Thread subject: Diptera.info :: Conopidae fly - Myopa picta (male)
#1
Hi
* locality - Silgueiros - Viseu - PORTUGAL
* date - 2007.04.18
* size - 7 mm (large fly)
* habitat - openland
* substrate - grass
I think in Myopa sp.
EDIT --->> changed the title "Conopidae fly - Myopa sp." to "Conopidae fly - Myopa buccata" and in 2 May 2007 to a possible "Conopidae fly - Myopa cf. picta (it was M. buccata)" and then in 19th May 2007 changed finally to "Conopidae fly - Myopa picta (male)"
#4
Wow, what a beautiful monster you have there!

#5
yes.

yesterday the temperatures reached almost 30 ?C in some places.

At least, was about 25 ?C

(but today is raining and temperatures dropped a little about 20 ?C)
#6
Hello, Jorge!
jorgemotalmeida wrote:
yes.

yesterday the temperatures reached almost 30 ?C in some places.
Almost?

Last sunday we had 31 ?C here in northwest Germany! (all time high for April...).
#7
This specimen appears to fit Seguy's (out-of-date) 1928 description of
Myopa variegata, but it's not a species we have in Britain, so I can't say for sure.

#8
hi Tony
Thanks a lot! Which kind of photo you need to be sure about Myopa variegata?

We need to be sure so gallery can grow more and more.
#9
Your photos are great, Jorge! I just need a more up-to-date paper or a reference collection!

But perhaps someone on the forum knows
variegata - it is a widespread species in Europe - and will be able to confirm this.
#10
thanks.
and what about this? http://home.hccnet.nl/mp.van.veen/conopidae/myopa.html#intro
Tergite 4 and 5 with silvergrey dusting, at the front border with two large, dark rectangular spots without dust, these spots well separated; face: at the mouth edge left and right a thin black stripe. 6-8 mm. -> Myopa variegata Meigen
Posted by
Guenter on 19-04-2007 21:04
#11
I guess Jens-Hermann Stuke can tell you exactly what species it is, send the photos to him: jstuke at zfn.uni-bremen.de
Edited by
Guenter on 19-04-2007 21:05
#12
thank you. I wrote to him since 1 hour 30 min ago.

I hope we can have the confirmation... but if someone knows about this one, please let us know.
#13
Jens-Hermann Stuke replied to me:
"I guess it is Myopa buccata: The wings are darkened and I guess I can see the white crossvein. Additional the species has a haired face and black spots on the occiput."
So, almost probable to be Myopa buccata.
#14
do you confirm that the whitish crossvein to ID M. buccata is right?
Thank you!
#15
just to show a magnification above 3:1 of the head. Of course the dof in high magnification turns more smaller.
But here it goes the head of Myopa buccata.

You can see the terminal arista typical for conopid flies.

#16
I am not so sure that this is
Myopa buccata. The middle crossvein (R-M) is, as far as I can tell, blackish and it is this vein which is diagnostically whitish in
buccata. The arrowed whitish crossvein appears to be M-Cu. Superficially the species looks very like
variegata, but the wing-markings and occiptal 'beard' rule this out. It
could be an aberrant
buccata, but my feeling is that this is something altogether different.
Posted by
fleabag on 22-04-2007 17:15
#17
wow ...crazy looking fly

Posted by
Guenter on 24-04-2007 16:12
#18
Beautiful! I love this group.
#19
My pictures of myopa buccata, and those in the gallery, do not show the black-bordered white bands on the femora shown on the pictures above. I'm not sure if that helps though.
#20
It reminds me of
Myopa picta. The cross-vein at the basis of cell R is black (the cell is rather short, so the cross vein is at about the middle of the wing). Cell R seems to have a black patch in it, typical for this species. Further, the colouration of the head matches.