Posted by Tony Irwin on 19-06-2013 21:29
#2
The fact is they're not always easy - it looks like both sites have included at least one misidentified picture. [Never trust any picture captions except Diptera.info!|t] In
aeneus, the eyes of the male meet on the frons, in
sepulchralis they are separate. In females, the eyes of
aeneus are bare in the lower half, those of
sepulchralis are entirely hairy.
E.aeneus tends to be larger and less "wrinkly" than
sepulchralis, and
sepulchralis often has dull patches on the tergites, while
aeneus is always shiny. In Britain,
aeneus is a coastal species, while
sepulchralis is associated with freshwater.
Edited by Tony Irwin on 19-06-2013 21:35
Posted by BubikolRamios on 20-06-2013 07:22
#3
In females, the eyes of aeneus are bare in the lower half, those of sepulchralis are entirely hairy
female right ?
http://agrozoo.ne...e4e18e8f79
corensponding eye (sepulchralis then ? Also not in costal area as oposite to other two images on agrozoo.net that was found actualy on sea coast):
Posted by Tony Irwin on 20-06-2013 21:07
#4
The coastal vs. non-coastal distinction is not absolute, and it can sometimes be very difficult to know whether hairs are on the eyes or just around them (I can't decide on this photo). Having said that, this specimen does look more like
sepulchralis, and was one of the misidentified specimens I referred to.