Diptera.info :: Identification queries :: Diptera (adults)
Who is here? 1 guest(s)
Macrotarsina longimana, Rhinophoridae, Croatia, May 2007
|
|
Xespok |
Posted on 07-09-2007 19:27
|
![]() Member Location: Debrecen, Hungary Posts: 5551 Joined: 02.03.05 |
A common seashore fly. Quite unique.
Xespok attached the following image: ![]() [100.34Kb] Edited by Xespok on 12-09-2007 20:12 Gabor Keresztes Japan Wildlife Gallery Carpathian Basin Wildlife Gallery |
Xespok |
Posted on 07-09-2007 19:27
|
![]() Member Location: Debrecen, Hungary Posts: 5551 Joined: 02.03.05 |
Lateral view.
Xespok attached the following image: ![]() [74.99Kb] Gabor Keresztes Japan Wildlife Gallery Carpathian Basin Wildlife Gallery |
jorgemotalmeida |
Posted on 07-09-2007 19:28
|
![]() Member Location: Viseu - PORTUGAL Posts: 9296 Joined: 05.06.06 |
what so tiny legs!!! ![]() |
Nikita Vikhrev |
Posted on 09-09-2007 14:32
|
![]() Member Location: Moscow, Russia Posts: 9425 Joined: 24.05.05 |
As for me, I'm very much puzzled of this fly ![]() common seashore fly !My impression is rather Coenosinae than Ulidiidae, but no farther idea ![]() Gabor, could you give size or any other help? Nikita Nikita Vikhrev - Zool Museum of Moscow University |
|
|
Stephane Lebrun |
Posted on 09-09-2007 14:47
|
![]() Member Location: Le Havre, France Posts: 8248 Joined: 03.03.07 |
I've thought just like you Nikita, but I've tried all genera (Spanochaeta, Lispe, Orchisia, Coenosia...) without success.![]() Flies are so enigmatic in Croatia ! ![]() Edited by Stephane Lebrun on 09-09-2007 14:51 Stephane. |
|
|
Nikita Vikhrev |
Posted on 09-09-2007 14:59
|
![]() Member Location: Moscow, Russia Posts: 9425 Joined: 24.05.05 |
I've tried all genera (Spanochaeta, Lispe, Orchisia, Coenosia...) without success So did I ![]() Nikita Vikhrev - Zool Museum of Moscow University |
|
|
Xespok |
Posted on 09-09-2007 15:08
|
![]() Member Location: Debrecen, Hungary Posts: 5551 Joined: 02.03.05 |
I have more images, but they do not help a lot. http://xespok.net/gallery2/main.php/v/Arthropoda/Insecta/Diptera/Unknown_Family_Diptera/?g2_page=4 . The fly was abundant on the shore. I did not see it elsewhere. I agree, it is more likely to be a Calyptrate fly. Actually I uploaded these images to the Unknown family folder, because I too considered many possibilities (Ulidiidae, Tethinidae, Coenosiinae) I excluded Muscidae, because I know of no Muscids that would have a spotted wings, other than some darkenings around the veins. But now looking through the descriptions of Coenosiine flies there is at least one example for a Coenosiine Muscid to have spots on the wing. Lispe Apicalis. Could this be a Lispe apicalis. The description does not seem to match entirely. The size was around 5 mm. Gabor Keresztes Japan Wildlife Gallery Carpathian Basin Wildlife Gallery |
Nikita Vikhrev |
Posted on 09-09-2007 15:19
|
![]() Member Location: Moscow, Russia Posts: 9425 Joined: 24.05.05 |
I have more images, but they do not help a lot. It helps! This creature is from Theo or Liekele departments! (So I think about http://www.diptera.info/forum/viewthread.php?forum_id=5&thread_id=8393#post_38162) Nikita Nikita Vikhrev - Zool Museum of Moscow University |
|
|
Xespok |
Posted on 09-09-2007 15:30
|
![]() Member Location: Debrecen, Hungary Posts: 5551 Joined: 02.03.05 |
Maybe U are right, the M vein seems to bend too strongly for a Muscid. Would be surprised if it turned out to be a Sarcophagid. A strange Phasiinae?
