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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

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07.05.2007 0:02, Vladimirrr

07.05.2007 0:51, Bad Den

Larva of a skin-eating beetle from the genus Attagenus

07.05.2007 8:21, Sv Kononova

Good afternoon! Tell me about spiders, please.
Who is it?

user posted image
Moscow region, 2003

user posted image
Also near Moscow, 2003
Hatched - but who? I don't know...

07.05.2007 8:31, Tigran Oganesov

Good afternoon! Tell me about spiders, please.
Who is it?

1. Misumena vatia
2. It looks like a crowd of krestovikov (Araneus sp.).
Likes: 1

07.05.2007 12:20, Sv Kononova

Thank you for the spiders!

Can I show you another one?"
I thought at first it was him - Misumena Crookshanks.
But now I see that I was wrong.
user posted image
Moscow region, 2006


And one more question (not about spiders)
Who's that?" I don't even know what unit to put them in...

user posted image
Moscow region, 2003

This post was edited by Sv_Kononova - 07.05.2007 12: 23

07.05.2007 12:36, omar

Bee beetle Trichodes apiarius. A very common animal in the Moscow region. Family Cleridae
Likes: 1

07.05.2007 12:58, Sv Kononova

Thank you for pchelozhuka! I've already found information on it and read it. Thanks!

What about the spider?
I'm at a loss now-which of them is Misumena Crookshanks?
Especially since I have another similar misumena:

user posted image
Moscow region, 2005

So which of the three is which?

Help me figure it out!

07.05.2007 15:57, Tigran Oganesov

Thank you for the spiders!

Can I show you another one?"
I thought at first it was him - Misumena Crookshanks.
But now I see that I was wrong.


What about the spider?
I'm at a loss now-which of them is Misumena Crookshanks?
Especially since I have another similar misumena:
So which of the three is which?

Help me figure it out!

I'll tell you a secret, it's all Misumena vatia. I can make a mistake with the latter, because he doesn't seem to be an adult yet.
As far as I remember, only this species lives in the genus Misumena, there are no others. It is highly variable and can also change color like a chameleon depending on the substrate.

"Clumsy" lol.gifI love Russian names.
Likes: 1

08.05.2007 7:21, Sv Kononova

Thank you for your clarification about Misumena croatia!

I have one more question - who is this?

user posted image
Also near Moscow

10.05.2007 7:08, Sv Kononova

Something with the spider business is moving quite tight...
Then I have a question about Diptera.

user posted image
Figure 1
Is this a big head?
Specifically - can it be Conops flavipes?

The picture (as well as all subsequent ones in this topic) was taken in the Moscow region in 2003.

user posted image
figure 2

user posted image
figure 3

user posted image
figure 4

user posted image
figure 5

10.05.2007 9:44, Bad Den

Fig. 1 - this is most likely
a murmur of rice.3-Scatophaga stercoraria
fig.4 - Volucella pellucens
Likes: 1

10.05.2007 13:43, guest: Лена

Help with spiders)
user posted image

user posted image

10.05.2007 14:36, Sv Kononova

In the second photo (on a yellow flower) - Misumena croatia.

10.05.2007 14:38, Sv Kononova

Figure 1-this is most likely a murmur

I don't agree yet shuffle.gif
According to my observation of responses to previously posted photos, babblers do not have such a "waist" and the back part of the body bent down.

10.05.2007 14:46, omar

I don't agree yet

Svetlana, you're doing great!

10.05.2007 15:02, Sv Kononova

Figure 4-Volucella pellucens


But this is also -
user posted image
also Volucella pellucens. And they are quite different in my opinion.
The one in Figure 4 has a stronger color contrast between the parts of the calf (black-white).
And the one in the last picture, the colors in the brown key (and there is no camera error and color reproduction - I remember this murmur well "live"smile.gif)

10.05.2007 15:57, Tigran Oganesov

I don't agree yet shuffle.gif
According to my observation of responses to previously posted photos, babblers do not have such a "waist" and the back part of the body bent down.
And here is and in vain tongue.gifZhurchalka this, pure water. They are very diverse. Here here for example, also a babbler, Rhingia.
Bad Den is right about volucella again, she is.

And what about the Misumena did you say correctly smile.gif

By the way, the first spider is the Lycosa tarantula. I just don't know. It would be nice to know where the images came from.
Likes: 1

10.05.2007 16:01, Sv Kononova

And here is and in vain tongue.gifZhurchalka this, pure water.


Don't tease me shuffle.gif
I'm not a wizard yet - I'm just learning smile.gif

Murmurs accepted smile.gif
Only if with Volucella pellucens the issue of defining up to a species is finally resolved, then what to do with Fig. 1? Who can it be specifically?
Is it possible to determine this?
Likes: 1

10.05.2007 16:10, Tigran Oganesov

Don't tease me shuffle.gif
I'm not a wizard yet - I'm just learning smile.gif

Murmurs accepted smile.gif
Only if with Volucella pellucens the issue of defining up to a species is finally resolved, then what to do with Fig. 1? Who can it be specifically?
Is it possible to determine this?

Fig. 1 - some kind of banal, I see them all the time, but I don't remember who exactly it isfrown.gif
By the way, your last spider is also banal. My literature is currently unavailable, so I can't look it up yet. frown.gif
Figure 2 - apparently, some Phasia from the flies (Tachinidae).
Likes: 1

10.05.2007 17:09, Sv Kononova

Fig. 1 - some kind of banal, I see them all the time, but I don't remember who exactly it isfrown.gif
By the way, your last spider is also banal.


