Thread subject: Diptera.info :: Caricea vs. Coenosia (Muscidae)

Posted by Tony T on 31-03-2008 16:42
#1

30 March 2008, New Brunswick, Canada. Muscidae: Caricea sp.

a key to the NA genera separates Caricea from Coenosia and 6 other genera
: pair of orbital setae on each side of frons; pair of frontal setae on each side of frons- Caricea
: usually 1 orbital and 3 frontal setae on each side of frons - Coenosia etc.

Posted by phil withers on 31-03-2008 16:48
#2

In Europe these two genera are (I believe) considered synonymous

Posted by Stephane Lebrun on 31-03-2008 18:34
#3

I think Caricea is Lispocephala in old World.
Magnificent, Dazzling, absolutely Marvelous shot. ShockSmileSmile

Posted by Tony T on 31-03-2008 22:30
#4

Stephane Lebrun wrote:
I think Caricea is Lispocephala in old World.
Magnificent, Dazzling, absolutely Marvelous shot. ShockSmileSmile


Thanks for your comments. The image is a composite of many images stacked with Helicon Focus. Such an image can only be obtained by stacking images but the overlapping setae and large depth of field cause problems for the software. However, Helicon Focus is an incredible program for obtaining this type of image.

Posted by Susan R Walter on 01-04-2008 13:23
#5

I agree with St?phane - I think this may be your best ever image on Diptera.info. We are so lucky to have you. Grin

Posted by crex on 01-04-2008 13:45
#6

It's an amazing image. I wonder if anyone ever have made a photo of a whole fly in that large magnification scale (stacking + stitching). That would be a fantastic gigantic fly photo Grin

Edited by crex on 01-04-2008 13:46

Posted by Tony T on 01-04-2008 19:37
#7

crex wrote:
I wonder if anyone ever have made a photo of a whole fly in that large magnification scale (stacking + stitching)


The above head shot is a crop from a larger image. The full-frame image is here. The original is 4,288 pixels wide; this means that it would make a print 18" wide (@240ppi resolution). So, a similar photo of the posterior end should allow one to get a good print, after stitching) that is 1 meter wide. Trouble is it would be difficult to display on a computer monitorPfft

Posted by crex on 01-04-2008 22:40
#8

Tony T wrote:... 1 meter wide. Trouble is it would be difficult to display on a computer monitorPfft


You could use e.g. Zoomify Wink

Posted by Tony T on 02-04-2008 02:29
#9

crex wrote:

You could use e.g. Zoomify Wink


I had a look at that site; very impressive. Not sure how it would work with Diptera.info.
Diptera. info restricts image size to 200KB, the original image is 34,900KB.
Zooming in on a 200KB will probably give lousy resolution; that is even if it would be possible to zoom in on a Diptera.info image.
Interesting idea but way beyond my capabilities of computer "skills".

Posted by crex on 02-04-2008 07:20
#10

About Zoomify. I have tried it a long time ago on an image of a large hand drawn map. It is nice to be able to see an overview and be able to zoom in to see each line in detail, but it is only suitable for a few images because Zoomify creates alot of images from the original. Not very practical from an administrators point of view.

Posted by Tony T on 03-04-2008 19:27
#11

crex wrote:
I wonder if anyone ever have made a photo of a whole fly in that large magnification scale (stacking + stitching). That would be a fantastic gigantic fly photo Grin


Photographed another specimen and made a print on the largest paper I have at the moment (279 x 432mm). Came out OK, body length of the actual fly is 5mm, on the print it is 180mm. Was restricted in the amount of magnification by the width of the paper. Must try making a print of a 'long' fly.

Posted by conopid on 03-04-2008 19:40
#12

Pfft Fantastic. What incredible results. A coffee table book of photos like this would be every entomologist's dream!

Edited by conopid on 03-04-2008 19:41

Posted by Tony Irwin on 03-04-2008 20:14
#13

Brilliant image, Tony! Do you take comissions? Wink