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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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30.12.2007 19:51, gumenuk

Probably sappers. There were no fascists around?

No, the fascists near Moscow were beaten in 41. Maybe our partisans stayed? tongue.gif

30.12.2007 19:55, Vlad Proklov

Can you tell me who could mine the oak leaves?

I've only just started mining-but it doesn't look like a butterfly mine.
From butterflies if only Phyllonorycter sp. which...
Likes: 1

30.12.2007 19:56, Vlad Proklov

The yellow spots confuse me - I've never seen anything like this.
In general, the oak is one of the most popular trees, it is not only mined by anyone.

30.12.2007 20:10, gumenuk

It is clear that identifying the miner in his tracks is a very difficult task eek.gif
Maybe with the creators of Gauls easier ?

Pictures:
picture: A010672.jpg
A010672.jpg — (135.12к)

30.12.2007 20:33, Vlad Proklov

To the mines: or maybe it's Tischeria ekebladella (?)
Likes: 1

30.12.2007 20:38, gumenuk

To the mines: or maybe it's Tischeria ekebladella (?)

It could very well be. I looked it up http://lt.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vienspalv%C4%97s_ti%C5%A1erijos - very similar (especially when compared to other frames I have)

05.01.2008 2:52, YLena

 
In general, oak is one of the most popular trees, it is not only mined by anyone.


Hello!
I'm also talking about dubo-miners.
Please tell me whose "handiwork" this is?

user posted image

Plant: Tavor oak. Quercus ithaburensis. Filmed in Israel at the end of October. All trees were infected with this.

05.01.2008 3:03, Vlad Proklov

Hello!
I'm also talking about dubo-miners.
Please tell me whose "handiwork" this is?

Plant: Tavor oak. Quercus ithaburensis. Filmed in Israel at the end of October. All the trees were infected with it.

They're not mines, they're Gauls. In England, something similar to the oak tree is created by hymenoptera-gallica (family Cynipidae) from the genus Neuroterus.

05.01.2008 3:36, YLena

They're not mines, they're Gauls. In England, something similar to the oak tree is created by hymenoptera-gallicae (family Cynipidae) from the genus Neuroterus.


Yes, I know that the Gauls. smile.gif And can Gallics of this kind live in the area of Israel and the Mediterranean?

Just when searching on the Internet, I did not meet such "fuzzies"...

This post was edited by YLena-05.01.2008 03: 41

05.01.2008 4:07, Vlad Proklov

Yes, I know that the Gauls. smile.gif And can Gallics of this kind live in the area of Israel and the Mediterranean?

Just when searching on the Internet, I did not meet such "fuzzies"...

Oh, I don't mess with my eardrums smile.gif
Not necessarily this genus, maybe some relatives...

05.01.2008 15:09, YLena

kotbegemot, in any case, thank you for the prompt response. user posted image

According to your tip-off, I found something similar in the Internet-fluffy, attributed to Andricus sp., but still this is not it...

http://www.biosurvey.ou.edu/okwild/misc/images/wogal.jpg

If suddenly someone finds out something more specific - I will be very happy. shuffle.gif

Thank you in advance.

06.01.2008 19:41, gumenuk

Is this a sawfly? What's his name?"

Pictures:
picture: A015617.jpg
A015617.jpg — (87.92к)

08.01.2008 17:38, NEOsap

Help me determine what kind of insect ended its life on my glass so interestingly.
Size 4-5mm, Germany, Dusseldorf.
user posted image
user posted image
user posted image
user posted image

09.01.2008 0:58, Fornax13

Tinplate! What fungi in Dusseldorf!
It was something made of aphids. Until the mushroom is eaten. I also threw spores on the glass smile.gif
Likes: 1

09.01.2008 1:01, Bad Den

Aphids are smile.gif

09.01.2008 1:03, Victor Titov

I would venture to assume that this is something from Homoptera, a suborder of Aphidinea. Aphids, in short.

This post was edited by Dmitrich-09.01.2008 01: 06

09.01.2008 2:19, Насекомовед

E... So you need to use a special determinant:

"American entomologist Mark Hostetler has published an insect detector based on their remains on the windshield after a collision with a car. To do this, he drove about 20 thousand kilometers on US roads, strengthening a grid under the windshield of his car, where insects fell after the collision. The book is provided with color photographs and drawings, it provides details about the appearance and lifestyle of 24 species of insects that are most often victims of automobile traffic."

