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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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22.05.2006 22:01, Redactor

Good afternoon,
can you tell me what kind of bug it is?
Taken in Berlin


user posted image

22.05.2006 23:24, Tigran Oganesov

This is a kraevik (family Coreidae). The type is most likely Coreus marginatus.

26.05.2006 10:49, Bear

[attachmentid ()=7692]
Very interesting to know smile.gif

26.05.2006 12:46, Bad Den


Very interesting to know smile.gif

Spider-Misumena vatia
Beetle - from the family. Mordellidae (difficult to be exact)
Flower-Rosa sp. smile.gif
Likes: 1

05.06.2006 14:56, RippeR

Barbel from the genus Asias, and what..? I don't understand the types of Asians.. similar to halodendri

05.06.2006 15:07, Bad Den

Or maybe Purpuricenus sp.

This post was edited by Bad Den-05.06.2006 15: 08
Likes: 1

06.06.2006 21:01, BO.

The view, even more likely some kind of local, Japanese. And I agree about the paws. Anyway, it seems like someone is sort of eating someone.

07.06.2006 0:24, Pirx

Help me determine :
Barbel
Ant? All winged, settled at work on the window. Stubbornly do not want to leave the windowsill.
Fly ( top view, side view)
Taken in the Astrakhan region.


Fly-family ragionid
Likes: 1

08.06.2006 13:25, K. A. A.

I don't know if it jumps or not. I managed to take only one shot: the beetle quickly fell off the leaf.
Obviously, really B. betulae - as far as I remember, the side was greenish. Thank you.
And what kind of animal is this (someone's nymph?):

Pictures:
picture: P6073655.JPG
P6073655.JPG — (179.84 k)

08.06.2006 17:34, Tigran Oganesov

Bedbug larva. Similar to a member of the Miridae family.

10.06.2006 23:26, Veggy

I was attacked by an animal today. killed him with a knife.
help classify, plz:
user posted imageclose-up

11.06.2006 1:28, Tigran Oganesov

2 sealor
Trilobit wink.gifCan I get a bigger picture?

2 Veggy
It's a bloodsucking fly. About her in this topic.

11.06.2006 7:15, Veggy

  
2 Veggy
It's a bloodsucking fly. About her in this topic.


thank you! sorry that I didn't find it myself - I just didn't think that exactly the same question would be very close (did these flies start rabies on the basis of avian flu, since they were everywhere?)

11.06.2006 8:19, sealor

Bolivar, so there it is, the lost world smile.gif
I changed the image to the largest image that could be obtained from the original without interpolation. The animal itself had a size of approx. 2cm. I didn't even take a good look at what was on the bottom of it, threw it in the box and went on. But then I met an interesting dragonfly-Anax imperator, and when I caught it, I lost this " bug " frown.gif

17.06.2006 14:20, Boris Onishenko

Good time of day ! I live in Crimea, on the southern coast . For several years now, extremely small spiders ( no more than 3 mm in diameter, along with their legs ) have settled in our kitchen. Usually there is a whole colony of them on the ceiling (several dozen). Descending on the web down, they bite extremely painfully ( as for their size). It is useless to photograph them - it is only possible to see them under a magnifying glass. Please tell me what kind of species it can be, and what ways you can deal with them. Thanks ! If possible, please send your answers by E-mail to to_bob@mail333.com.

18.06.2006 11:01, Tigran Oganesov

Strange business. I can't imagine any spider of this size being able to bite through human skin. Yes, and living in colonies. It's like Windham. Try to take a picture of them, even if it's small and blurry. Just to have some idea. Are you sure they're spiders?

18.06.2006 13:13, sealor

If it weren't for cobwebs it looks like bed beetles wink.gif

22.06.2006 0:45, Shofffer

Bedbug-IMHO Carpocoris sp.
Bug larva-possibly Eurydema sp., for example Eurydema ornata.
Likes: 1

24.06.2006 9:40, Boris Onishenko

Strange business. I can't imagine any spider of this size being able to bite through human skin. Yes, and living in colonies. It's like Windham. Try to take a picture of them, even if it's small and blurry. Just to have some idea. Are you sure they're spiders?


