Thread subject: Diptera.info :: Our town park: small Chloropidae
#1
June 27, 2006.
Size 2-2.5mm.
#2
Not Chloropidae but Chyromyidae. I think
Gymnochyromyia flavella
.
#3
Thanks a lot Paul,
Here's some information that I've found
The family Chyromyidae is a fairly small (approximately 50 species; 1?p;5 mm in length) and little-studied group of xerophilic Diptera. Three extant and one fossil genus comprise the family, which is found worldwide except South America. Adults of extant forms have been collected on flowering plants. Immatures are virtually unknown, but adults have been reared from a variety of substrata including dung, mammal burrows, rotting wood and birds' nests (Ferrar, 1987).
(http://hbs.bishopmuseum.org/fossilcat/fosschyro.html)
Little is known of the life histories of the Australasian/Oceanian species. Colless & McAlpine (1970) recorded adults of Aphaniosoma spp. from flowers of Hibiscus and closely related plants in Australia, while larvae of 1 species have been collected in bat guano in caves. An undescribed species of Aphaniosoma occurs in Australia and Papua New Guinea on flowers of Santalum in dry country (D.K. McAlpine, in litt.) Adults of A. macalpinei have been collected on Scaveola frutescens and in light traps, and adults of Gymnochiromyia hawaiiensis have been collected mostly on windows as well as on Acacia and at light.
Ref.: Hardy & Delfinado (1980, Hawaiian spp.).
(http://hbs.bishopmuseum.org/aocat/chyromy.html)
#4
Mmmm.. I think this is actually Anthomyzidae. Two reclinate upper frontal orbitals, vibrissae, that spine under the fore-femur, and the pubescent third antennal segment hanging down from the second - all make it more like an anthomyzid, rather than a chiromyid. Most species of Anthomyza are grey and yellow, but A.pallida is all yellow, and I think that's the species here.
Tony
#6
Hi,
Tricky identification after a photo with several other species looking rather similar (
Anthomyza dissors, A. dorsata, A. neglecta, and
A. paraneglecta). But then again, Tony may be right.
Jan Willem
#7

I concede defeat, graciously.
#8
Today I took pictures of a very similar fly of approximately same size, collected at same location.
#9
Hi Dima,
This indeed looks like another
Anthomyza spec of the
pallida group. This is a male. Your first specimen looks like a female. For me it is too tricky to put a species name to your specimens.
Jan Willem
#11
Hi Dima,
Your second specimen (the male) has been identified as
Anthomyza dissors by Dr. Jindrich Rohacek (specialist in Anthomyzidae). The female specimen might belong to the same species, but can also be
Anthomyza pallida, which looks very similar.
Jan Willem
P.S. Dima, can you please contact me personally!
#12
Thanks a lot again Jan