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Miners. websites, photos, and questions

Community and ForumInsects biology and faunisticsMiners. websites, photos, and questions

Pirx, 26.05.2011 1:36

I came across a good site. The topic of traces of insects ' vital activity was repeatedly discussed at the forum. However, I didn't find any topics dedicated specifically to mines in my search. I suggest posting everything related to them here (within reasonable limits). I think that many people also have something to offer for determination.

http://www.bladmineerders.nl/index.htm

This post was edited by Pirx - 29.05.2011 01: 12

Pictures:
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Comments

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29.05.2011 1:26, Pirx

I suggest that the Gauls also come here

one of the walnut trees on the oak tree
http://www.bladmineerders.nl/gallen/andric...datrix/_675.jpg

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29.05.2011 1:42, Pirx

British Miners

http://www.leafmines.co.uk/index.htm

miners_2.jpg

sycamore mining moth
http://www.leafmines.co.uk/Leaf%20mines%20...%20platani5.jpg

picture: Phyllonorycter_platani5.jpg

29.05.2011 1:52, Pirx

More Brits

http://www.ukflymines.co.uk/index.html

miners_3.jpg

Mine of Phyllocnistis ramulicola
http://www.ukflymines.co.uk/Images/gallery...amulicola_1.jpg

picture: Phyllocnistis_ramulicola_1.jpg

29.05.2011 13:47, Pirx

on wild garlic

wild garlic: bear onion (Allium ursinum L., 1753) and victory onion (A. victorialis L., 1753)
picture: 413px_Illustration_Allium_ursinum1.jpgpicture: Allium_victoralis_small.jpg

sirphids from the related genera
Portevinia maculata (Fallén, 1817), mine the bases of the stems, and later the larva penetrates the bulbs (corms are believed to be corms) of bear onion, less often triangular (A. triquetrum L., narrow - leaved species).
картинка: 575px_Portevinia_maculata__male_.jpg
picture: Pm00E21A_4.jpg
picture: Pm41761_large.jpg
picture: Portevinia_maculata.jpg

A. triquetrum L.
allium_triquetrum__inflorescense_.jpg

Cheilosia fasciata Schiner & Egger, 1853, mines the leaves of bear onion (March-May, at low altitudes n.o. m.) and L. pobednogo (June, higher).
picture: _______1.jpg
picture: Cheilosia_fasciata.jpg
picture: 42090_large.jpg

mine on wild garlic
picture: _______5.jpg

wild garlic thickets
_______6.jpg

This post was edited by Pirx - 05/29/2011 19: 11
Likes: 4

29.05.2011 19:13, Pirx

After studying all the available literature, I changed the previous message: portevinia live in the bulb, cheilesia-in the leaves.

30.05.2011 10:09, Pirx

The famous Cameraria ohridella, chestnut mining moth or Ohrid miner. Successful page about her. In Ukraine, the species is widespread everywhere.

Pictures:
picture: cameraria_ohridella_befall.jpg
cameraria_ohridella_befall.jpg — (95.56к)

Likes: 2

17.06.2011 12:20, Анфим

The day before yesterday I met fluffy galls.
(There's a bug among the Gauls. Is he related to the Gauls?)
And the other Gauls are here with me:
http://www.photoshare.ru/office/album.php?id=242933

This post was edited by Anfim - 18.06.2011 13: 06

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18.06.2011 16:22, Дзанат

If it is a bird cherry, then it may be a gall tick from the family Eriophyidae. And on the willow there are red swellings - galls of the thick-walled gall sawfly (I don't remember Latin)
Likes: 1

18.06.2011 19:35, botanque


(There's a bug among the Gauls. Is he related to the Gauls?)

The bug is very similar to someone from Cyphon, sem. Scirtidae. Are there any water bodies nearby? It has nothing to do with Gauls.
Likes: 1

18.06.2011 21:19, Анфим

Thank you, yes, there are reservoirs nearby. The Sven River.
But these spots on the aspen leaf, do they also belong to mines?

