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Who is it? Identification of different orders of insects

Community and ForumInsects identificationWho is it? Identification of different orders of insects

gostya, 05.09.2005 5:07

This topic contains photos (how to insert a picture in a message described here or links to photos of orders of insects and arachnids (not included in special topics) for which you need to determine the family / genus/species.

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05.09.2005 6:48, AVP

gostya: http://nasekomie.h10.ru/cikada.html
Well, xto here can still be day and night.... Similar?
Likes: 6

05.09.2005 6:51, Dmitrii Musolin

Yes, it's a cicada. Such large species can spend several years underground in the larval stage.

Dmitry Musolin.
Likes: 3

05.09.2005 13:13, K. A. A.

And here is another beautiful fly, about 0.5 cm, I saw it only in the thickets of wild rose...

Pictures:
 the image is no longer on the site: P8221017.JPG P8221017.JPG — (36.59к) 05.09.2005 — 12.09.2005

05.09.2005 13:52, Дзанат

Is it sitting on a bull's-eye?

05.09.2005 13:58, K. A. A.

This is such a rosehip fruit, only it is still green (:

05.09.2005 14:34, Guest

Wow! Then the rosehip fly (Rhagoletis alternata Fall.). sem.Tephritidae-mottled birds.Look on the net, otherwise I don't know when, it or not it?
Likes: 2

05.09.2005 14:38, Guest

This is a Zenat, not a guest,I forgot my password weep.gif

05.09.2005 15:01, Дядя ФАКСер

gostya: http://nasekomie.h10.ru/cikada.html
Well, xto here can still be day and night.... Similar?

Extremely noisy animal: a couple of them got into a secluded place on my balcony - and chattered all night smile.gif

05.09.2005 16:28, XYZ

to Gostya
The genus Tibicen is typical for the United States. Probably Tibicen canicularis is a male, but not exactly...
Unfortunately, I don't have my own experience in the United States. If you're interested, check out this site:
http://insects.ummz.lsa.umich.edu/fauna/mi...igan/Index.html
don't let the color in the photo confuse you, see, for example, http://molbiol.ru/forums/index.php?showtopic=42775
Likes: 2

05.09.2005 17:03, gostya

Thank you all very much! They are really very noisy, one such as a jet plane, the windows can not be opened at night in the summer. And we also have fireflies flying in the summer, I don't have photos, but they are basically beautiful only when they glow, and so ordinary beetles 2-cm somewhere.

17.09.2005 15:40, Dracus

What kind of cicada? confused.gif

Pictures:
 the image is no longer on the site: tur23.JPG tur23.JPG — (115.37к) 17.09.2005 — 24.09.2005

08.11.2005 20:34, sealor

Here's another reason to ask "who is it", since I also can't identify dragonflies.
However, there are versions:
http://vernum.mksat.net/oda/od1.jpg Conagrinidae
http://vernum.mksat.net/oda/od2.jpg Cordulia sp.
http://vernum.mksat.net/oda/od3.jpg Cordulia sp.
http://vernum.mksat.net/oda/od6.jpg Aeshnidae
http://vernum.mksat.net/oda/od8.jpg Aeshnidae

Все: http://vernum.mksat.net/oda/oda.htm

This post was edited by sealor - 08.11.2005 20: 36

08.11.2005 20:42, PVOzerski

od2 and od3 are not Cordulia. Od3 is most similar to the mature male Libellula depressa. Od2 - same species, but female or young male. See, for example, what I just found by searching on the Net:

http://rwn.boom.ru/animals/odonata/Libell_depres_r.html

08.11.2005 21:04, BO.

Help identify the spider.

The body size is slightly more than 1 cm.
Astrakhan region. If you can go into more detail.
Sincerely VO.

08.11.2005 21:07, sealor

Yes, indeed Libellula depressa. And I looked in my "school atlas", there are drawings such that Cordulia is similar, but I looked online - not it.
But the upper one is exactly like from Coenagrionidae, and the lower ones are eshna, the first one is similar to Anax sp, and the second to Aeshna mixta?

16.11.2005 23:02, BO.

Help identify the spider.

16.11.2005 23:39, Tigran Oganesov

BO, and there are still pictures, and then this is some kind of indistinct (for definition)?

17.11.2005 20:37, andr_mih

http://vernum.mksat.net/dpt/sp1.jpg
I disagree: in my opinion, this is a male babbler Volucella pellucens
2-female, and 3,4-males (there may be one species)
/het/sp1.jpg - nymph Eurydema sp. (m / w E. oleracea)
/het/sp2.jpg -male Pentatoma rufipes (already visited this forum)
/het/sp4.jpg -nymph Palomena sp. (prasina or viridis)
/het/sp5.jpg -it looks like a colony of young soldier beetles (Pyrrhocoris apterus), but, to be honest, I'm not sure - there is no sharpness.

The spider in the picture is very similar to Clubiona sp. (well, experts will correct me)

17.11.2005 21:09, Tigran Oganesov

17.11.2005 22:37, BO.

BO, and there are still pictures, and then this is some kind of indistinct (for definition)?

No to cohabitation. This one I met by chance at the sea on vacation. Just one frame.

And whether it is possible, to define a spider which photo threw a little earlier. (yellow)Very necessary.
The spider is very active jumping. Doesn't eat, it's already been a week frown.gif

17.11.2005 22:46, BO.

frown.gif that there are no spiders?

