Gallery Links
Users Online
· Guests Online: 19

· Members Online: 0

· Total Members: 4,945
· Newest Member: millenin
Forum Threads
Newest Threads
· Unknown Stratiomyida...
· Milichiidae?->Chloro...
· Heleomyzidae ?
· Ceratopogonidae (Ton...
· Bibionidae: Bibio re...
Hottest Threads
No Threads created
Theme Switcher
Switch to:
Last Seen Users
· piros 2 days
· Bernd Rotten... 4 days
· Marcello16 weeks
· Paul Beuk47 weeks
· JWV61 weeks
· Nosferatumyia72 weeks
· daveb2172 weeks
· guplox72 weeks
· ESant72 weeks
· Jan Maca72 weeks
Latest Photo Additions
View Thread
Diptera.info » Identification queries » Diptera (adults)
Who is here? 1 guest(s)
 Print Thread
Unusual Fly at Lights from Mississippi USA
Stephen
This handsome fly showed up at my mercury vapor lamp. I liked the markings both on the anterior end and on the wings too.

Can anyone tell me what I have here?

Location: Mississippi, USA
Date: 16 April 2006
--Stephen

Stephen Cresswell
www.americaninsects.net
 
www.americaninsects.net
totipotent
Stephen,

The antennae on this wonderful specimen tells me it is a Tabanid, but the wings are throwing me off.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
http://donald.beasleyprojects.com
Nikita Vikhrev
My impression was Sciomyzidae.
Well, let's wait for experts.
Nikita
Nikita Vikhrev - Zool Museum of Moscow University
 
totipotent
Nikita Vikhrev wrote:
My impression was Sciomyzidae.
Well, let's wait for experts.
Nikita


I do admit that the head and wings look more like it belongs to Sciomyzidae, but there are no arista on these antennae...?
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Edited by totipotent on 22-04-2006 19:27
 
http://donald.beasleyprojects.com
conopid
I'll vote for Scyomizidae. It certainly does not look like any kind of Tabanid we get in the UK. Whatever it is, it's a very nice beast!
Nigel Jones, Shrewsbury, United Kingdom
 
Xespok
This fly also reminds me some Platystomatidae flies. The lack of arista on the picture is possibly an angle artefact. They likely point upwards and are thus invisible from this angle.

Actually giving a second look, the aristae might be there, but are not visible properly.
Edited by Xespok on 23-04-2006 15:30
 
Teglagyar u. 30.
Stephen
By cropping, I came up with this closer view of the antennae. Thanks to one and all for the comments so far.
--Stephen

Stephen Cresswell
www.americaninsects.net
 
www.americaninsects.net
Kahis
Sciomyzidae. The arista is white and poorly visible in the small version but easily seen in the cropped version. Sciomyzidae is a relatively small family with ~600 species worldwide. Still, I am not able to give you a name or even a genus.

Sciomyzids are amon the few groups of flies that often apper on light. Given that their larval hosts are mostly nocturnal I suspect that the adult sciomyzids do seek their victims at night. Some, like Anticheta, are easy to find with light traps but seldom seen in netted samples.
Kahis
 
www.iki.fi/kahanpaa
Nikita Vikhrev
It seems to me that there aren't oc setas. Is there another genus without oc exept Sepedon?
Nikita Vikhrev - Zool Museum of Moscow University
 
Dmitry Gavryushin
Yes there are two that I know of: Sepedomerus (postocellar bristle absent) and Hedria (postocellar bristle well-developed, 2 fronto-orbital bristles, posterior crossvein bisinuate) (The Marsh Flies of California, by Fisher and Ort, 1983)
 
Nikita Vikhrev
Thank you Dima.
Sepedon always has elongated 2-nd antennal segment, so it isn't Sepedon.
In web there is one image of Sepedomerus. If photo ID is correct it isn't Sepedomerus.
More probable candidate - Hedria mixta.
There is one image in:
http://www.entomology.umn.edu/museum/links/Interactive%20Key%20Gallery/source/sciomyzid(hedria).htm

I'm sure Stephen will check it using US sources.
Nikta
Nikita Vikhrev - Zool Museum of Moscow University
 
Tony Irwin
But the second antennal segment is elongated (longer than the third in the enlargement). Also Hedria has an s-shaped cross-vein. This fly has a straight cross-vein. My money is on Sepedon.
Tony
----------
Tony Irwin
 
Nikita Vikhrev
You made a wise stakeWink Sepedon - 70 speciec, Hedria - 1.
Let's wait what Stephen find, I think with this wings the answer will be species level.
Nikita
Nikita Vikhrev - Zool Museum of Moscow University
 
Gerard Pennards
Well, I don't want to spoil the party, but if i remember well this fly is on the bugguide.net site as in the family Pyrgotidae!
Greetings, Gerard
Greetings,
Gerard Pennards
 
Stephen
Sorry, I was away for a day only to discover my photo I posted here in April was being discussed again.

Last July I posted this same photo on BugGuide, after having discovered a similar-looking fly photo also on BugGuide. That photo had been identified as Pyrgotidae by the Curator of Diptera at the Florida State Collection of Arthropods.

