Three Flies Over a Flower - Observation of the Week, 1/30/24

Our  Observation of the Week is this trio of Orange-spined Drone Flies (Eristalis nemorum, Eristale interrompue in French), seen in France by @nicolashelitas!

Nicolas Helitas tells me he was raised by his grandparents in the southwest of France. His father, who lived near Paris, would spend a lot of time fishing when on holiday and took Nicolas with him. “I think the hours I spent quietly on the bank of ponds gave me the love of being in nature,” he says, which led him to study biology. 

I made an herbarium, and I started to look more closely at plants - especially orchids. Those plants are often rare, so I started to take photos instead of collecting them. Then I looked at the butterflies which were visiting the plants, then dragonflies after that, while a passion for photography started to grow in me. Now my main interests are still botany and entomology, but I'm potentially interested in everything in nature!

I currently have more than 200k images on my hard drive. Even if lots of them are redundant (I don't like selecting and deleting!), that represents a lot of data. I offer some images to nature protection associations who look for illustrations, but most of those data have not been used. A friend of mine told me about iNaturalist some time after we had discovered GBIF. We had found an excellent way to give value to years of observations! The link between the two sites was the key for our interest in iNaturalist: the information is stored and shared together with all other scientific sources, and offered to researchers.

One of those photos, of course, is the subject of this blog post. In June of 2015, Nicolas ventured out in search of a rare butterfly. While he never did see the butterfly, he did spot drone flies behaving in a curious way. “I was looking closely at all the wildflowers along the trails, and I noticed those hoverflies on a daisy. I had never seen this interaction of 3 flies, and took a series of images to try to have the 3 in focus.”  

I reached out @matthewvosper, the top iNat identifier of orange-spined drone flies, for some information about the taxon and this behavior. He told me that the genus Eristalis, which has been split reapeatedly since its original description in 1804, contains about 100 species and has about 50k more observations than any other hoverfly genus on iNat.

The larvae of Eristalis and similar genera live in muddy stagnant pools. They use their long breathing-tube tails like a snorkel, providing them with the rather delightful moniker “rat-tailed maggots”. They can be attracted to your garden by making simple “hoverfly lagoons”.

E. nemorum is one of the smaller species of Eristalis. It is characterised (though not uniquely) by its glassy clear wings with a very small wing stigma (the stigma is often important for identifying Eristalis). It's a very typical-looking Eristalis with clearly triangular orange spots near the front of the abdomen (which can be faded in females), and narrow white bands at the segment margins. It has a bit of a ginger-haired scutum, normally well dusted with a characteristic pattern. It has a holarctic distribution, and it is most similar to E. hirta and E. rossica (which also have short stigmas).

One of the most distinctive things about E. nemorum however, is the unique behaviour exemplified in this Observation of the Week. A female enjoying a flower will be “guarded” by a potential mate hovering directly above her. When the male finds her he touches her with his legs before assuming this position (apparently to confirm the identity - they have been observed touching small dark objects in this way and flying off). They can hover like this for many minutes. When the female leaves, the male follows her. This behaviour doesn't guarantee a mating opportunity however, as other males can get involved. Additional males hover in a towering stack of suitors, maintaining a constant distance from each other. It's not entirely clear how this situation gets resolved when the female flies off! This behaviour is a diagnostic character of E. nemorum.

Nicolas (above) continues to post his photos to iNaturalist and use it as a way to identify his subjects. “I haven't spent a lot of time exploring images from over the world,” he says, “but I'm planning a trip to Greece in April, and iNaturalist will be a nice tool to prepare for it.”

(Photo of Nicolas was taken by Elisabeth Gaillard. Some quotes have been lightly edited for clarity.)


- you can find Nicolas’s website here!

- check out our Identifier Profile on a group of fly identifiers who’ve made ID resources for hoverflies!

- here’s some footage of Orange-spined drone flies courting in Ireland.

- this is a nice paper describing courtship behavior for orange-spined drone flies. [PDF]

Publicado el 30 de enero de 2024 por tiwane tiwane

Comentarios

Just beatuiful, amazing!

Publicado por jorgeguerrapires_phd hace 8 meses

Amazing photo!

Publicado por cbirds22 hace 8 meses

Wow, dude! That's kind of a once-in-a-lifetime shot, I think.

Publicado por samantha_knight hace 8 meses

Wow cool behaviour!

Publicado por upupa-epops hace 8 meses

Fantastic!
I'll never look at a hoverfly in the same way again.

Publicado por swells hace 8 meses

Wonderful observation! Good luck in Greece!

Publicado por derrell_d hace 8 meses

How fabulous. Thanks for bringing our attention to this fascinating bit of behaviour.

Publicado por susanhewitt hace 8 meses

What a great fly moment! I've seen a somewhat similar behavior in squid, with several individuals swimming evenly spaced near some fixed object (like a head of coral).

Publicado por weecorbie hace 8 meses

Amazing photo! And @tiwane, I like the way you organized this post. It's great to learn about observer @nicolashelitas and how he got the photo, but also cool that you used iNaturalist's network to contact @matthewvosper for more information about the natural history of these flies. Just another illustration of how iNaturalist encourages people to get curious about nature and gives the resources to follow up on that curiosity.

Publicado por janetwright hace 8 meses

Wow, what fascinating behavior! I wonder if the top one maintained its position facing the opposite direction from the other two?

Publicado por carrieseltzer hace 8 meses

Thanks! It's something I need to do more of. Much gratitude to both Nicolas and Matthew for taking the time to reply to my messages.

Publicado por tiwane hace 8 meses

Marvellous!

Publicado por deboas hace 8 meses

So beautiful!

Publicado por njvelasc hace 8 meses

What an amazing picture!

Publicado por sunnetchan hace 8 meses

A magnificent photo of a frequently seen demeanour among hoverflies. E.g. Helophilus pendulus-

Publicado por stefansen hace 8 meses

Thanks a lot to @tiwane for the choice of my image and the work he did to build this article, and thanks too @matthewvosper for the interesting informations he added,

Publicado por nicolashelitas hace 8 meses

What a fabulous photo and fascinating explanation! Thanks to all involved :-)

Publicado por susanne-kasimir hace 8 meses

Great photo and even better story. Thanks!

Publicado por mags49 hace 8 meses

How fascinating. Thank you sincerely for sharing this unique observation with all of us. Looking forward to more of your wonderful work.

Publicado por sheilsun hace 8 meses

How cool!

Publicado por sedgequeen hace 8 meses

Wow, what a photo!

Publicado por sullivanribbit hace 8 meses

C'est incroyable! Allez les bleus!

Publicado por katermorgan hace 8 meses

Agregar un comentario

Acceder o Crear una cuenta para agregar comentarios.