Thread subject: Diptera.info :: Lauxaniidae - Homoneurinae? (Zambia)
Posted by Will van Niekerk on 27-02-2016 23:36
#1
Smallish fly, on Soybean ('tis the season), probably around 3-4mm in length.
Terrible pictures, and it may be misplaced dots making me think so, but is it a Tephritoid, possibly Ulidiidae?
January 2016, in Mpongwe, Copperbelt, Zambia.
EDIT: Title updated from 'Tephritoid? Zambia.'
Edited by Will van Niekerk on 04-03-2016 20:59
Posted by Will van Niekerk on 27-02-2016 23:42
#2
Second picture.
Posted by John Carr on 28-02-2016 00:26
#3
Lauxaniidae?
It appears to be a female without an oviscape, so I doubt Tephritoidea.
Posted by Nikita Vikhrev on 28-02-2016 01:14
#4
I think so (99% sure), Lauxaniid
Posted by Nosferatumyia on 28-02-2016 02:32
#5
Certainly NOT a tephritoid; I'd notified its large trapezoid scutellum -- just do not recall right now if any Lauxaniidae Homoneurinae (which this fly could be) have them. It looks very similar to that in some Drosophilidae Steganinae, but your picture show no basal cells clearly.
Posted by Will van Niekerk on 28-02-2016 08:30
#6
Lauxaniid would have been my second stab in the dark...
Thanks for correction. Have updated title and will revisit if I see more of these around.
Posted by Will van Niekerk on 04-03-2016 19:27
#7
Dredging through:
5-6 Homoneurinae genera in sub-saharan Africa:
Cainohomoneura - only one species known (C. delta), Stuckenberg notes that thorax unremarkable (so presumably not trapezoidal scutellum), and wing-patterning not close.
Homoneura - which Stuckenberg notes to be a major constituent of African fauna.
Katalauxania - Kilimandjaro, wing quite different.
Prosopomyia - wing unpatterned.
Trypetisoma (Trypaneoides) - seems to be only T. perpunctata, which Stuckenberg reports from mainland. No mention of scutellum in description, wing-pattern unlike it.
and
Zanjensiella - Madagascar, wings unpatterned.
Also, found some more pictures of a very, very similar fly from Mkushi (central province, almost at junction with Kasanka, D.R.C.), and also in Soy (below).
Could this possibly be homoneura? Some in previous discussions have appeared structurally similar, albeit never quite identical.
Posted by Will van Niekerk on 04-03-2016 19:29
#8
pic 1 from Mkushi:
Posted by Will van Niekerk on 04-03-2016 19:40
#9
Pic 2 from Mkushi
Posted by Will van Niekerk on 04-03-2016 19:41
#10
Pic 3 from Mkushi
Posted by John Carr on 04-03-2016 20:15
#11
The head is typical of Lauxaniidae and I see nothing inconsistent with that family.