Thread subject: Diptera.info :: Exoristinae or Tachininae?->cf. Tachinini (Mikia, excluding M. tepens)

Posted by guplox on 26-09-2022 10:54
#1

Photographed very recently in east China. Could it be a Tachininae? Thanks!

Edited by guplox on 27-09-2022 02:43

Posted by guplox on 26-09-2022 10:57
#2

Another shot

Posted by guplox on 26-09-2022 11:03
#3

Frontal shot

Posted by Zeegers on 26-09-2022 11:37
#4

Hi Guplox,

So, what is your latitude ? Is this Oriental, Palaearctic ot transitional ?

Fly looks very nice indeed. Gut feeling is Tachinini or just possibly Nemoraea.

Theo

Posted by guplox on 26-09-2022 11:58
#5

Thank you, Theo, for the gut-feeling id! |t The latitude is 28.61177, might be an oriental species. I'll take a look at Neomoraea recorded in Catalog of Life China. :)

Posted by guplox on 26-09-2022 12:04
#6

Just took a quick look at Catalog of Life China. 13 species of Nemoraea have been recorded from China, which are:
Nemoraea angustecarinata (Macquart, 1848)
Nemoraea angustifrons Zhang et Zhao, 2011
Nemoraea bipartita Malloch, 1935
Nemoraea echinata Mesnil, 1953
Nemoraea fasciata (Chao et Shi, 1985)
Nemoraea fenestrata (Mesnil, 1971)
Nemoraea japanica (Baranov, 1935)
Nemoraea javana (Brauer et Bergenstamm, 1895)
Nemoraea metallica Shima, 1979
Nemoraea pellucida (Meigen, 1824)
Nemoraea sapporensis Kocha, 1969
Nemoraea titan (Walker, 1849)
Nemoraea triangulata Villeneuve, 1937

Posted by Zeegers on 26-09-2022 13:03
#7

Thanks, yes that is likely Oriental. By the way, first gut feeling was Tachinini.

If Tachinini, it keys out to Mikia and it is definitely NOT M. tepens.

By the way, there is an excellent catalogue of Tachinidae of China bij O'Hara et al.



Theo

Posted by guplox on 26-09-2022 13:33
#8

That's terrific! Thank you Zeegers for the comment. And yes, I see. the name James E. O′Hara (together with Chuntian Zhang and Hiroshi Shima) appears in the namelist of the experts that review the Tachinidae in the Catalog of Life China. |t

Posted by guplox on 27-09-2022 03:42
#9

Three Mikia species (M.japanica M. apicalis and M. patellipalpis) have been recorded to occur in east China according to the checklist of Tachinidae reviewed by O'hara et al in the Catalog of Life China. Perhaps it is one of them if it is a Mikia species already described and recorded to occur here. :)

Edited by guplox on 27-09-2022 03:55

Posted by John Carr on 27-09-2022 15:54
#10

guplox wrote:
Three Mikia species (M.japanica M. apicalis and M. patellipalpis) have been recorded to occur in east China according to the checklist of Tachinidae reviewed by O'hara et al in the Catalog of Life China. Perhaps it is one of them if it is a Mikia species already described and recorded to occur here. :)


The three species you mention were moved to genus Anaeudora in the latest world checklist. http://www.nadsdi...klist.html

Edited by John Carr on 27-09-2022 15:55

Posted by John Carr on 23-01-2024 16:32
#11

Key to Anaeudora as subgenus of Mikia from Flies of China volume 2 pp. 1990-1991.

Posted by John Carr on 23-01-2024 16:33
#12

Part 2

Posted by John Carr on 23-01-2024 22:33
#13

It should be Anaeudora patellipalpis Mesnil, 1953, or Mikia patellipalpis if you keep the genera together. I do not have a copy of the original description, at page 157 of

Mesnil, L.P. 1953. Nouveaux tachinaires d’Orient. (2e partie.) Bulletin et Annales de la Société Entomologique de Belgique 89: 146–178.

Yellow basicosta (前缘基鳞) excludes orientalis and nigribasicosta. Marked wings exclude japanica. Lack of median marginals (中缘鬃) on tergite 2 excludes apicalis. Entirely black abdomen and legs excludes yunnanica.

I have not seen a description of the later-described Mikia choui Wang & Zhang, 2012. The checklist of world species says it is recorded from "Central" China, defined as Gansu, Ningxia, and Shaanxi.