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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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15.05.2007 16:23, Zhuk

Fig.3 - Chrysopa perla
Likes: 1

16.05.2007 9:37, Aleksandr Ermakov

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

The same empidid, only from a different foreshorten
Likes: 1

19.05.2007 22:08, nimu

Help plz identify a couple of flies.
Both Moscow region.

Pictures:
picture: m1.JPG
m1.JPG — (24.83 k)

picture: m2.JPG
m2.JPG — (18.35 k)

19.05.2007 22:41, Bad Den

1- Volucella pellucens
Likes: 1

23.05.2007 0:56, Vladimirrr

Please tell me the Latin name of this insect (in the photo).
The insect is predatory, the wings are probably folded in an accordion under small elytra, the length is about 1.5 cm.

Pictures:
picture: nasek1.jpg
nasek1.jpg — (24.62 k)

23.05.2007 6:19, Bad Den

Please tell me the Latin name of this insect (in the photo).
The insect is predatory, the wings are probably folded in an accordion under small elytra, the length is about 1.5 cm.

This is a beetle from sem. Staphylinidae, Staphylinus caesareus most likely.

24.05.2007 0:12, Vladimirrr

Yes, thank you, I looked at the pictures - very similar. But with the same name in the photos come across gray beetles, they can have such a variability of color?
I just used to keep gray ones, but there are no such ones.

24.05.2007 2:11, nimu

Help plz identify the fly.
Moscow region

Pictures:
picture: m.JPG
m.JPG — (7.3к)

24.05.2007 8:28, алекс 2611

Help plz identify the fly.
Moscow region


What I see resembles Ceroxys urticae (fam. Otitidae). But the quality of the photo is a little bit, as if it were softer...
I do not blame the author, I just really managed to compare only the color of the wing. The location of different bristles and other important to determine the garbage could not be considered. Therefore, it is difficult to vouch for the result of the determination.
Likes: 1

24.05.2007 19:09, nimu

Help plz identify flies, etc.
8 - Solovetsky Islands, the rest of the Moscow region.

Pictures:
picture: m4.JPG
m4.JPG — (17.78к)

picture: m3.JPG
m3.JPG — (22.07к)

picture: m2.JPG
m2.JPG — (22.58 k)

picture: m1.JPG
m1.JPG — (28.54 k)

picture: m5.JPG
m5.JPG — (20.59к)

picture: m6.JPG
m6.JPG — (16.34к)

picture: m7.JPG
m7.JPG — (13.68к)

picture: m8.JPG
m8.JPG — (7.09 k)

25.05.2007 7:55, алекс 2611

Help plz identify flies, etc.
8 - Solovetsky Islands, the rest of the Moscow region.


photos 1 and 3-6 are sirfids.
1-Sericomyia silentis, 3-Volucella ?,
4-the genus Syrphus (now many taxonomists divide this genus into several small genera), the abdominal pattern resembles Syrphus lapponicum, but I may be mistaken-maybe the genus Scaeva??
5-the genus Eristalis, up to the species can not be determined exactly.
6-the genus Chrysotoxum, resembles Chrysotoxum bicinctum, but it is better to double-check. There are many illustrations of this type.
Likes: 1

25.05.2007 7:59, алекс 2611

P.S. photo 2 - some kind of tahina, I saw it somewhere, but I can't remember...
Let's think about it...
Likes: 1

25.05.2007 8:32, Tigran Oganesov

7 - also a sirfid, I can't say for sure, but maybe from Eristalis
8 - an interesting creature, I'm thinking. Can I get a bigger and better picture? And the size would be nice to know.

25.05.2007 9:23, nimu

Size 6-6. 5 mm. Photo with a life-size match, the rest are enlarged. Solovetsky Islands 11.07.06. P.
S. number 3 identified as Volucella inanis

Pictures:
picture: mm.JPG
mm.JPG — (8.12к)

picture: mmm.JPG
mmm.JPG — (12.7к)

picture: mmmm.JPG
mmmm.JPG — (14.85к)

25.05.2007 13:45, алекс 2611

7 - also a sirfid, I can't say for sure, but maybe from Eristalis
8 - an interesting creature, I'm thinking. Can I get a bigger and better picture? And the size would be nice to know.


