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eggs
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BubikolRamios |
Posted on 15-01-2010 04:54
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Member Location: Posts: 1723 Joined: 14.06.09 |
1 mm, Slovenia, 13.06.09, no idea if this belongs to diptera, but mybe ... ? Edited by BubikolRamios on 15-01-2010 05:08 highly searchable nature photo galery --> http://agrozoo.ne....jsp?l2=en |
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pwalter |
Posted on 15-01-2010 11:18
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Member Location: Posts: 3555 Joined: 06.11.08 |
1 mm is big! So maybe a buterfly. I think dipterans do nat lay eggs on leaves, maybe only Syrphidae (which have aphid-eating larvae). Others may lay eggs in the tissue of leaves (those making mines) and the wast majority lay egs in soil, leaf litter, decaying material... |
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BubikolRamios |
Posted on 20-01-2010 07:42
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Member Location: Posts: 1723 Joined: 14.06.09 |
so, surfed around and found this, which looks like stuff on my image: http://www.flickr...259263383/ and what presumably comed out of it http://www.flickr...259253713/ anyone knows what is that ? highly searchable nature photo galery --> http://agrozoo.ne....jsp?l2=en |
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pierred |
Posted on 20-01-2010 07:58
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Member Location: Posts: 1413 Joined: 21.04.05 |
Hello, After looking at both pictures on flickr, I remembered some photos of last year, in particular this one: Pierre Duhem : France : 3/7/2009 : Paris : 75018 altitude : 50 m - taille : 1 mm ref:47081 The eggs were more reddish and not so regular, but this could be a solution. Pierre Duhem |
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BubikolRamios |
Posted on 20-01-2010 08:14
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Member Location: Posts: 1723 Joined: 14.06.09 |
could be, coz I can find it here: http://www2.pms-l...liohya.htm site run by bunch of professionals. Thanks! highly searchable nature photo galery --> http://agrozoo.ne....jsp?l2=en |
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pwalter |
Posted on 20-01-2010 08:21
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Member Location: Posts: 3555 Joined: 06.11.08 |
So, it must be a bug than... |
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Paul Beuk |
Posted on 20-01-2010 08:39
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Super Administrator Location: Posts: 19208 Joined: 11.05.04 |
I'd say Coreidae.
Paul - - - - Paul Beuk on https://diptera.info |
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BubikolRamios |
Posted on 20-01-2010 09:54
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Member Location: Posts: 1723 Joined: 14.06.09 |
acording to this: http://www.cababs...0043144033 The eggs of C. marginatus were singly laid in cotton batting and were usually separated from each other. On the average, the elongated eggs were 1.72±0.01 mm long and 1.08±0.01 mm wide. The eggs were yellow upon deposition but changed to brown after embryonic development. Variable shaped polygons were observed on the egg surface. A ring of widely separated aero-micropylar tubercles was observed and well-marked operculum intersects the ring micropyles. The hatching line was cracked in a circular shape by an egg burster. You might be reight, especialy as the thing lives here. Tere is my colection of images from egg,imph to adult: http://agrozoo.ne...&l2=en Edited by BubikolRamios on 20-01-2010 10:14 highly searchable nature photo galery --> http://agrozoo.ne....jsp?l2=en |
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