19.11.2005 22:15, sealor

What is the name of this spider? What are its" opportunities " in terms of toxicity? There's a report that it bit a human !? eek.gif
This spider lives in indoor conditions, in appearance and lifestyle - from the shadows.

user posted image

This post was edited by sealor - 11/19/2005 22: 17

19.11.2005 22:41, Tigran Oganesov

In my opinion, this is the Linyphiidae family, the genus is most likely Linyphia. In terms of toxicity, it has no "opportunities" against vertebrates. I suppose you thought it was karakurt?" It's definitely not him or his relative. BTW, is he from around here?

19.11.2005 23:56, sealor

No, I certainly did not confuse him with Karakurt, it would be very interesting, I'm looking for him all over the steppes, and he's sitting at home under the sofasmile.gif, but I assumed that from teridiid.
I looked at Google images - it looks like it. Now I'll look for more information.
Regarding the "possibilities", the bitten person claims that there was swelling.
" BTW, is he from your area?"how's that? As for the spider, yes, but I suspect that it is generally synanthropic.

This post was edited by sealor - 11/20/2005 00: 01

20.11.2005 1:54, Tigran Oganesov

Ugh, I messed frown.gifup This is not Linyphiidae at all. The color got mixed up, those have a similar one. This is indeed Theridiidae, a genus of Steatoda, apparently triangulosa (see photos in Google). In the south, he caught black steatodes with red and orange stripes, not similar in color to this one. As a child, I mixed them up with karakurt, it's too similar smile.gifIn this case, it may well be swelling from her bite.
I have seen steatodes in the south, but in Moscow, for example, I have never seen them.

20.11.2005 16:20, andr_mih

In the Internet, there was already something about the bite of a synanthropic spider:
http://second.udomlya.ru/forum/YaBB.pl?num...32671;start=all
Does anyone know what it's called? Maybe from the Agelenidae?

20.11.2005 18:29, Tigran Oganesov

Loxosceles reclusa (сем. Loxoscelidae) . Quite a venomous spider. He has a hemolytic poison, so the tissues are destroyed (in karakurt - neurotoxic). The spider is American (and then there is far from everywhere), but we do not have it at all (well, maybe in the collection), unlike what the author of that topic convinces.

20.11.2005 19:58, andr_mih

Thank you. I thought at first that this was a joke. A spider like our Tegenaria domestica, at first glance. Maybe we already have them in our homes?: -)))

20.11.2005 21:12, sealor

Bolivar :
"I have seen steatodes in the south, but in Moscow, for example, I have never seen them. "
Intresno, just from Moscow and report on the bite...

20.11.2005 22:33, Tigran Oganesov

You wrote it:

21.11.2005 0:28, sealor

No, the spider in the picture above is mine, and the one in Moscow is supposedly similar.
Unfortunately, I can't give a link to the description of the spider and the bite of it directly by the "injured" author, authorization is required there...

21.11.2005 1:26, Tigran Oganesov

Oh, I see. You see, I got it all mixed up at first, so anything can happen. In general, there are not so many spiders that can cause edema. Although krestovik can do this, it all depends on the person.

21.11.2005 19:32, andr_mih

I have steatodes at home and at work (Troitsk MO), especially a lot of them in the summer (I haven't seen them in nature). The species is similar to S. grossa, black ones like that. But I've also seen one similar to this one. These creatures quietly got into the terrarium, multiplied there and devoured all the earwigs and almost all the crickets. In my opinion, they do not bite at all - chelicerae are too weak for the skin.

21.11.2005 21:22, andr_mih

In my opinion, there is no paired vertex zone on the crown, and the head is not conical either in profile or from above. The protrusion on the forehead gives the appearance of a taper on the side, but this is not it :-). Flat antennae can be just a sexual trait. See on the Internet photos of undoubted pyrgomorphids. Unfortunately, Acinipe is not searched for keywords, and I don't remember where I downloaded them from. I can't insert a photo from my computer yet: - (

21.11.2005 21:47, Dracus

23.11.2005 2:35, Tigran Oganesov

2 andr_mih

25.11.2005 18:37, sealor

andr_mih
I have heard that karakurts can be up to 1.2 cm and even smaller. And these are females. Males are generally small and very different from females. This is meant by L. t. var. mactans.

25.11.2005 19:59, Tigran Oganesov

Our karakurts reach 15 mm (females) and 8 mm (males), but they can be smaller smile.gifand ("black widow") slightly larger. Steatodes are the same (S. paykulliana) and smaller (S. grossa, bipunctata). At the same time, grossa grows up to 12 mm, which is quite comparable.

26.11.2005 17:10, PVOzerski

 
On http://photo.bov.com.ru my photos of insects. Many are undefined.
I will be glad to hear your comments.
Sincerely yours, VO.

In my opinion, the animal designated as the nymph Decticus verrucivorus is actually a nymph of some Platycleis. Other grasshoppers are similar to Tettigonia larvae. Regarding locusts, the upper left animal looks like a male Heteracris, and the upper right one looks like a male Paracinema tricolor (although both are "offhand". If I reconsider my opinion , I will correct it).

The photos are great. Where was it filmed? smile.gif

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