Posted by jorgemotalmeida on 22-04-2007 20:55
#1
Hi
* locality - Silgueiros - Viseu - PORTUGAL
* date - 2007.04.22
* size - 4 mm (small fly)
* habitat - woodland, near river
* substrate - tree - acacia?
This is a Platypezidae fly. An albin fly indeed...
Check the checkered pattern in abdomen, the scutum is grey with some iridiscence (lilas, for example), scutellum a little more dark than the scutum, And in torax, look, in LATERAL view, at the white stripe. Moreover, you can see that frontalia is completely white and with just 2 bristles (the other broken). Too bad that this fly was dead when I took the photos. It is one of the most beautiful flies I ever seen with this size. ;)
2 ocellar bristles proclinate; one frontobrital bristle in each side; 2 long and strong outervertical bristles.
I hope you can give me, at least, the species level. :D
EDIT ---> Title changed from "New Platypezidae" to "Drosophilidae - Leucophenga cf. maculata"
NEW EDIT .---> Confirmed : Leucophenga maculata ;) (and title changed)
Edited by jorgemotalmeida on 22-04-2007 21:35
Posted by Paul Beuk on 22-04-2007 21:03
#5
Leucophenga sp., Drosophilidae. I'd need to check whether it is
maculata or not.
Edited by Paul Beuk on 07-05-2007 09:21
Posted by jorgemotalmeida on 22-04-2007 21:06
#6
but something says me that this could not to be Platypezidae... not so hum p thorax as usual. :(
Posted by jorgemotalmeida on 22-04-2007 21:08
#7
Paul Beuk wrote:
[]Leucophenga[/i] sp., Drosophilidae. I'd need to check whether it is maculata or not.
LOL. :d i WROTE about that this could not to be a platypezid and you said a little before that this is a drosophilid fly. :D so... new platypezid in shoutbox is a liar. :(
Edited by jorgemotalmeida on 22-04-2007 21:14
Posted by Kahis on 22-04-2007 21:30
#8
Leucophenga maculata according to Baechli et al. (Fauna Ent. Scand.-series book, with keys to all European species).
Posted by jorgemotalmeida on 22-04-2007 21:34
#9
thanks to both! ;) I found it just because the withish colour of frontalia calls to me - :) The fly was about 10 cm in relation to the ground. I thought at the first it was a fly that could belongs to the subfamily Miltogramminae, but then when I catched the fly, it was very clear that it would be another fly (not sarcophagid :).