#5
Hi Reinoud,
someone on the site Sociedad Mexicana de Entomologia (they shared my photo on facebook), say that this is a
Lochmorhynchus albicans.
Any idea about it? I'm unable to find photos about this specie.
Thanks for your help!
Marcello
PS: I saw the male genitalia and it's different, then it's not a Palaearctic genus!
Quaedfliegh wrote:
Most features fit M rusticus, it could be right but the black occipital bristles are puzzling me....cf. More experience required with local diptera.
#6
Hi Reinoud,
the M. annulipes is not present on the Italian checklist. We have this species:
Machimus (Machimus) Loew, 1849
Machimus (Machimus) caliginosus (Meigen, 1820) (N)
Machimus (Machimus) chrystis (Meigen, 1820) (N)
Machimus (Machimus) cribratus (Loew, 1849) (S)
Machimus (Machimus) cyanopus (Loew, 1849) (N)
Machimus (Machimus) dasypygus (Loew, 1849) (S, Si)
Machimus (Machimus) fimbriatus (Meigen, 1804) (N, S)
Machimus (Machimus) fortis (Loew, 1849) (S)
Machimus (Machimus) gonatistes (Zeller, 1840) (N)
Machimus (Machimus) lacinulatus Loew, 1854 (N, S)
Machimus (Machimus) minusculus Bezzi, 1899 (S)
Machimus (Machimus) pilipes (Meigen, 1820) (S)
Machimus (Machimus) rusticus (Meigen, 1820) (N, S)
Machimus (Machimus) setibarbis (Loew, 1849) (N)
Where N = North and S = South.
I found this subject at North Italy.
Thank you for the help!
Ciao,
Marcello
#7
Hello Marcello,
The genitalia are definitely Machimus genitalia. In Manual of Neotropical Diptera: Asilidae page 18 genitalia of a Lochmorynchus are displayed. The look quite different. (http://revistas.ffclrp.usp.br/Neotropical_Diptera/article/viewFile/243/193)
Furthermore there is no reference in faunaeur.org for Lochmorhynchus in Europe and Geller-Grimms' extensive database covers no references for the genus in Europe. I would be very curious to know on what literature the Lochmorhynchus identification is based.
If a species in the genus Machimus is not listed for Italy is not so relevant. Even in the far better researched countries of Belgium and The Netherlands with only 40 species of Asilidae its still possible to find new species. I think, if you'd fanaticly started chasing Asilidae in Italy, after two or three years, you'd find even a species new for science!
Lovely photo b.t.w!
Greetings,
Ectemnius
#9
Hi Ectemnius,
yes, I agree. I looked the same pdf "Neotropical Diptera. Asilidae".
How I sayd before, the genitalia are differents and this genus is not present in the Italian checklist, so they have done a big mistake.
I'm sure too that it's a Machimus sp. and I think you are right, it could be a new specie here and it make me more curious.
Thanks for your confirm.
Ciao,
Marcello