Rutilia (Rutilia) confusa

A Rutilia bristle fly at Paddys River, ACT

Rutilia (Rutilia) confusa at Paddys River, ACT - 25 Feb 2019
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Identification history

Rutilia (Rutilia) confusa 28 Feb 2019 michaelb
Rutilia (Rutilia) confusa 27 Feb 2019 jgl
Rutilia (Rutilia) sp. (genus & subgenus) 26 Feb 2019 RodDeb

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User's notes

on a rock in the middle of the creek

3 comments

RodDeb wrote:
   27 Feb 2019
no only got this one before it flew off sorry
jgl wrote:
   28 Feb 2019
Firstly, subgenus Rutilia is absolutely right! I couldn't make out the row of strong setae on T3 using my phone, but now I can see it clearly. There's a species around the ACT (R. micropalpis) that hasn't been assigned to a subgenus (incertae sedis) - it can looks superficially like many other spp. in various subgenera, except that it has microscopic palps (and lacks a row of strong setae on T3). But, the coloration of the specimen in this photo matches that of specimens I've caught recently in Kosciuszko NP, and from the NSW South Coast which key out to R. (R.) confusa. There are many specimens of this species from the ACT in ANIC, but they often change colour slightly after spending 60+ year on a pin.

R. (R.) confusa look like a (more common) R. (R.) vivipara that's been lightly bleached blonde, with a much lighter and brighter orange brown abdomen. The faint metallic coloration over their dorsal thorax is green, rather than pinky-red (like in all other spp. in the subgenus Rutilia).

There's the slight complication that not all the ACT specimens in our collection conform to Crosskey's 1973 Rutilia key, based on a few microscopic setae on the suprasquamal ridge which shouldn't be there. However, I fairly certain that this is a problem with the key, rather than them being a separate species - such inconsistencies are very common in this genus, an often manifest themselves when one looks at hundreds of specimens, rather than just a few individuals (as was the case with many European taxonomists). I'm not ruling out cryptic speciation until I've completed my molecular work, but I'm happy assign this to R. (R.) confusa for the time being, as that is what it would most likely key out to according to the current taxonomy. I feel that the row of setae on T3, the colouration and the location are sufficient in this case.
RodDeb wrote:
   28 Feb 2019
amazing the detailed information there is, thank goodness for people like you.
Thank you for your time and help.

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  • 1 Abundance
  • 25 Feb 2019 01:04 PM Recorded on
  • RodDeb Recorded by

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