Thank you for your answers ! I was trying to see this creation under a 7x magnifying glass . This is definitely a spider. With a gray almost transparent body, with clearly visible-I don't know how to correctly, "jaws", in my opinion there are a couple of black stripes on the back.
A week ago, I couldn't stand it, and in order not to use chemicals ( they live in the kitchen), I took a powerful vacuum cleaner and put two colonies in the trash can. A week later, these animals restored the "status quo" - there are just as many of them. My wife was tortured-she is, of course, in the kitchen more than I am, and they eat her at once. The speed with which they move through their web is amazing. The spider is able to descend or rise a meter in a matter of seconds. They prefer to be placed close to the heat source ( their main colony is constantly organized on the ceiling next to the boiler-the heat source). It is possible that the spiders could have been introduced with some overseas bananas, etc. - what is surprising, on Ukrainian TV a couple of weeks ago there was a message that piranhas were caught in the reservoir of the Dnepropetrovsk region, and they significantly multiplied there. Someone released it for sure, and they liked it. I'll try to take a photo one of these days.

24.06.2006 10:24, Tigran Oganesov

Be sure to take a picture of them! Just some kind of fantasy eek.gif

28.06.2006 6:33, mit-rich

Good day!
Nedskajite who it can be? And what to do about it.
Thanks

Pictures:
DSC00157.JPG
DSC00157.JPG — (175.94к)

28.06.2006 10:28, Tigran Oganesov

2 mit_rich
Is it on sausage or something? Probably fly eggs. The larvae will come out and eat this sausage. So see for yourself. I would throw out all nafig.

03.07.2006 6:06, BO.

He is.

I would like to be more specific. In the bio-pictures there is my photo of an ant lion.( shaggy, 10cm) Different types? Gender difference?
IN THE PHOTO: SIZE 5CM, in daylight - color yellow with green

Pictures:
picture: P_1060725.jpg
P_1060725.jpg — (152.12к)

03.07.2006 10:54, Tigran Oganesov

I would like to be more specific. In the bio-pictures there is my photo of an ant lion.( shaggy, 10cm) Different types? Gender difference?
IN THE PHOTO: SIZE 5CM, in daylight - color yellow with green

The types are different. The current one is most likely a kind of Deutoleon.
Likes: 1

06.07.2006 23:04, BO.

Help me identify the ktyr.
Astrakhan region.

Pictures:
picture: P_1060657.jpg
P_1060657.jpg — (60.28к)

10.07.2006 14:55, sealor

Fans of dragonflies, especially equal-winged smile.gifones, What are they called?

Pictures:
picture: oda1.jpg
oda1.jpg — (41.41к)

picture: oda2.jpg
oda2.jpg — (34.41к)

picture: oda3.jpg
oda3.jpg — (36.34к)

picture: oda4.jpg
oda4.jpg — (27.91к)

10.07.2006 15:05, Vlad Proklov

Fans of dragonflies, especially equal-winged smile.gifones, What are they called?


1. Erythromma najas (Red-eyed arrow), male.
2. Female arrows, or rather I find it difficult.
3. Platycnemis pennipes (Common flatfoot).
4. Cercion lindeni (Linden's Arrow), male. The female in the second photo, probably also of this species.

This post was edited by kotbegemot - 10.07.2006 15: 06

10.07.2006 16:01, sealor

I compared them, I think they are a little different. We should try to find a tandem pair, I hope they only mate with individuals of their own species:)

10.07.2006 16:05, Vlad Proklov

I compared them, I think they are a little different. We should try to find a tandem pair, I hope they only mate with individuals of their own species:)


Just in case, I scanned the image from the book I was looking at (R. Askew. The Dragonflies of Europe):
user posted image

10.07.2006 16:43, sealor

This is still a saka and a male Cercion lindeni. And the difference in the structure of the cervical segments is also the same.

