Thread subject: Diptera.info :: Nycteribiidae ? from Romania

Posted by cosmln on 08-08-2007 17:11
#1

Hi,

like i have say in a previous post, last week i have been involved in some bat study.
after a visit in one cave found this on me (see attached photo). from what i know is from Nycteribiidae family. some details: the host was probably (before me :) ) Miniopterus schreibersii. in that cave was a very big colony of them (~4000 exemplary) but this is just a presumtion (the total number estimated was somewhere at 7000 exemplary).

maybe an identification can be possible?

thanks in advance,
cosmln

Posted by Paul Beuk on 08-08-2007 19:22
#2

Ouch, that's a nice one.

Posted by Zeegers on 08-08-2007 19:34
#3

Terrific !
Miniopterus is great for Nycteribiidae.
Identification only possibly with specimen 'in hand'.
So did you collect some ?


Theo

Posted by cosmln on 08-08-2007 19:41
#4

hi Theo and Paul,

thanks for appreciation and yes the exemplary was collected, i'm waiting for identification but i was hopping to receive that faster.

;)

after i receive the identification if you want i will send the photo to gallery.
also in the future if you want some of my photo to be here in the gallery jut let me know.

cosmln

Posted by Paul Beuk on 08-08-2007 22:19
#5

You can submit any picture you think should be in the gallery. A quick peek will learn if a species is present or not and if your images are better tahn existing ones. yes,... I do ditch the occasional image for a better one. Does not happen often, though. :D

Posted by jorgemotalmeida on 08-08-2007 23:12
#6

I don?t know who will win the prize of the most ugly family fly... Hippoboscidae or Nycteribiidae... B)

Posted by cosmln on 09-08-2007 07:38
#7

jorgemotalmeida wrote:
I don?t know who will win the prize of the most ugly family fly... Hippoboscidae or Nycteribiidae... B)


i think Nycteribiidae but the members of this family can see that, they don't have eyes :)

cosmln

Posted by Zeegers on 09-08-2007 07:43
#8

Well, first impression is that of Penicillidia.
This one is big, that is, for the Nycteribiidae.

And several Nycteribiidae (like Basilia) do have 'eyes' , that is, facets.


Theo

Posted by cosmln on 09-08-2007 07:57
#9

Zeegers wrote:

And several Nycteribiidae (like Basilia) do have 'eyes' , that is, facets.

Theo


hmmm, new info

thanks Theo