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Tabanidae: Haematopota subcylindrica? No, it's Haematopota pluvialis
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kuv |
Posted on 05-01-2024 21:21
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Member Location: Posts: 3587 Joined: 30.04.10 |
Northern Germany, Schleswig-Holstein, Schenefeld near Hamburg, walking path along the rivulet Düpenau, bushes like Rubus, Corylus, Acer, Salix and other; 7th of June 2023. Photos: kuv. Is my idea - after reading in the book "Families of flies with threes pulvilli", Zeegers & Schulten, 2022 - ok? Please confirm or correct my ID. Greetings Kuv Edited by kuv on 07-01-2024 15:46 |
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kuv |
Posted on 05-01-2024 21:22
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Member Location: Posts: 3587 Joined: 30.04.10 |
2nd picture (enlargement): |
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Zeegers |
Posted on 07-01-2024 14:26
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Member Location: Posts: 18446 Joined: 21.07.04 |
there is a strong apical notch at apex of furst antennel segment, so I’d say H. pluvialis. theo |
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kuv |
Posted on 07-01-2024 15:45
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Member Location: Posts: 3587 Joined: 30.04.10 |
H. pluvialis: Thank you very much Theo . I thought that the red third antenna segment is the leading role for ID. But ok - perhaps next time. Greetings Kuv |
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