Here are the two photos; only the first one has any discussion with it:

http://bugguide.net/node/view/15878

http://bugguide.net/node/view/63605

I should have come back here and updated this post, but I supposed it was long-forgotten, buried on page 80 of the forum. Please accept my apologies!
Edited by Stephen on 04-11-2006 20:18
--Stephen

Stephen Cresswell
www.americaninsects.net
 
www.americaninsects.net
Nikita Vikhrev
Tony, all our stakes gone to Gerard!
Stephen, we havn't yet this family in the Gallery, do your best to ID!
Nikita
Nikita Vikhrev - Zool Museum of Moscow University
 
Stephen
Nikita, I do have one identified Pyrgotid photo and I will pass it on to Paul shortly for the gallery. Xespok has one photo of a Pyrogotid in the gallery already.

From what I can tell, the photo at the top of this page is either Pyrgota maculipennis or Sphecomyiella valida, two species which, although in different genera, are supposed to be hard to tell apart. I wrote to the curator gentleman who made the ID on BugGuide to see if he would look at my photo, but I did not hear back from him.

Here are his comments about the photo at BugGuide that looked very similar to mine:

"Pyrgota maculipennis. The wing and body patterns of P. maculipennis cannot be distinguished easily from those of Sphecomyiella valida, but the 11 mm length, body proportions, and especially the shape and banded color pattern of the hind tibia give me confidence in this identification. Sphecomyiella valida is usually at least a few mm longer, stouter of body, and with a gradually expanding hind tibia that is not distinctly banded. Pyrgota maculipennis has also gone under the genus names Sphecomyiella and Boreothrinax."

For the record, if I took my photo (at the top of this page) at my lens' closest focus, and I think I did, then the fly was 12.3 mm long.

On a completely different subject, I notice there is not a single Chironomid photo in the gallery. I guess the problem is not that we don't have photos, but that none of them are identified? Still, it seems like even an unidentified Chironomid would be better than none at all, for any visitor who wondered what a Midge looks like.
Edited by Stephen on 04-11-2006 17:22
--Stephen

Stephen Cresswell
www.americaninsects.net
 
www.americaninsects.net
Tony Irwin
Ooops! Thanks to Gerard for preventing any further embarassment! Frown
Reading up on this family, it looks like this is Sphecomyiella valida. It's certainly not the same species as that identified as Pyrgota (formerly Boreothrinax) maculipennis, which has a completely different hind tibia shape. Astonishing life history - oviposition in scarabeid hosts while in flight (at night), and larva completes its development in two weeks. Shock
Tony
----------
Tony Irwin
 
Nikita Vikhrev
Stephen:
On a completely different subject, I notice there is not a single Chironomid photo in the gallery. I guess the problem is not that we don't have photos, but that none of them are identified? Still, it seems like even an unidentified Chironomid would be better than none at all, for any visitor who wondered what a Midge looks like.

My oppinion is that we can load in several cases images of Diptera ID only till genus or even family. But temporary. When somebody will load, for example, fly with full ID, previos images have to be deleted.
Same situation with images of not the best quality. For example, I'd prefer to delet some of my early images and replace it by new better images.
Nikita
Nikita Vikhrev - Zool Museum of Moscow University
 
Jump to Forum:
Similar Threads
Thread Forum Replies Last Post
Unusual view of Fannia canicularis Diptera (adults) 3 10-01-2023 20:20
Thaumatomyia (?) with unusual coloration Diptera (adults) 4 19-11-2022 13:16
Hoverfly ? Unusual Mouthparts Diptera (adults) 3 01-06-2022 19:59
Tipulid.. with unusual resting pose,India Diptera (adults) 4 09-02-2020 17:40
Help Identifying Diptera with very unusual marking General queries 4 30-01-2020 05:14
Date and time
17 July 2025 02:33
Login
Username

Password



Forgotten your password?
Request a new one here.
Temporary email?
Due to fact this site has functionality making use of your email address, any registration using a temporary email address will be rejected.

Paul
Donate
Please, help to make
Diptera.info
possible and enable
further improvements!
Latest Articles
Syrph the Net
Those who want to have access to the Syrph the Net database need to sign the
License Agreement -
Click to Download


Public files of Syrph the Net can be downloaded HERE

Last updated: 25.08.2011
Shoutbox
You must login to post a message.

17.08.23 15:23
Aneomochtherus

17.08.23 13:54
Tony, I HAD a blank in the file name. Sorry!

17.08.23 13:44
Tony, thanks! I tried it (see "Cylindromyia" Wink but don't see the image in the post.

17.08.23 11:37
pjt - just send the post and attached image. Do not preview thread, as this will lose the link to the image,

16.08.23 08:37
Tried to attach an image to a forum post. jpg, 32kB, 72dpi, no blanks, ... File name is correctly displayed, but when I click "Preview Thread" it just vanishes. Help!

23.02.23 21:29
Has anyone used the Leica DM500, any comments.

27.12.22 21:10
Thanks, Jan Willem! Much appreciated. Grin

19.12.22 11:33
Thanks Paul for your work on keeping this forum available! Just made a donation via PayPal.

09.10.22 17:07
Yes, dipterologists from far abroad, please buy your copy at veldshop. Stamps will be expensive, but he, the book is unreasonably cheap Smile

07.10.22 11:55
Can any1 help out with a pdf copy of 1941 Hammer. Vidensk. Meddel. Dansk Naturhist. Foren. 105; thank you

Render time: 3.52 seconds | 196,151,897 unique visits