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chironomid swarming on the water
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mwkozlowski |
Posted on 14-04-2012 14:48
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Member Location: Posts: 751 Joined: 17.10.06 |
Yerterday, I observed small, probably flightless hironomid males that swarmed, gliding on the water surface of a small lake in Mazury Poland. Manner of gliding still obscure, since I did not notice any wing vibrations. Any suggestion to the species and to the behavior ?
Edited by mwkozlowski on 14-04-2012 14:52 very general entomologist |
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mwkozlowski |
Posted on 14-04-2012 14:53
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Member Location: Posts: 751 Joined: 17.10.06 |
and...
very general entomologist |
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mwkozlowski |
Posted on 14-04-2012 14:54
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Member Location: Posts: 751 Joined: 17.10.06 |
and..
very general entomologist |
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John Carr |
Posted on 14-04-2012 22:15
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Member Location: Posts: 9773 Joined: 22.10.10 |
This must be Thienemanniola ploenensis, a Chironominae with slightly reduced wings "confined to shallow, still waters" of the western Palaearctic. (Cranston et al. 1989) |
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mwkozlowski |
Posted on 15-04-2012 10:40
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Member Location: Posts: 751 Joined: 17.10.06 |
Thank you John, in the paper of Gilka and Dominiak (2007) from Fragmenta Faunistica, stays that this sp. is known only from the few European sites so I give coordinates of the place from goole maps: 53.670477,21.212282
very general entomologist |
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John Carr |
Posted on 16-04-2012 03:52
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Member Location: Posts: 9773 Joined: 22.10.10 |
I did not know about the similiar species Corynocera oliveri when I made my ID. Species of Corynocera also swarm on fresh water bodies. This is not C. ambigua, a holarctic species (group) which has a more strongly modified wing. Thienemanniola lacks hairs on the thorax and has a more slender gonostylus. Corynocera has may have some dorsocentrals and scutellars and has a short, broad gonostylus. C. oliveri may be a more northern species. Both genera are in tribe Tanytarsini. |
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