Thread subject: Diptera.info :: Homoneura
#1
Whithout hope to get immediately species name, but to make winter less greyish

Thai, Khao Khitchakut, common species
#2
I cannot see the wing margin close enough to say you are wrong, but in this part of the would this would be something like
Pseudolyciella.

Still
Homoneura is such a large genus in that part of the world, I guess we should not be surprised at anything.
#3
Nikita, it loox to have a pennate arista! It is a
Curtonotum (Curtonotidae). Ask Ashley Kirk-Spriggs, perhaps he knows.
#4
No, Valery, I know Curtonotidae (and Oriental
Axinota), it isn't.
Paul, costa looks for me as homoneuroid type, but of course, I do not insist. Species collected in enough amount and someday will get name...
#5
Nikita Vikhrev wrote:
No, Valery, I know Curtonotidae (and Oriental Axinota), it isn't.
Paul, costa looks for me as homoneuroid type, but of course, I do not insist. Species collected in enough amount and someday will get name...
It ISN'T
Axinota. It IS a
Curtonotum. Doncha have any specimens in Moscow? I do have. And I have compared your pig w/
C. anus specimens. Everything, incl. eye shape, long pennate arista, body and leg coloration and bristling. Please trust me.
#6
No, Valery, it is Lauxaniidae. I have specimen of C.anus, I know this fly, I collected it myself and observed it in South Turkey. Curtonotidae has very inmistakable type of flight (both Axinita and Curtonotum). It's flight looks as balerina moving - like tiptoe touching surface (or being ready to touch)
#7
Nikita, ask Shatalkin, if he knows any lauxaniid genus w/ that large flat scutellum. Cheers,
#8
to me - I might be wrong, though - this is Curtonotidae.
-> arista plumose and long!
-> 2 pairs of frontal bristles and proclinate (NONE curves backward as in Lauxaniidae -- referring to the Frontal bristles.. only one reclinat)
-> I can see one oc bristle, at least (Lauxiniidae has it as well, but other features seems to point to another family)
-> hunchbacked thorax
-> all tibiae with dorsal pre-apical bristle (well visible in the female.)

-> bristle present in postpronotum (humeral callus!)
-> general jizz
It would help to see better the frontal head and the wing.
I hope this can trigger more confusion.
Posted by
Kahis on 10-01-2008 17:44
#9
I'd say
Homoneura. There are many Palearctic species with such an arista especially in the southern parts of the estern half, for examply
Homoneura unguiculata, known from Japan, China, Vietnam, Sri Lanka and elsewhere as a synanthrope.
Nothing in this fly suggests
Curtonotum in my opinion

Edited by
Kahis on 10-01-2008 17:46
#10
Nikita Vikhrev wrote:
No, Valery, it is Lauxaniidae. I have specimen of C.anus, I know this fly, I collected it myself and observed it in South Turkey. Curtonotidae has very inmistakable type of flight (both Axinita and Curtonotum). It's flight looks as balerina moving - like tiptoe touching surface (or being ready to touch)
Make a video, Nikita!

I would like to see a fly "dancing" a ballerina.
In the another family.... as you know tabanids can do this - >
http://diptera.in...&pid=17677
#11
Kahis wrote:
I'd say
Homoneura. There are many Palearctic species with such an arista especially in the southern parts of the estern half, for examply
Homoneura unguiculata, known from Japan, China, Vietnam, Sri Lanka and elsewhere as a synanthrope.
Nothing in this fly suggests
Curtonotum in my opinion

Would the presence of the vibrissae discard the
Homoneura? (I don't know any lauxaniid with vibrissae. If there one, let me know.) Unfortunately we cannot be sure if these flies have or not the vibrissae.
However, wing venation is more reliable for this case, I think.
#12
Hi all,
This is absolutely a lauxaniid - no doubt about it. The aristal condition is common in lauxaniids. The fronto-orbitals are both clearly reclinate (the proclinate seta is the ocellar). There are no vibrissa. Everything about it is typical.
The species is Homoneura beckeri (Kertesz). I have compared it to the photographs I have of a male syntype from the collection in Budapest, and I have another 40 specimens on hand. It is rather widespread species - Taiwan, India (Madras), Indonesia (Java, Sumatra, Lombok), Krakatau, Nepal, Singapore, China, Thailand.
Cheers,
Steve

#13
I must learn so many things about lauxaniid yet .

Thanks for clarification, Steve.
#14
Steve Gaimari wrote:
Hi all,
This is absolutely a lauxaniid - no doubt about it. The aristal condition is common in lauxaniids. The fronto-orbitals are both clearly reclinate (the proclinate seta is the ocellar). There are no vibrissa. Everything about it is typical.
The species is Homoneura beckeri (Kertesz). I have compared it to the photographs I have of a male syntype from the collection in Budapest, and I have another 40 specimens on hand. It is rather widespread species - Taiwan, India (Madras), Indonesia (Java, Sumatra, Lombok), Krakatau, Nepal, Singapore, China, Thailand.
Cheers,
Steve

I see one pair of proclinate frontal bristles, two pairs of reclinate frontal bristles and one pair of postocellar bristles. Right?
#15
Some common Homoneura IDable by photo! Thank you Steve

Jorge - only 2 pairs of
or (or =fronto-orbital), both reclinate, postocellar crossed (not visible at this photo, at least to me).
Nikita
#16
Nikita - I see one
or proclinate too, or is it a crossed bristle? (see the male)
Postocellar bristles seems to me reclinate, but the angle is not the best to be sure.
edit: not postocellar. they are not visible in the photo.

so forget my last statement. I overpassed your parenthesis!
#17
proclinate bristles are ocellare, postocellare crossed = inclinate, male's left posterior fronto-or is broken, both right or are OK, also
ivt and
ovt are visible
#18
ok. got it! thanks, Nikita!