Definitely a sirfid??? Some strange wing venation.... Not Eristalis exactly.

And about photo 8 - yes. I don't understand anything, as if the head of one species is attached to the body of another.

25.05.2007 14:09, алекс 2611

Bolivar is right, photo 7-sirfid. From the genus Microdon/
Likes: 1

25.05.2007 14:38, Tigran Oganesov

Definitely a sirfid??? Some strange wing venation.... Not Eristalis exactly.
Just by venation it is clear-a clear additional vein. The most stable attribute. True, there are species in which it is not a vein, but a fold, that's where it is more difficult wink.gif

25.05.2007 15:14, nimu

At 7, the head is turned 90 degrees (in profile), so it was possible to straighten it in field conditions, I generally took it for a wasp at first, once again I did not touch the head.
And with regard to 8 - "as if the head of one species is attached to the body of another." I did not attach anything anywhere, as it was caught so "in its original form" and got on a pin, chesnoe pionerskoe. yes.gif

26.05.2007 8:37, алекс 2611

Just by venation it is clear-a clear additional vein. The most stable attribute. True, there are species in which it is not a vein, but a fold, that's where it is more difficult wink.gif


Yes, I knocked down this stupid process from the radial vein that divides the p1 cell
in half. In my collection, this process is not fully developed in all the specimens. Well, I started looking among the straight-seam ones... frown.gif

26.05.2007 8:41, алекс 2611

 
And with regard to 8 - "as if the head of one species is attached to the body of another." I did not attach anything anywhere, as it was caught so "in its original form" and got on a pin, chesnoe pionerskoe. yes.gif


Yes, no one doubts... It's just that her head is like a straight-seam fly, and her body is like a typical round-seam fly.
Likes: 1

26.05.2007 9:22, Tigran Oganesov

Yes, I knocked down this stupid process from the radial vein that divides the p1 cell
in half. In my collection, this process is not fully developed in all the specimens. Well, I started looking among the straight-seam ones... frown.gif
Duc " he " is a sign smile.gifI remember on the test I gave students a murmur, in which this vein is very weakly expressed, like a thin crease. No one guessed shuffle.gif

26.05.2007 10:21, stierlyz

About staf - it is still most likely Staphylinus erythropterus

26.05.2007 15:37, алекс 2611

Duc " he " is a sign smile.gifI remember on the test I gave students a murmur, in which this vein is very weakly expressed, like a thin crease. No one guessed shuffle.gif


No, I'm not talking about the "super-complete" vein. In the genus Microdon, a process runs parallel to ta from vein R4+5 to vein M1. In the view in the photo, this process reaches M1 and one extra cell is obtained. So I started to slow down... rolleyes.gif

27.05.2007 10:47, Tigran Oganesov

Oh, I see. Yes, cells can be closed.

27.05.2007 21:02, Манор

Photographed insects in Bitsevsky Park (Moscow). The tick was just crawling on the log. The maximum size is 3 mm. And the second creature crawls in the foam on the stems of plants. The size is also about 3 mm.

Pictures:
picture: 1.jpg
1.jpg — (163.91к)

picture: 2.jpg
2.jpg — (100.86к)

picture: 3.jpg
3.jpg — (181.67 k)

picture: 4.jpg
4.jpg — (95.17к)

28.05.2007 3:57, Aleksandr Ermakov

Well, if it's in foam, it means some kind of pennywort (such a cicada), or rather its larva.
And a tick, some kind of Trombidium (there are such predators...)
Likes: 1