Edited by Xespok on 09-09-2007 15:31 Gabor Keresztes Japan Wildlife Gallery Carpathian Basin Wildlife Gallery |
Tony Irwin |
Posted on 11-09-2007 20:09
|
![]() Member Location: Norwich, England Posts: 7280 Joined: 19.11.04 |
Gabor - can you edit the title to "Tachinidae?" and add one of your pictures that shows the wing venation more clearly? I'm sure we all want to know what it is, and need to tempt Theo to look at it! ![]() Tony ---------- Tony Irwin |
|
|
Xespok |
Posted on 11-09-2007 21:46
|
![]() Member Location: Debrecen, Hungary Posts: 5551 Joined: 02.03.05 |
A better view with wing venation.
Xespok attached the following image: ![]() [102.74Kb] Gabor Keresztes Japan Wildlife Gallery Carpathian Basin Wildlife Gallery |
ChrisR |
Posted on 12-09-2007 09:59
|
![]() Super Administrator Location: Reading, England Posts: 7703 Joined: 12.07.04 |
Fascinating fly - but I never saw a tachinid with such a long, thin fore basitarsus ![]() Did you catch any? It looks like something that Theo should recognise if it is a tachinid but I'd still be interested to run it through the Central European key sometime! ![]() |
Zeegers |
Posted on 12-09-2007 17:14
|
Member Location: Soest, NL Posts: 18917 Joined: 21.07.04 |
Well, this one baffles me. The calyptrae are small though, so my first guess (really a guess!!) is Rhinophoridae, in which case Macrotarsina comes in mind, given the pciture. Need to come back on this one. Theo |
|
|
Xespok |
Posted on 12-09-2007 17:26
|
![]() Member Location: Debrecen, Hungary Posts: 5551 Joined: 02.03.05 |
If this would be a Rhinophorid, given the location where this fly was found, this fly is likely to parasitise these Crustaceans. (The photo is shot at the same locality). They are quite similar to terrestrial Isopoda, may even belong to Isopoda. Anyone knows what they would be?
Gabor Keresztes Japan Wildlife Gallery Carpathian Basin Wildlife Gallery |
Xespok |
Posted on 12-09-2007 17:34
|
![]() Member Location: Debrecen, Hungary Posts: 5551 Joined: 02.03.05 |
J think Theo is on the right track. Macrotarsina longimana can be found in Croatia and Italy only, based on faunaeur.org. Also the name really fits for this fly, both the generic and the species name seem to refer to the strange forelegs of the male. This should be places into a subfamily of its own, it is so different from other Rhinophorids. Gabor Keresztes Japan Wildlife Gallery Carpathian Basin Wildlife Gallery |
Zeegers |
Posted on 12-09-2007 18:06
|
Member Location: Soest, NL Posts: 18917 Joined: 21.07.04 |
Bingo We are looking at a couple (male and female) of Macrotarsina longimana, , of which Herting writes (translated) 'This extraordinary fly lives on rocky shores along the Adriatic Sea" Theo |
|
|
jorgemotalmeida |
Posted on 12-09-2007 18:35
|
![]() Member Location: Viseu - PORTUGAL Posts: 9296 Joined: 05.06.06 |
let?s go to Croatia! An expedition of diptera.info. ![]() ![]() Serious: Perhaps in the next year I will go to the Morocco IF I have enough crazy people to go with me. If someone it is interested let me know. Beware that it is very bad idea to drink water there... The food is very cheap. I pretend to do camping sauvage, and just staying a few days over there. It is an idea I'm thinking about. To search flies, of course. ![]() ![]() |
ChrisR |
Posted on 12-09-2007 19:09
|
![]() Super Administrator Location: Reading, England Posts: 7703 Joined: 12.07.04 |
Amazing fly - can we assume that (as rhinophorids here eat Woodlice - land isopods) that Macrotarsina attack the isopods found in or around seaweed on beaches? ![]() |
Tony Irwin |
Posted on 12-09-2007 19:44
|
![]() Member Location: Norwich, England Posts: 7280 Joined: 19.11.04 |
The isopod that Gabor photographed appears to be Ligia italica. I don't know of any rhinophorid parasites of Ligiidae, and there are likely to be other species of woodlice on these shores. However given the abundance of flies - the Ligia do seem like a probable host. Only one way to find out - book a holiday in Croatia! ![]() Tony ---------- Tony Irwin |
|
Jump to Forum: |