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Fungus Gnats (Mycetophilidae)
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Leptomorphus
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Leptomorphus nebulosus
Photo#21544
Copyright © 2005
tom murray
Large Fungus Gnat -
Leptomorphus nebulosus
Bethlehem, New Hampshire, USA
June 20, 2005
Contributed by
tom murray
on 23 June, 2005 - 7:17pm
Last updated 3 December, 2008 - 4:53pm
Chris,
Thanks for coming back and getting this one nailed down to species!
…
tom murray
, 3 December, 2008 - 4:53pm
Moved
Moved from
Platyura
.
…
tom murray
, 28 February, 2007 - 4:26pm
Moved
Peter, thanks for the id!
…
tom murray
, 20 December, 2006 - 6:47pm
This is a tricky one
Hi All
This is actually a Mycetophilidae in the strictest sense, not a Keroplatidae. It is a member of the genus Leptomorphus in the subfamily Sciophilinae. I'll provide you with the species name tomorrow when I return to my office where the species descriptions are. I actually have the good fortune to be working on this pretty genus as part of my thesis work that I've just started. It's certainly a beautiful shot, mind if I use it in my upcoming thesis proposal seminar (with full credit of course!)? Happy fungus gnat hunting.
…
Chris Borkent
, 26 February, 2007 - 9:29pm
Thanks Chris
You can use this image in your thesis, and thanks for making sure this is identified correctly.
…
tom murray
, 28 February, 2007 - 4:29pm
Species name
This is probably the species L. nebulosus but may be L. bifasciatus. Hard to tell with out a microscope and some dissecting equipment!
…
Chris Borkent
, 27 February, 2007 - 3:09pm
Leptomorphus nebulosus
On further contemplation this appears to definitely be
Leptomorphus nebulosus
.
…
Chris Borkent
, 2 December, 2008 - 12:38pm
Whoah!
I am quite certain that this is actually a fungus gnat in the Mycetophilidae. Some can get quite large, and those tibial spurs on the legs are absent in crane flies. What an amazing specimen! Even looks like it mimics a wasp.
…
Eric R. Eaton
, 24 June, 2005 - 3:21pm
Looks like...
Platyura sp. (Keroplatidae). These guys are awesome!
…
PeterKerr
, 20 December, 2006 - 5:37pm
Thanks Eric
This one really fooled me. It was the size of a cranefly, and as you state, it looks like a wasp.
…
tom murray
, 24 June, 2005 - 8:09pm