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DSC05843.JPG — (609.63к)

21.06.2011 16:53, guest: Дзанат

No, they're not mines. Mines are when the larvae drill a hole in the leaf blade. It's probably Gauls.

02.07.2011 23:53, Анфим

I noticed bubbles on the leaves of the holly maple. They are located at the bottom, and moisture condenses in them. Top view and bottom view, July 1. And some more scales.

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DSC09880.JPG
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DSC09908.JPG
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03.07.2011 1:53, Pirx

I noticed bubbles on the leaves of the holly maple. They are located at the bottom, and moisture condenses in them. Top view and bottom view, July 1. And some more scales.


This is all the panels.
Likes: 1

04.07.2011 20:55, Анфим

This is all the panels.

And here is some strange fluff on the same maple tree and another on an American one-it's probably not scabbards anymore?

This post was edited by Anfim - 04.07.2011 20: 59

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04.07.2011 21:04, guest: Дзанат

Looks like powdery mildew

05.07.2011 0:00, Pirx

Yes, it looks powdery.

06.07.2011 2:10, Анфим

I found a chestnut moth in Bryansk (June 29 of this year), but I doubt whether it is a portevinia or not. Last year's fly, from September 25.

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6215201.jpg
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Likes: 2

06.07.2011 2:31, Vlad Proklov

I found a chestnut moth in Bryansk (June 29 of this year), but I doubt whether it is a portevinia or not. Last year's fly, from September 25.

Oh, credit! And where was the moth - right in the center of Bryansk, on what outskirts? I need to slap a point on the map correctly=)

06.07.2011 2:38, Pirx

I found a chestnut moth in Bryansk (June 29 of this year), but I doubt whether it is a portevinia or not. Last year's fly, from September 25.


No, this is not a syrfida at all.

06.07.2011 17:29, алекс 2611

No, this is not a syrfida at all.


tahina probably....

06.07.2011 21:16, Pirx

This is beyond my understanding - I, a servant of God, can only hope that it is so.
Likes: 1

06.07.2011 22:04, Анфим

Oh, credit! And where was the moth - right in the center of Bryansk, on what outskirts? I need to slap a point on the map correctly =)

In Proletarsky Square, near the BMZ plant.
Likes: 1

07.07.2011 9:36, алекс 2611

This is beyond my understanding - I, a servant of God, can only hope that it is so.


and ischo fly
expert takhina can not determine
tongue.gif

07.07.2011 15:24, Pirx

and ischo fly
expert takhina can not determine
tongue.gif


I repent, I repent, I am still sinful and weak in mind mol.gif

07.07.2011 21:23, Анфим

and ischo fly
expert takhina can not determine
tongue.gif

Holy naivete!
Is there really still such a class of encyclopedists in the world as "fly geeks"? Today, you probably need to distinguish who is a sirphologist and who is a tachinologist-the difference...
In short, the tachinologists disagreed about my fly. One said, "Meigenia mutabilis group of species," and the other, " I would guess Meigenia sp." Now I'm covered in dictionaries and trying to translate this from the high language of science into my Plebeian language.
What is the essence of the disagreement?

This post was edited by Anfim - 07.07.2011 21: 35
Likes: 1

07.07.2011 21:56, Pirx

What kind of tachynologists? The definition is accurate, apparently...

07.07.2011 23:42, Анфим

What kind of tachynologists? The definition is accurate, apparently...

http://www.diptera.info/forum/viewthread.php?thread_id=40010
Well, I understand that tachinologists, in order to show that they do not eat bread for nothing, decided to consider Meigenia mutabilis not a species, but a group of species...
However, now it is not clear what the expression "beat me to the name" means.
"Damaged your reputation"?..
Apparently, it should be understood that the second tachinologist agreed with the first.

This post was edited by Anfim - 07.07.2011 23: 49

08.07.2011 0:56, Pirx

  http://www.diptera.info/forum/viewthread.php?thread_id=40010
Well, I understand that tachinologists, in order to show that they do not eat bread for nothing, decided to consider Meigenia mutabilis not a species, but a group of species...
However, now it is not clear what the expression "beat me to the name" means.
"Damaged your reputation"?..
Apparently, it should be understood that the second tachinologist agreed with the first.