28.05.2007 4:20, Andigo

Help with the definition of the fart was found and photographed in a house in the Leningrad Region (St. Petersburg)
picture: P1000579.jpg
picture: P1000580.jpg
picture: P1000581.jpg
picture: P1000597.jpg
In macro photos pita kamarom spider size slightly more than a centimeter in length and half a centimeter in width long legs 2 and a half centimeters in length and 3 and a half centimeters in width color green as can be seen in the photos at the end of the legs black in the future vyyanilsya pita and their relatives but apparently other species this was seen for the first time such not where not observed among us not experts...
HERE ARE THE LINKS TO THE PHOTOS
http://image030.mylivepage.com/chunk30/504...P1000597_r3.jpg
http://image030.mylivepage.com/chunk30/504...41/P1000581.JPG
http://image030.mylivepage.com/chunk30/504...41/P1000580.JPG
http://image030.mylivepage.com/chunk30/504...41/P1000579.JPG

P.S. IF IT IS NOT DIFFICULT TO TELL YOU WHO KNOWS WHAT ABOUT HIM AND HIS KIND JUST VERY INTERESTING, for example, what he eats... THANK YOU VERY MUCH IN ADVANCE for all the answers !!!
If you need to take more photos then this is currently possible without any problems just ask but the quality at that time worsened due to the fact that the photo was taken at night with weak poor lighting of a specific color that temporarily changed natural colors towards yellow...

This post was edited by Andigo - 05/28/2007 06: 04

28.05.2007 8:51, Tigran Oganesov

It is a spider of the genus Micromata. Likes wet biotopes, can often be found on the grass near the water. He doesn't weave a trap net, but hunts by leaps and bounds. It eats, like all spiders, any living creature suitable in size. Mostly insects, of course.

01.06.2007 18:14, Halfer

It flew into the room in the lamplight, although it doesn't seem to be a nocturnal creature. I got it in boxes. The next day I open it, and it's bent.
It looks like a wasp in color. But the belly is kind of flattened not on the sides, but on top.
In general, here are the pictures:
picture: dipt1.jpg
picture: dipt2.jpg

01.06.2007 18:16, Halfer

Oh, and she also has a piercing mouthpiece, at least a short bayonet sticks out.

01.06.2007 20:23, Tigran Oganesov

This is sirfida. A mouthpiece like most flies-licking.

01.06.2007 22:42, алекс 2611

Spaerophoria ? Or am I being stupid again?

02.06.2007 2:16, Tigran Oganesov

Spaerophoria ? Or am I being stupid again?

I would say yes (in the sense of Sphaerophoriawink.gif). But I am not very familiar with the modern taxonomy of sirfids, who knows what it is called now? confused.gif

02.06.2007 10:04, алекс 2611

It seems that this genus has not yet been divided (into a bunch of small ones). Here is the genus Syrphus, yes, got it.

02.06.2007 10:46, Tigran Oganesov

It seems that this genus has not yet been divided (into a bunch of small ones). Here is the genus Syrphus, yes, got it.
Well, yes, so I smile.gifdon't like these fractional trends by analogy mad.gif

02.06.2007 17:22, алекс 2611

Well, yes, so I smile.gifdon't like these fractional trends by analogy mad.gif



Oh, I agree.

02.06.2007 18:32, Ilia Ustiantcev

Please help me identify the spiders:
1.2.3.4.5.6picture: ________________.jpg
picture: _________________2.jpg
image: ____. jpg
picture: _____4.jpg
picture: _____5.jpg
.picture: ____________________.jpg
All photos except the last one were taken in the Moscow region, and the last one was taken in the Oksky Nature Reserve.

02.06.2007 19:21, lepidopterolog

1, 2. Misumena vatia
6. Lycosa singoriensis?
Likes: 1

02.06.2007 19:39, Ilia Ustiantcev

And in Russian it is a yellow spider-crab and a South Russian tarantula?

02.06.2007 20:24, Dinusik

Please help me identify the spiders. All photos were taken in the Amur region.

Pictures:
picture: P5260066.JPG
P5260066.JPG — (169.66к)

picture: P5260063.JPG
P5260063.JPG — (206.62к)

picture: P5260062.JPG
P5260062.JPG — (173.38к)

picture: P5260013.JPG
P5260013.JPG — (149.71к)

picture: P5260056.JPG
P5260056.JPG — (152.65к)

picture: P5190039.JPG
P5190039.JPG — (254.34к)

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