I am well aware that 99% of my photo library consists of absolutely ordinary, banal pictures!
Unfortunately, I don't currently have the opportunity to travel around the world and take photos of various exotics - so I am content with what the fauna of the Podolsk district of the Moscow region offers me. smile.gif
Well, what can be original there?
Three highways, a railway and the city of Podolsk with all its "consequences" in 10 km frown.gif

10.05.2007 17:48, guest: Лена

By the way, the first spider is the Lycosa tarantula. I just don't know. It would be nice to know where the images came from.


Southern Urals, Chelyabinsk region. I thought we only had Lycosa singoriensis smile.gifwhat

10.05.2007 18:23, алекс 2611

  
Murmurs accepted smile.gif
Only if with Volucella pellucens the issue of defining up to a species is finally resolved, then what to do with Fig. 1? Who can it be specifically?
Is it possible to determine this?


1 most likely Xanthogramma pedisequum (from the family Syrphidae). In central Russia, a fairly common view.
And Tahina is interesting, I will think.... I've seen it somewhere....
Likes: 1

10.05.2007 18:47, Sv Kononova

But such a horror - who really is?
I can't even guess what genus it belongs to...

user posted image
Banal Moscow region, 2003

10.05.2007 18:48, алекс 2611

Oh, by the way, about Volucella pellucens: the top picture shows a male, the bottom picture shows a female.

10.05.2007 18:53, Sv Kononova

And this is Bombylius major? Or am I wrong?

user posted image
Moscow region, 2004

10.05.2007 18:54, Sv Kononova

Oh, by the way, about Volucella pellucens: the top picture shows a male, the bottom picture shows a female.

I'm afraid to even ask how you tell them apart by gender...

10.05.2007 20:24, алекс 2611

I'm afraid to even ask how you tell them apart by gender...


Nothing terrible or indecent. In most sirfids, the eyes of males fit snugly together, while in females the eyes are separated by a strip. Your photos clearly show this. Females and males also differ, for example, in horseflies.
Likes: 1

10.05.2007 20:26, Zhuk

But such a horror - who really is?
I can't even guess what genus it belongs to...

Was it alive? It seems to me that this is someone's skin after molting (presumably mayflies).

11.05.2007 1:05, Tigran Oganesov

I am well aware that 99% of my photo library consists of absolutely ordinary, banal pictures!
Unfortunately, I don't currently have the opportunity to travel around the world and take photos of various exotics - so I am content with what the fauna of the Podolsk district of the Moscow region offers me. smile.gif
Well, what can be original there?
Three highways, a railway and the city of Podolsk with all its "consequences" in 10 km frown.gif
I do not mean that the pictures are banal and uninteresting. I am saying that these insects are not rare and known, so there should be no problems in identifying them. I would have identified the spider for you without any problems, but now all my entomological literature is completely inaccessible, I can't remember it from memoryfrown.gif, and I don't have time to climb the Internet.
And Alex 2611 has already identified smile.gifthe murmur

11.05.2007 2:23, Vladimirrr

Please tell me the name of the spider. There are no photos, but I don't think there are many of them in the middle lane. The spider is quite small - several mm long, and its color is completely bright red... Land transport.

This post was edited by Vladimirrr - 05/11/2007 02: 26

11.05.2007 6:34, Bad Den

Please tell me the name of the spider. There are no photos, but I don't think there are many of them in the middle lane. The spider is quite small - several mm long, and its color is completely bright red... Land transport.

Maybe it's not a spider, but a red-bodied tick (Trombiculidae)?

11.05.2007 7:28, guest: Лена

11.05.2007 8:10, Sv Kononova

Was it alive? It seems to me that this is someone's skin after molting (presumably mayflies).

Your question has me stumped... The picture was taken four years ago - I don't remember what it really looked like confused.gif

I think you're right - it's someone's pelt, abandoned after molting.

11.05.2007 23:50, Vladimirrr

12.05.2007 7:50, Sv Kononova

Tell me, please, is this someone from the Asilidae?
Or am I wrong again?

If I'm wrong, please correct me.

user posted image
Moscow region, 2004

12.05.2007 10:24, Bad Den

Tell me, please, is this someone from the Asilidae?
Or am I wrong again?

If I'm wrong, please correct me.

Moscow region, 2004

No, it's Empididae, Empis sp.
Likes: 1

13.05.2007 21:01, Sv Kononova

Thank you for Empis sp.!

I have one more problem (in addition to the three hymenoptera that I asked about in the corresponding topic and haven't received an answer yet)...

user posted image
Moscow region-2003

13.05.2007 21:57, Zhuk

It's a fly. Nirazu had never seen one like it.

14.05.2007 22:08, Sungaya

Dear experts, tell me what kind of caddisfly it is (if possible - up to the species)
At what stage is the larva and is it possible to get an adult insect from it at home?

Pictures:
picture: r1.jpg
r1.jpg — (59.06к)

picture: r2.jpg
r2.jpg — (53.31 k)

15.05.2007 7:27, Sv Kononova

Good afternoon!
Since there are no results with hymenoptera yet, I'll ask about the golden eyes.

user posted image
figure 1

user posted image
figure 2

user posted image
figure 3

user posted image
figure 4

On the one hand, they are all almost the same - the only difference is in the color of the eyes, wings and body...

All were shot in the Moscow region in different years.

Are they all Nineta vittata?
confused.gif

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