..
Posted by javanerkelens on 20-03-2008 21:47
#4
I don't now anything about these fly's, but very nice pictures !!!
And what a very little and shrunk scutellum.
Greatings Joke
Edited by javanerkelens on 20-03-2008 21:55
Posted by Juergen Peters on 20-03-2008 22:21
#5
Hello, Jorge!
<Sigh...> We have temperatures barely above 0 ?C here, with storm and snow (predicted a "White Easter" with snowdrifts), and the only Diptera I saw today were some very small Chironomids at our house wall and some
Sylvicolas at my banana baits... The only other insects I only found in the house:
Anthrenus verbasci (Dermestid beetles) and
Tinea pellionella (bagworm moth larvae) - both like our cats' hairs... ;)
Posted by Erik Nielsen on 20-03-2008 23:14
#6
I think that in the secomd picture you must have pointed a gun towards its head and say "hands up", and in the fourth picture it is praying for its life :D
Happy Easter Erik
Posted by jorgemotalmeida on 21-03-2008 03:07
#7
javanerkelens wrote:
I don't now anything about these fly's, but very nice pictures !!!
And what a very little and shrunk scutellum.
Greatings Joke
Thanks! :)
This Myopa must be really an old fly. I spotted this fly using averted vision among the vegetation. (I'm an amateur astronomer and I used to use many times this vision to see pale globular and open clusters and enhance more stars).
This fly was very near in one nice place (precisely where I spotted the famous fly acrocerid Cyrtus gibbus) and in spite of the very windy day, in that place due the fact is protected by the many trees around, I could spot in 2 hours about over 200 flies easily. :P
Posted by jorgemotalmeida on 21-03-2008 03:14
#8
Juergen Peters wrote:
Hello, Jorge!
<Sigh...> We have temperatures barely above 0 ?C here, with storm and snow (predicted a "White Easter" with snowdrifts), and the only Diptera I saw today were some very small Chironomids at our house wall and some Sylvicolas at my banana baits... The only other insects I only found in the house: Anthrenus verbasci (Dermestid beetles) and Tinea pellionella (bagworm moth larvae) - both like our cats' hairs... ;)
I saw the Anthrenus yesterday too. :P Tineidae larvae are among ones that can eat human hair too.. :( on the final stage of a human decomposition...
Here the Easter will be very rainy. :(
Posted by jorgemotalmeida on 21-03-2008 03:17
#9
Erik Nielsen wrote:
I think that in the secomd picture you must have pointed a gun towards its head and say "hands up", and in the fourth picture it is praying for its life :D
Happy Easter Erik
:) I thought (almost) precisely the same. :) you can see it
here .
Boa P?scoa.
Posted by jorgemotalmeida on 21-03-2008 03:20
#10
Myopa dorsalis? Or Myopa fasciata?
Hyaline wings without any dark markings. The scutellum is dull reddish and the abdomen reddish brown, resembling in some way a Sicus.
So I think this can be a Myopa dorsalis, according to the Veen's keys... but I'm waiting for Stuke to confirm this or no.. :)
Posted by jhstuke on 21-03-2008 14:49
#11
It could be Myopa palliceps (=minor). The species is known to Portugal and the flight time fits to what I know.
Jens-Hermann
Posted by jorgemotalmeida on 21-03-2008 18:37
#12
Thank you Stuke. I will add this to the gallery very soon (in summer...).
Posted by jorgemotalmeida on 24-03-2008 17:21
#13
today I found about 5 Myopa. Even in a very cloudy day. It seems that they are very common. One species can be new for me. More later, I will show the photos.
Today I spotted my first Bibionidae, my first Asilidae (!), also my first Phasia and my first Pipunculidae ( I saw 4 pipunculids today on a lemon tree!), and a spectacular goniini fly that outshines Baumhaeuria microps and about 4/5 new tachinids. :p Also I found a very strange tick.. all black. Last Thursday I found my very first Sialidae ever. (ok, these last 2 are not dipters :P). Is it possible to create a log section where we can create our field log?? It would be interesting...