Based on the materials of "Science and Life" (see at the bottom of the page here: http://nauka.relis.ru/50/9803/50803070.htm ) wink.gif

09.01.2008 5:02, guest: Proctos

This is an aphid mummy infected with a rider from the family Aphidiidae (sometimes considered a subfamily of braconids).
Likes: 1

09.01.2008 10:08, amara

Tinplate! What fungi in Dusseldorf!
It was something made of aphids. Until the mushroom is eaten. I also threw spores on the glass smile.gif


And I thought that for the "flying saucer" smile.gif

09.01.2008 17:28, IchMan

2 kotbegemot
I want to correct - gall midges (gall midges) is a family of diptera Cecidomyiidae. Hymenoptera, which also sin in this way, in Russian are called nutcrackers (family Cynipidae). In addition to them, galls can also form chalcides from sem. Eurytomidae.
By the way, no one is rich in qualifiers for the European Cynipoidea fauna?
I'd really appreciate it...
Likes: 2

09.01.2008 18:03, VBoris

E... So you need to use a special determinant:

"American entomologist Mark Hostetler has published an insect detector based on their remains on the windshield after a collision with a car. To do this, he drove about 20 thousand kilometers on US roads, strengthening a grid under the windshield of his car, where insects fell after the collision. The book is provided with color photographs and drawings, it provides details about the appearance and lifestyle of 24 species of insects that are most often victims of automobile traffic."


Insect expert, if not for the link, then I would think that this is a jokesmile.gif

09.01.2008 18:10, NEOsap

And what is this formation under it? Is this a way of wintering or breeding, when young animals are "born" from a dead individual?

10.01.2008 0:59, Fornax13

And what is this formation under it? Is this a way of wintering or breeding, when young animals are "born" from a dead individual?

Yes, I would say that this is just a mushroom. And around it, the spores are plastered on the glass.
Maybe something from ascomycetes.

10.01.2008 1:17, NEOsap

Is he already dead?" Is he dangerous? I have ants in my house, in the same room, can he harm them?

10.01.2008 1:56, Salix

Suspect is armed and very dangerous smile.gif

10.01.2008 1:59, Fornax13

Dead? I don't even know what to do with such fungi so that they die smile.giflike bacteria, if not worse.
How dangerous it is, I can't say either, depending on what kind of mushroom it is: there are those with a narrow specialization - these are hardly dangerous. And there are those who don't care what they have at all: both plant remains and a person can be imprisoned - these are all the worsesmile.gif
But, in any case, it is better not to put such insects to the ants.

10.01.2008 3:14, Proctos

2 kotbegemot
I want to correct - gall midges (gall midges) is a family of diptera Cecidomyiidae. Hymenoptera, which also sin in this way, in Russian are called nutcrackers (family Cynipidae). In addition to them, galls can also form chalcides from sem. Eurytomidae.
By the way, no one is rich in qualifiers for the European Cynipoidea fauna?
I'd really appreciate it...


Apparently, there is no general European summary of the superfamily.
I found some books

FERGUSSON (N.) Handbooks for the Ident. of British Insects. Charipidae, Ibaliidae & Figitidae - 1986 - 55 p - 97 figs

NIEVES-ALDREY, J.L., 2001. Hymenoptera, Cynipidae. En: Fauna Ibérica,
vol. 16. RAMOS, M.A. (Eds.) Museo Nacional de Ciencias Naturales.
CSIC. Madrid, 636 pp.

Hellén W. 1963. Die Alloxystinen Finnlands. (Hymenoptera: Cynipidae).
Fauna Fennica 15: 1-23.

Melika George; Gall Wasps of Ukraine. Cynipidae. Vol. 1- 2. Bulletin of Zoology, Supp. 21, 2006. 644 p.)
user posted image

For the annotation, see http://www.izan.kiev.ua/ukr/monog06.htm

Well, in addition, there are many articles on the evolution and phylogeny of Ronquist and his comrades.

This post was edited by Proctos - 11.01.2008 07: 52
Likes: 1

10.01.2008 17:37, RippeR

so do not touch the mushroom, otherwise it will suck and you will become a mushroom yourself.. and the mushroom itself will become a cap lol.gif

10.01.2008 18:01, NEOsap

Thank you for your help. I'll scrape it off and throw it away...
Although it's a pity to just throw it out, if someone can tell the address in Germany, where this case can be sent for analysis/determination, I will be very grateful.