10.07.2006 23:00, BO.

1. Erythromma najas (Red-eyed arrow), male.
2. Female arrows, or rather I find it difficult.
3. Platycnemis pennipes (Common flatfoot).
4. Cercion lindeni (Linden's Arrow), male. The female in the second photo, probably also of this species.

This is a very interesting topic.
Please identify mine. Isn't there an electronic version of the book?

Pictures:
picture: P_1070306.jpg
P_1070306.jpg — (119.89к)

picture: P_1070252.jpg
P_1070252.jpg — (65.05к)

10.07.2006 23:21, Vlad Proklov

This is a very interesting topic.
Please identify mine. Isn't there an electronic version of the book?


1. Ischnura elegans (Slender tail elegant).
2. Platycnemis pennipes, male (Sealor has a female).

Unfortunately, there are no books in electronic form. By the way, a new book on the dragonflies of Europe is being published right now, with illustrations by Richard Lewington (the same one who illustrated Tom Tolman's book on the mace-moustaches of Europe). It has already been sent to me, and it will probably arrive tomorrow. I don't know if the European part of the former USSR is included in it.Askew's already quite old book, which I use now (it's from 1988), includes Europe up to the Urals, but mistakes are not excluded from our fauna, although the author traveled around the USSR quite well. And the new book is freely available on Amazon, where I bought it.

13.07.2006 12:22, Papont

Thank you. Same place as the previous frames. Karelian Isthmus near the border with Karelia proper.

And now the deadly number
user posted image

This is NO LONGER the Karelian Isthmus. This is the United States (which part has not yet been answered). Dragonfly. Clearly Zygoptera, for some reason it seems to be Calopteryx (by wing coloration?). Is it possible to define up to a view?

17.07.2006 21:47, sealor

The picture shows a couple, as I understand it, Cercion lindeni, which is interesting - the female there is still not very similar to the one in the photo above. The stripes are blurry, the pattern is not the same, and the color is also different.
And an interesting hymenopteran found, who is it?

Pictures:
picture: nn.jpg
nn.jpg — (63.66к)

picture: nn2.jpg
nn2.jpg — (43.78к)

17.07.2006 22:16, Vlad Proklov

The picture shows a couple, as I understand it, Cercion lindeni, which is interesting - the female there is still not very similar to the one in the photo above. The stripes are blurry, the pattern is not the same, and the color is also different.
And an interesting hymenopteran found, who is it?


This is not Cercion lindeni, this is Ischnura sp. (Thintail). Two-colored pterostigmas are very characteristic. Since the pattern is not visible, it is impossible to say exactly before the appearance, but most likely Ischnura elegans.

In the eardrums I alas...

17.07.2006 23:03, sealor

Yes, it's incredible. How many types of these "arrows" there are near the river smile.gifLike I found similar ones - not the same ones...

17.07.2006 23:11, Vlad Proklov

Yes, it's incredible. How many types of these "arrows" there are near the river smile.gifLike I found similar ones - not the same ones...

Yes, on any river, probably a dozen species of equal-winged dragonflies can be found smile.gifIn the majority, arrows, of course.

19.07.2006 12:38, Papont

Once again, a riddle from the Karelian Isthmus. A certain sirfid.

user posted image

user posted image

19.07.2006 12:41, Sparrow

Spilomyia Diophtalma look in the next topic, copyright definitions for Bad Den -)

http://www.gardenia-helsinki.fi/Viikinluon...diophthalma.jpg

isn't that it?)

This post was edited by Sparrow - 07/19/2006 12: 43

19.07.2006 13:09, Papont

Well, it's hard to see from the picture you gave me, but I guess that's it.
http://www.faunistik.net/DETINVERT/DIPTERA...thalma_ad01.jpg

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