Thread subject: Diptera.info :: livida vs vicina
Posted by Tony T on 28-08-2007 02:16
#1
We have both of these species of
Calliphora in New Brunswick, Canada; (May 2007)
Can be separated by the cheek colour and as Susan wrote
HERE
Susan R Walter wrote:
.................... the enfuscation of the squamae, with the lower one very dark [in
vomitaria] with a very narrow very white edge. Vicina has a broad white edge, so this feature can be useful when you don't have such a good view of the face. (Beware loewi and uralensis if in this situation of course.)
EDIT: the above comments were written when I thought one of the flies was
vomitoria. The fly is actually
Calliphora livida
Edited by Tony T on 29-08-2007 05:37
Posted by Tony Irwin on 28-08-2007 13:49
#2
Hi Tony - I agree with your ID of
vicina, but the top image does not look like
vomitoria to me (not enough orange hair on the cheeks). There are several other species of
Calliphora in your region, and this is probably one of them.
Terry Whitworth has produced a key to the North American Calliphoridae - you can download it from
http://www.birdbl...worth.html (Whitworth, Terry L. 2006)
Edited by Tony Irwin on 28-08-2007 13:55
Posted by Susan R Walter on 28-08-2007 14:04
#3
Tony
Are you certain the top one is
vomitoria? Brown basicosta and epaulettes (should be black in
vomitoria), yellowy brown anterior spiracle (should be black in
vomitoria, the white border on the lower calypter is not a threadlike white line around the edge. Both specimens have ginger hair behind the occiput, which
vicina can have, but no red hair on the genae, which
vomitoria should have and I am wondering if both are
vicina, or the top one is some third species - what do you get in North America?
I take it you have the specimens?
Posted by Zeegers on 28-08-2007 18:57
#4
I had my doubts too. On the other hand, I know from Siberia that vomitoria is unusually dark there, to our standards. The genitalia are distinctive. So that should setlle the matter.
But Susan is right: to us West-Europeans the vomitoria is quite atypical, if it really is vomitoria.
Theo
Posted by Tony T on 28-08-2007 19:09
#5
Thank you all for your useful comments. I have made a copy of the Whitworth paper. I used this key
HERE to ID the species but obviously I went wrong somewhere. I do have the specimen and will get to work this evening on its correct identification and look at other specimens to see if I do have a
vomitoria.
Incidentally these 2 flies and dozens of others (not all collected) were common in a rotten-fish-bait trap in my garden this past May.
Posted by Susan R Walter on 28-08-2007 20:32
#6
Tony I - That article you suggested looks great - some really clear useful looking drawings especially.
Tony T - the North Kentucky University Forensic Fly Key is useful because it shows closeups of tricky characters, but it only includes a couple of species from each genera - bit of a trap.
Posted by Zeegers on 28-08-2007 22:02
#7
Tony T,
We didn't say you went wrong, we had our doubts.
Your 'vomitoria' most certainly is not vicina and it could prove to be vomitoria after all. We just don't know the alternatives in your univers (= new world)
Theo
Posted by Tony Irwin on 29-08-2007 01:04
#8
Tony T wrote:
I used this key
HERE to ID the species but obviously I went wrong somewhere.
Tony - The only place you went wrong was to use a "key to common forensically important blowflies of Northern Kentucky" to identify potentially uncommon blowflies from New Brunswick! :p
It seems to me you reached the right answer in that key. ;)
Posted by Tony T on 29-08-2007 05:32
#9
You folks are smart, you certainly know your flies.
Ran the specimen through Whitworth's key, definitely
Calliphora. Got to couplet 5 in species key, critical character is number of postsutural intra-alar setae. 2 in
vicina and
vomitoria and some other species. My specimen has 3 =
livida or
coloradensis, the black genal dilation keys to
livida vs. reddish dilation in
coloradensis.
Thanks to you all for comments.
Posted by Zeegers on 29-08-2007 08:43
#10
Congratulaions to Tony and Susan for getting the solution.
Theo