But no, the guys just said that the species belongs to a group of species close to" mutabilis", more precisely, it is simply impossible from the photo, no one here has measured it with pipisks. And even joked lol.gif

08.07.2011 9:55, Анфим

No I'm not

But this one I have, I hope, is definitely babblers, and not hippos?
Xylota ignava
Eristalinus sepulchralis

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15.07.2011 11:28, Анфим

Burdock leaf with a mine. Yesterday.

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15.07.2011 12:43, Vlad Proklov

Burdock leaf with a mine. Yesterday.

Flies.

15.07.2011 20:04, Pirx

But this one I have, I hope, is definitely babblers, and not hippos?
Xylota ignava
Eristalinus sepulchralis


The second behemoth is correct, and the first one is most likely Xylota segnis.
Likes: 1

16.07.2011 21:44, Анфим

Here are some more mines I have lying around. May 7 on the lime tree and May 19 on the apple tree photographed. I haven't seen any of them yet, though.

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picture: DSC00366_.JPG
DSC00366_.JPG — (97.25к)

picture: DSC03922_.JPG
DSC03922_.JPG — (116.63к)

17.07.2011 9:27, Pirx

Here are some more mines I have lying around. May 7 on the lime tree and May 19 on the apple tree photographed. I haven't seen any of them yet, though.


Is it zlatki? Are they definitely miners?

17.07.2011 21:08, Анфим

Is it zlatki? Are they definitely miners?

I don't know. Right now I opened the Internet, and there it says: "Mining zlatka (Trachys minuta) is often found in damp places on willow trees. Beetles are found in June, July and August. The larvae form mines. Mines in the form of large yellow spots at the edge of the leaf "
(http://www.faunarb.info/page.php?id=311&ratings=1), and I have not in June, but in May, and not on willow.
Likes: 1

17.07.2011 21:12, Shtil

Still yes, Trachys minuta. We have also been catching fish since May...
Likes: 1

17.07.2011 23:21, Bad Den

Is it zlatki? Are they definitely miners?

Aha, from the genus Trachys, most likely T. minuta (only it is found on including and on trees, the rest, it seems, are inhabited by herbaceous plants)
Larvae mine the leaves.
Likes: 1

18.07.2011 0:53, Pirx

In Russian literature there is a very good three-volume publication on the topic:

Gall-forming insects of cultivated and wild plants of the European part of the USSR. Hymenoptera / / Zerova M. D., Dyakonchuk L. A., Ermolenko V. M.-Kiev: Naukova dumka. - 1988. - 160 p. [I'm not sure if the link is correct]

Gall-forming insects of cultivated and wild plants of the European part of the USSR. Diptera / / Kolomoets T. P., Mamaev B. M., Zerova M. D. et al. / Ed. by E. N. Savchenko. Kiev: Naukova dumka Publ., 1989, 168 p. (in Russian)

Gall-forming insects of cultivated and wild plants of the European part of the USSR. Equidistant wings, lepidoptera, coleoptera, and hemiptera / / Zerova M. D., Mamontova V. A., Ermolenko V. M. et al. / Ed. by E. N. Savchenko. Kiev: Naukova dumka Publ., 1991, 344 p.

It is a pity that they are not in electronic form, it seems. I haven't seen the first volume at all.

This post was edited by Pirx - 18.07.2011 00: 54

18.07.2011 9:23, Анфим

Aha, from the genus Trachys, most likely T. minuta (only it is found on including and on trees, the rest, it seems, are inhabited by herbaceous plants)
Larvae mine the leaves.

This is not entirely true. Here, please, is a narrow-bodied gold leaf on a tree. Photographed on June 5 in the forest. I don't remember the tree, but the gold leaf looks like Agrilus viridis in a scientific way...
That is, these are other trachys on the grass...

This post was edited by Anfim - 18.07.2011 10: 18

Pictures:
picture: DSC02105_.JPG
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