Thread subject: Diptera.info :: British Columbia fly on seaweed, what family?

Posted by Stephen on 04-12-2010 12:08
#1

In Vancouver on the beach, British Columbia, Canada, 5 July 2009. This fly was walking over seaweed and sea shells. Can someone tell me the family?

Posted by Stephen on 04-12-2010 12:11
#2

Detail of the head.

Posted by jorgemotalmeida on 04-12-2010 15:18
#3

very possibly Anthomyiidae.

Posted by Michael Ackland on 04-12-2011 18:19
#4

Fucellia apicalis - note darkened tip of wing to which the name refers

Posted by Michael Ackland on 11-12-2011 14:26
#5

No one has picked this up. I did not receive a reply from the author.

Posted by Paul Beuk on 11-12-2011 17:26
#6

Should be in the Gallery!

Posted by Stephen on 14-01-2012 18:05
#7

Sorry for the delay, thank-you, I am moving this to the Gallery!

Posted by Stephen on 14-01-2012 18:06
#8

Sorry for the delay, thank-you, I am submitting this for the Gallery!

Posted by bradbarnd on 14-01-2012 21:01
#9

Stephen, I hope you'll add this to BugGuide.net as well. :)

Posted by John Carr on 30-10-2012 03:07
#10

I have not found any record of Fucellia apicalis in North America. Huckett (1965) listed Fucellia pictipennis from northern Canada with similar wing marking. Apicalis was described from China in 1908 and pictipennis from Greenland in 1907. Is apicalis the correct name for Pacific populations previously misidentified as pictipennis?

Posted by Stephen on 05-11-2012 15:24
#11

John, well, no one has chimed in on this. The Stone catalog of North American diptera does not list apicalis, and you're right, the range of pictipennis comes near: Alaska, Yukon, NWT. The photo of F. pictipennis at BOLD seems a bit different. Maybe safest just to say Fucellia sp. unless you have some literature on the genus. Thanks for pointing this out, I will check to make sure my pics in the diptera.info gallery and BG are okay on this.