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Coenomyia ferruginea (Scopoli, 1763)
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Pierre-Nicolas Libert |
Posted on 17-11-2004 09:19
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Member Location: Posts: 82 Joined: 31.08.04 |
Hi everybody, I Does anyone knows about the repartition of the unique species of the Coenomyidae: Coenomyia ferruginea in Belgium? Is it widespread? What is the situation in other countries? Pierre-Nicolas |
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Paul Beuk |
Posted on 17-11-2004 10:30
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Super Administrator Location: Posts: 19208 Joined: 11.05.04 |
Summarising NW-European data from Van der Goot (1985): Belgium: rather rare in the hills Netherlands: south in the province of Limburg and about five other inland localities in woodland area France Germany Denmark (not after 1900) Poland These are the most recent data I have here, though there are one or two more recent record from the Netherlands. Reference: Goot, V.S. van der, 1985. De snavelvliegen (Rhagionidae), roofvliegen (Asildiae) en aanverwante families van Noordwest-Europa. - Wetenschappelijke Mededelingen van de Koninklijke Nederlandse Natuurhistorische Vereniging 171: 1-66. Hope this gets you on the way for now. Paul - - - - Paul Beuk on https://diptera.info |
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Menno Reemer |
Posted on 17-11-2004 15:25
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Member Location: Posts: 343 Joined: 10.06.04 |
There is a very recent paper by Jens-Hermann Stuke (2004) on the occurrence of Coenomyidae (and some other small families) in Niedersachsen and Bremen, published in Braunschweiger Naturkundliche Schriften 7(1): 137-142. I have found the species in Belgium once. If you are interested I can look up the date and locality for you. |
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cthirion |
Posted on 17-11-2004 22:32
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Member Location: Posts: 901 Joined: 13.08.04 |
Aussi, plusieurs localit?s dans la coll Gembloux (FSAGX)
cthirion |
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Joris Menten |
Posted on 18-11-2004 15:01
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Member Location: Posts: 7 Joined: 19.08.04 |
The species has been caught several times in the Meerdaalwoud and Heverleebos near Leuven (by Frank Vandemeutter and Jorg Lambrechts). I myself have one ex from Elsenborn. Frank also reported the species from the Argonne in France. It appears the species is not terribly rare, but is on the wing for a very short time in June, which explains it apparent rarity. One thing I was wondering: I never smelled the cheese-smell on the ex in my collection. Does anyone really noticed this smell? Joris Edited by Joris Menten on 18-11-2004 15:02 |
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michal tkoc |
Posted on 07-11-2007 12:26
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Member Location: Posts: 237 Joined: 07.11.06 |
Yes, I have one exemplar from Moravia, Czech Rep., and the smell is really strong, but we dont say "cheese" ratherly some "soup relish" like Maggi http://www.nestle...soning.htm
Curator of Diptera, Entomology Department, National Museum Prague. PhD. Student, Charles University. Prague, Czech Republic. |
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