Sunday, 13 October 2013

Chloromyia formosa (Scopoli, 1763)


We've been neglecting the flies quite unfairly.



Chloromyia formosa, Bosham, West Sussex, UK
Male. Photographed in Bosham, West Sussex, UK, in June 2012, using an Olympus E-420 with 40-150mm Zuiko lens and 3 KOOD magnifiers.
This rather hairy little fellow is

Chloromyia formosa 
(Scopoli, 1763)

Also known in the UK as the Broad Centurian. It's colourful, reasonably common and - important note - harmless. As an adult it's a pollinator, as a larva it eats decaying leaves, and doesn't intentionally land on food or sewage, so really, about as unimposing as an insect can be. 

Another angle, female in this instance, to give you some idea of the overall form of the animal:

Female, same place, time and camera.


 And with that, I suppose we should get on with the Taxonomy.


- Sarginae     
- Stratiomyidae
- Stratiomyoidea 
- Tabanomorpha   
- Brachycera           
- Diptera                    
- Antliophora               
See also Panorpa germanica.
- Panorpida                    
- Endopterygota               

- Eumetabola                      
- Neoptera                            

- Metapterygota                      
- Pterygota                                
- Dicondylia                                 
- Insecta                                         
- Hexapoda                                      
- Arthropoda                                      
- Ecdysozoa                                         
- Protostomia                                         
- Nephrozoa                                             
- Eumetazoa                                                 
- Animalia                                                       
- Eukaryota                                                       


And that is all, folks!

No comments:

Post a Comment