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Please send some rain to Finland!
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Kahis |
Posted on 11-08-2006 19:33
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![]() Member Location: Posts: 1999 Joined: 02.09.04 |
Send some rain! Think of the baby diptera! This summer is the dries on record in Finland by quite some margin. Total rainfall in Helsinki (where I live) since May: 15 mm! ![]() I fear this is going to decimate the populations of many diptera, especially those living in moist soil or wet dead trees like the handsome Temnostoma hoverflies. Also many springs and small streams have totally dried up. We'll see how the springwater species like a winter without the 'warm' groundwater for protection. Year 2002 was also very dry and it killed many park trees and whole pine forests on rocky ground. This year will be worse ![]() Edited by Kahis on 11-08-2006 19:35 Kahis |
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jorgemotalmeida |
Posted on 11-08-2006 19:42
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![]() Member Location: Posts: 9295 Joined: 05.06.06 |
Kahis wrote: Send some rain! Think of the baby diptera! This summer is the dries on record in Finland by quite some margin. Total rainfall in Helsinki (where I live) since May: 15 mm! ![]() I fear this is going to decimate the populations of many diptera, especially those living in moist soil or wet dead trees like the handsome Temnostoma hoverflies. Also many springs and small streams have totally dried up. We'll see how the springwater species like a winter without the 'warm' groundwater for protection. Year 2002 was also very dry and it killed many park trees and whole pine forests on rocky ground. This year will be worse ![]() Perhaps this could be relationed with global warming (not just caused by human being, perhaps we could be pass a normal rise of temperature in climatological history...)? Here in POrtugal, each year, the temperatures seems rise a little more. Yes, I note that the temperature is getting more hotter as time goes on... ![]() 15 mm until now... is very few, indeed... I know in UK the weather got a little more hotter than usual a few weeks ago... Imagine if the panorama keeps the same... ![]() I read somewhere that in about 2020 ALENTEJO (in South of Portugal, to North of famous Algarve) could turns a real desert... and we can have the first signals of paludism!! ![]() |
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Tony Irwin |
Posted on 11-08-2006 19:53
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![]() Member Location: Posts: 7168 Joined: 19.11.04 |
Hi Kahis Sorry to hear that your drought is continuing. We had very long dry period earlier this summer, but now we are getting heavy rain. However the groundwater is still very low and many ponds have dried up, so there may be problems for some species. Fortunately some, like the stratiomyids, can survive dry periods. The global change in the climate will affect many insects, and in Britain I think a few will benefit from the warmer weather, but many others will be lost, particularly as small remnants of habitat are destroyed and not replaced elsewhere. They are interesting times, but quite depressing. ![]() Tony ---------- Tony Irwin |
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crex |
Posted on 11-08-2006 23:04
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![]() Member Location: Posts: 1996 Joined: 22.05.06 |
It's rather dry in Sweden as well ... Could the dry weather be of any benefit to certain kinds of diptera? |
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jorgemotalmeida |
Posted on 12-08-2006 00:05
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![]() Member Location: Posts: 9295 Joined: 05.06.06 |
crex wrote: It's rather dry in Sweden as well ... Could the dry weather be of any benefit to certain kinds of diptera? I'm not sure. I will try to do just a guess: I think the same flies that survive in deserts... Culicidae?? Stratiomyidae... Really, like you, I want to know what dipters can survive a lot of time with very tiny quantities of water! - it is your question. ![]() I know for example, that salticid spiders, (some) has great capacity to survive in very dry conditions. One example really true: I forgot one salticid inside a car - Philaeus chrysops (very beautiful indeed) - that survived during more 4 hours with almost 70?C inside! Very impressive! There are much more salticids with spectacular records concerning live with very, very small quantity of water and very dry habitats. Of course, there are deserts that aren?t dry. ![]() Look... another question arise! Which kind of dipters we can find in Antarctica? Another example (but in extreme opposite).... the famous Araneus diadematus can survive(if temperature decrease slowly) until -30 ?C! Life is more fantastic that we usually think! ![]() Sorry, if I talk about "no dipters"... but everything is in relation! There are many spiders that consume dipters, and some dipters that parasite spiders. ![]() Below follows an image of Philaeus chrysops to get an idea: ![]() Edited by jorgemotalmeida on 12-08-2006 00:12 |
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Nikita Vikhrev |
Posted on 12-08-2006 08:01
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![]() Member Location: Posts: 9193 Joined: 24.05.05 |
What can I say? 1. I understand you. 2. In this case I try to tell myself: you can't change it, than take it, take it and regard as unic possibility to observe, there were a lot dry years in Finland before, but this one will be observed at least. Nikita Nikita Vikhrev - Zool Museum of Moscow University |
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Susan R Walter |
Posted on 12-08-2006 14:45
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![]() Member Location: Posts: 1794 Joined: 14.01.06 |
This is a gloomy subject, isn't it![]() ![]() If it wasn't raining here ![]() ![]() Susan |
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Kahis |
Posted on 12-08-2006 16:14
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![]() Member Location: Posts: 1999 Joined: 02.09.04 |
crex wrote: It's rather dry in Sweden as well ... Could the dry weather be of any benefit to certain kinds of diptera? It certainly can benefit some species. We are seeing many southern species arriving to Finland. I guess you get some of that if Sweden too. Unfortunately Finland has lost most of the dry, open spaces best suited for xerothermic species through changes in agriculture and very (perhaps too ![]() Species that love warmth and young(ish) forests thrive in Finland right now. The first time I saw Limenitis populi, a butterfly that rivals many tropical 'exotics' in beauty was heart-stopping. My butterfly guide listed is as south-eastern rarity (as it was in the seventies) and I had no clue about its rapid expansion westwards during the nineties. Kahis |
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Robert Heemskerk |
Posted on 21-08-2006 07:18
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![]() Member Location: Posts: 2082 Joined: 17.10.05 |
Maybe this wil help; http://home.wanadoo.nl/robhee/22-7-2006%20Amsterdam.mp3 raining regards, robert ![]() |
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