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Syrphus torvus?
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sbushes |
Posted on 23-05-2023 15:01
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Member Location: Posts: 563 Joined: 29.04.21 |
Noted on iNaturalist by Jere Kahanpää as having irregular markings... "The interrupted yellow bands are quite atypical from an european point of view" So thought I would double check here. In Iceland we only have two species known on the list S.ribesii and S.torvus. Observed 22nd May 2023 in Reykjavik. iNaturalist post : https://www.inatu.../163168856 : Edited by sbushes on 23-05-2023 15:04 |
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sbushes |
Posted on 23-05-2023 15:02
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Member Location: Posts: 563 Joined: 29.04.21 |
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sbushes |
Posted on 23-05-2023 15:03
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Member Location: Posts: 563 Joined: 29.04.21 |
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eklans |
Posted on 23-05-2023 15:32
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Member Location: Posts: 3337 Joined: 11.11.18 |
Yes, it should be S. torvus, which is listed for Europe, Asia to Japan and Nearctic (Hoverflies of Northwest Europe, van Veen, 2010). If you want to triple check: Femur 3 should show: tip with short adpressed black hairs & black on basal ¾. Greetings, Eric Kloeckner |
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sbushes |
Posted on 23-05-2023 16:05
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Member Location: Posts: 563 Joined: 29.04.21 |
Thanks Eric. I will post another observation from that day which shows the femur. |
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Karsten Thomsen |
Posted on 23-05-2023 21:11
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Member Location: Posts: 585 Joined: 07.01.16 |
I wonder if not the the legs are too dark for Syrphus. I'd look into Parasyrphus. |
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sbushes |
Posted on 23-05-2023 22:01
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Member Location: Posts: 563 Joined: 29.04.21 |
The only Parasyrphus on the Icelandic list is Parasyrphus tarsatus. Is that an option? What's diagnostic of that species? Other observations of hoverflies in Iceland have been noted as being dark on iNaturalist. When I raised this with Erling Olafsson at the National Institute here, he said it was very typical for Icelandic specimens that they would be darker than their continental equivalents. Edited by sbushes on 23-05-2023 22:04 |
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