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Diptera.info :: Identification queries :: Diptera (adults)
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Conops species, id help please
richard
#1 Print Post
Posted on 29-06-2011 19:43
Member

Location: Nottingham, UK
Posts: 20
Joined: 31.07.06

Taken today in Nottinghamshire, I wonder if it is possible to say which Conops species this is please?

Thank you
richard attached the following image:


[124.45Kb]
 
sd
#2 Print Post
Posted on 30-06-2011 11:38
Member

Location: Suffolk, UK
Posts: 893
Joined: 11.10.07

In the UK, with the small yellow theca and yellow face, this should be Conops quadrifasciatus

Steve
 
richard
#3 Print Post
Posted on 30-06-2011 14:24
Member

Location: Nottingham, UK
Posts: 20
Joined: 31.07.06

Thank you Steve.

BW Richard
 
richard
#4 Print Post
Posted on 30-06-2011 19:37
Member

Location: Nottingham, UK
Posts: 20
Joined: 31.07.06

I have been trying to find out what the theca is - is it a sheath enclosing the genitalia?

Also I have found this key

http://home.hccnet.nl/mp.van.veen/conopidae/conops.html

which started by asking

"Thorax at the sides with a silverish stripe (from wing to leg 2) -> 2 "

Does the image below show that stripe as a horixontal line above the wing attachment? Or is the line that I can see just a trick of the light?

Thanks
richard attached the following image:


[119.84Kb]
Edited by richard on 30-06-2011 19:40
 
sd
#5 Print Post
Posted on 30-06-2011 20:02
Member

Location: Suffolk, UK
Posts: 893
Joined: 11.10.07

The theca is a modified part of the female abdomen in conopids which helps with egg laying in their bee/wasp host, its not sexual. The theca varies in shape and size quite considerably between species. This difference may be due to different ovipositing strategies or could be for completely different reasons, eg courtship/recognition - I'm not sure anyone has a definite answerSmile

Mark's key is excellent/fantastic/up-to-dateSmile

I think I see the silver stripe, just a bit blurred and shadowed.
There is a pinned quadrifasciatus female in the gallery though its labelled male instead of female - which happens a lot with conopidsSmile

Steve
 
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