10.01.2008 18:38, avt

Don't scrape it off!
As Proctos correctly wrote earlier, this is an aphid mummy with an aphidiid rider cocoon attached under it, most likely from under the ground. Prainae. So for anyone other than other aphids, it does not pose a danger.
Before you send it for detection, first remove the parasite from the cocoon. If possible, you can try to send it to the neighboring Czech Republic:
Dr. Petr Starý, Institute of Entomology, Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic, Branišovská 31, 37005 České Budějovicé, Czech Republic; E-mail: stary@entu.cas.cz
Likes: 1

10.01.2008 22:16, NEOsap

The fact is that this aphid has been hanging on the outside of my window for a couple of months now and I don't think there is still a parasite in it. Only hope that this is a mushroom and it may still be of interest to scientists.

11.01.2008 10:07, amara

Don't scrape it off!
As Proctos correctly wrote earlier, this is an aphid mummy with an aphidiid rider cocoon attached under it, most likely from under the ground. Prainae. So for anyone other than other aphids, it does not pose a danger.
Before you send it for detection, first remove the parasite from the cocoon. If you can, you can try sending it to the neighboring Czech Republic:
Dr. Petr Star?, Institute of Entomology, Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic, Brani? ovsk? 31, 37005 ?esk? Bud?jovic?, Czech Republic; E-mail: stary@entu.cas.cz

I've never heard of this myself, but I found that this kind of thing seems to be done in Poland as well:
http://wydawnictwo.ar.lublin.pl/annales/Ho...hort_art_16.PDF

This post was edited by amara - 11.01.2008 13: 13

15.01.2008 17:42, IchMan

to Proctos
Thank you for the tip - off on the Ukrainians-Melika did not know about this work.
I have more :
Hellén, W. 1960: Die Eucoilinen Finnlands (Hym. Cyn.) - Fauna Fennica 9: 1-31

But in the old works, the names are all synonyms, until you figure it out... frown.gif
Sorry for your time.
How is Africa? A lot of new stuff in my field? (in pm)
Sorry for the offtop

20.01.2008 11:20, gumenuk

A caterpillar? False caterpillar?
Taken in the Moscow region in May

Pictures:
picture: A002871.jpg
A002871.jpg — (110.27к)

25.01.2008 12:30, Cosmos

How Do You Like It Earlier?))) Before the family who-thread zhviryuga knows?

Pictures:
picture: AustralianNeurop_Nympho_maybe__c_KTo.JPG
AustralianNeurop_Nympho_maybe__c_KTo.JPG — (149.32к)

25.01.2008 12:50, Cosmos

It is clear that identifying the miner in his tracks is a very difficult task eek.gif
Maybe with the creators of Gauls easier ?
I have such green chalcidiki-torymidae hatched. And on your most wonderful photo it may well be their male sitting. Excellent photo!!!

25.01.2008 12:56, Cosmos

I know that the caterpillars of either volnyanok or khokhlatok make such gnawings on linden leaves. BUT I didn't write it down, and now I can't remember or find it. Can someone tell me?
there is an opinion that this had nothing to do with butterflies. pokhryzy makry so do not do and in such quantity (you would have already seen them, and if you were late-after volnyanok some petioles would stick out), and miners of a specific form, leaf-eaters on a linden tree do not seem to happen, and if in principle there is, then experience does not show such extras. But most likely this is the drying of the suckers of cicadas or even more likely - leafblocks. In some places, it seems that the edges of the leaf are turned up - if so, this is also a hint of some eriophyid mites. Although, in principle, there can be web-based ones. By the way, I chewed this summer-40 gus. served and almost finished off a young apricot in a week, Koktebel, end of August)))
Likes: 1

26.01.2008 18:39, Victor Titov

26.01.2008 18:45, Victor Titov

Likes: 1

26.01.2008 21:00, IchMan

These are reticuloptera, an order of Neuroptera. In the upper-right corner - Ascalaphidae. And at the bottom in the middle - in my opinion, some kind of ant lion (family Myrmeleonidae).


I beg to differ. The whiskers of this bug do not make it possible to classify it as an ant lion, they are rather like those of askalafs (with a pronounced mace). But the beast doesn't look like Askalaf either. I would venture to assume that this is a representative of the Australian family Nymphidae, with which, however, I am not familiar.

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