Gallery Links
Users Online
· Guests Online: 5

· 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
· Marcello15 weeks
· Paul Beuk46 weeks
· JWV60 weeks
· Nosferatumyia72 weeks
· daveb2172 weeks
· guplox72 weeks
· ESant72 weeks
· Jan Maca72 weeks
· libor72 weeks
· Reimund Ley72 weeks
Latest Photo Additions
View Thread
Diptera.info » Family forums » Asilidae Forum
Who is here? 1 guest(s)
 Print Thread
gold-haired robber fly -> Laphria/Choerades sp?
treebeard
Hi all,

can anybody help me to identify this hairy robber fly? It was patrolling around forest path in Banska Bystrica, Slovakia, 6 July 2014, 450 m.a.s.l. Unfortunatelly, I have only pictures form this angle.

Greetings

Matej
Edited by treebeard on 22-07-2014 07:56
 
ValerioW
Choerades cf. fimbriata
 
treebeard
Thank you very much, but,in my opinion, Choerades fimbriata is much less hairy. I saw it even in this place, several minutes after this one. It had almost naked femora, black-stipped abdomen, overall look was different.

Can be Choreades fimbriata so variable?

A (very bad) picture of Ch. fimbriata from the same place and time:
 
Quaedfliegh
Wow..: ) I would say it is a Laphria species (because of the face and beard) but it doesnt fit any description i can find. I keys out to L aurea, but looks totally different. Although this looks quite similar: http://www.biolib.cz/IMG/GAL/238117.jpg
Greetings,

Reinoud

Field guide to the robber flies of the Netherlands and Belgium: https://www.jeugdbondsuitgeverij.nl/product/field-guide-to-the-robberflies-of-the-netherlands-and-belgium/

https://www.nev.nl/diptera/
 
Mariastraat 12
libor
Maybe Laphria vulpina, a questionable species near to L. flava?
See at: http://www.robberflies.info/keyger/htmle/lapvul.html
Libor
 
Quaedfliegh
Thought of that one too, but hair of abdomen seems to be adpressed ie flat against the body. In the flava complex the hairs are standing out like a bumblebee. But maybe we can't see enough.
Greetings,

Reinoud

Field guide to the robber flies of the Netherlands and Belgium: https://www.jeugdbondsuitgeverij.nl/product/field-guide-to-the-robberflies-of-the-netherlands-and-belgium/

https://www.nev.nl/diptera/
 
Mariastraat 12
treebeard
Reinoud, Libor, thank you very much. I have one more picture of abdomen, may it help?

Matej
 
ValerioW
Wow! Fully hairy tergites. Anyways, with theese I can just reject my Choerades thought, and say Laphria sp as Reinoud said. I can exclude some species but, personally, have no sure ID in mind.
Edited by ValerioW on 09-07-2014 16:05
 
treebeard
Thank you, I am starting to be affraid that my pictures are not sufficient for ID. Otherwise, I am pleased that I came accross a something extraordinary.
 
Quaedfliegh
Don't worry too much, Asilidae can be impossible to do from a picture but experience and local knowledge can help a lot. This picture could be good enough (it is a good picture). I think you have a special creature on this one. Try to compare it with local collected animals if possible.
Edited by Quaedfliegh on 14-07-2014 17:34
Greetings,

Reinoud

Field guide to the robber flies of the Netherlands and Belgium: https://www.jeugdbondsuitgeverij.nl/product/field-guide-to-the-robberflies-of-the-netherlands-and-belgium/

https://www.nev.nl/diptera/
 
Mariastraat 12
Quaedfliegh
Addendum: The creature keeps on bothering me, now i'm doubting my own conclusion that this is a Laphria sp.

The creature looks like a Choerades species with a Laphria head.
The shoulders seem basicly brown and not black ???
Laphria usually has long hairs on the back of the mesonotum.

Questions:

Does the creature have the shiny facial hair as in Choerades or not? (compare with 2nd picture)

I hope someone with a lot of experience about Lahpriinae helps me out of my misery..
Edited by Quaedfliegh on 21-07-2014 15:02
Greetings,

Reinoud

Field guide to the robber flies of the Netherlands and Belgium: https://www.jeugdbondsuitgeverij.nl/product/field-guide-to-the-robberflies-of-the-netherlands-and-belgium/

https://www.nev.nl/diptera/
 
Mariastraat 12
treebeard
Answer: If I understand you correctly,it probably does not. Choreades have some shiny spot between eyes, shining from certain angles, this creature probably does not. Entire this creature was shining, facial hairs, as far as I can remember, were not remarkable. Its overall look was "hairy" and "gold".

Have a nice day,

Matej
Edited by treebeard on 12-07-2014 18:08
 
ValerioW
No matter how thorax looks. Face hairs, above the hump, are Laphria's, and this is a keys' trait.
 
jaho
Looks a lot as Laphria cf. vulpina male which makes it a really interesting encounter.
Jan
 
treebeard
Jan, thank you very much

Matej
 
Quaedfliegh
I'm not conviced at all : ) compare: http://www.robberflies.info/keyger/htmle/lapvul.html

With Laphria species from the flava group (including vulpina) hair on the abdomen should be erect which is not the case, hair is adpressed. Also the very long postsutural hair of Laphria is not present on the mesonotum of this one.

As i mentioned before, it looks like a a head of a Laphria species on a choerades body. (not just the mesonotum also the abdomen, hair is adpressed in opposition the erect hairs of both L. vulpina and L. flava. Besides that, the shiny hairs on the face are not always obvious in Choerades, depending on the direction the light comes from. I therefore would suggest another species of which i only have seen pictures of collected specimens. : Choerades cf castellanii. Description by Hradsky fits quite well (admittedly the head remains strange) compare: http://www.biolib.cz/en/image/id238096/

I still hope that someone like Dysmachus or Danny Wolff would react. It is quite possible we will never know.
Edited by Quaedfliegh on 22-07-2014 00:18
Greetings,

Reinoud

Field guide to the robber flies of the Netherlands and Belgium: https://www.jeugdbondsuitgeverij.nl/product/field-guide-to-the-robberflies-of-the-netherlands-and-belgium/

https://www.nev.nl/diptera/
 
Mariastraat 12
treebeard
Yes, you are apparently right. In the meantime I chcecked those scarce pictures of the L. vulpina and they do not match. My field impession was neither "Choerades", nor "Laphria". Of course, I know only few species of these genera.

I will change the title and wait :-)
Edited by treebeard on 22-07-2014 07:56
 
Jump to Forum:
Similar Threads
Thread Forum Replies Last Post
Vietnam Choerades? Asilidae Forum 5 23-01-2024 12:48
ID please => Choerades fimbriatus Asilidae Forum 5 12-12-2023 22:49
Chironomid with long-haired front tarsi Diptera (adults) 4 18-11-2023 17:51
Choerades fimbriata Asilidae Forum 6 15-11-2023 10:58
Small fly with long-haired arista = Scaptomyza pallida) Diptera (adults) 7 02-11-2023 20:33
Date and time
12 July 2025 00:59
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: 2.33 seconds | 196,113,036 unique visits