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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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19.07.2017 18:24, AVA

In this case, the latter have a very inappropriate name.

Come on, the name is just a set of letters, which should not reflect any reality at all.
Good examples are the common chimpanzee and the Kalimantan orangutan. Nothing in common between the name and the actual characteristics of the view. wink.gif
PS Well, regarding tripoxylon, so here is the same case as the psenulus found by the author of the branch. When they saw a wasp climbing out of a hole in a tree, they decided that it was making those holes.
Likes: 1

20.07.2017 19:43, VBoris

Hello! I recently removed a callembola. Question. What does it do? Defecates or lays eggs? For some reason, I can't attach the file to the message, so I give you a link:
https://gyazo.com/d87d1f354f1d3d5a7eb3607cf8abf452

24.07.2017 20:01, Gazon

Hello dear experts! I have a question-whose eggs??
Crimea
user posted image

24.07.2017 22:53, NIKSTER

Hello dear experts! I have a question-whose eggs??
Crimea
user posted image

Apparently these are cocoons of riders

24.07.2017 23:01, Gazon

Apparently these are rider cocoons

interesting. I thought there should be riders on someone, but here it's just on a tree...

25.07.2017 0:05, ИНО

And the corpse of "someone" is hidden somewhere under them. But it is still clear that it was a kind of shaggy caterpillar.

This post was edited by ENO-25.07.2017 00: 13

25.07.2017 8:54, Gazon

Damn right! Just the eye is not yet trained)) Thank you all!

04.08.2017 13:28, kservice

Help me determine what it is? Photo taken in Sevastopol

This post was edited by kservice-04.08.2017 13: 41

Pictures:
picture: P1030573_1.jpg
P1030573_1.jpg — (309.67 k)

picture: P1030563_1.jpg
P1030563_1.jpg — (290.33к)

04.08.2017 14:32, NIKSTER

Help me determine what it is? Photo taken in Sevastopol

1 - if I'm not mistaken, this is a small cicada
2-Camptogramma bilineata

This post was edited by NIKSTER - 04.08.2017 14: 34

04.08.2017 19:08, Dracus

Help me determine what it is? Photo taken in Sevastopol

The first is clearly some kind of cicada, but interesting. Post the same photo in the topic "Definition of equidistant wings".

05.08.2017 10:25, Slavinator

Who is it?! Saratov region, July

Pictures:
picture: DSC08928.JPG
DSC08928.JPG — (287.23к)

picture: DSC08935.JPG
DSC08935.JPG — (299.03к)

picture: DSC08941.JPG
DSC08941.JPG — (316.08к)

05.08.2017 11:29, kservice

The first is clearly some kind of cicada, but interesting. Post the same photo in the topic "Definition of equidistant wings".


Good. It seems to me that this is some kind of pest. The sediments near which they sit (white particles in the picture) look like aphid waste products. We didn't have them before.

This post was edited by kservice-05.08.2017 11: 44

05.08.2017 13:43, NIKSTER

Who is it?! Saratov region, July

1-caddis
fly 2-cicadas

05.08.2017 17:57, Dracus

Who is it?! Saratov region, July

The first is a reticulate wing from Sisyridae
, the second is a left-winged cicada from Delphacidae, and the right is possibly Cicadellidae

06.08.2017 19:27, Slavinator

The first is reticuloptera from Sisyridae
The second is from Delphacidae on the left and possibly Cicadellidae on the right

Thank you, and really found your own among these! Perhaps you can look here - The Definition of equal-winged birds, there for a long time my cicadas have been waiting for them to be determined!

06.08.2017 23:19, Shamil Murtazin

Southern Urals, Ufa, 06.08.2017
Like a spider...
user posted image

06.08.2017 23:30, Arikain

Nemastoma lugubre presumably.
Likes: 1

12.08.2017 14:35, VitSev

Please help me identify ant lions. Sevastopol, 12.08.2017. The length of the individual in the second image is 36 mm (from the head to the end of the wings).

Pictures:
picture: 1.jpg
1.jpg — (54.46к)

picture: 2.jpg
2.jpg — (54.92 k)

13.08.2017 23:56, Slavinator

Saratov region, August. Is this Chrysopa commata?

Pictures:
picture: DSC09451.JPG
DSC09451.JPG — (305.93к)

17.08.2017 23:22, Тверской

Hello. In a new building, during repairs, I constantly noticed insects on the walls ranging in size from 0.5 to 1 mm. Now these insects mainly live on the floor. When observing through a magnifying glass, it was possible to establish that insects move dragging their hind legs behind them, and when a finger is raised, they quickly bounce off.
Location: Moscow region, Sergiev Posad district. Taken on 17.08.2017. In the photo, the insect is about 0.9 mm in length.
picture: _______________________.jpg
Help me determine it. Thank you.

18.08.2017 0:00, ИНО

Hay eater.

19.08.2017 12:37, Shamil Murtazin

Southern Urals, Ufa, 06.08.2017
Looks like a bug larva =)

user posted image

user posted image

19.08.2017 18:34, Woodmen

Surroundings of Kirovo-Chepetsk, Kirov region. 19.08.2017.
Something at the bottom of a dried-up puddle in a road rut.

user posted image user posted image user posted image user posted image user posted image

19.08.2017 19:35, Dmitry Vlasov

Surroundings of Kirovo-Chepetsk, Kirov region. 19.08.2017.
Something at the bottom of a dried-up puddle in a road rut.

user posted image user posted image user posted image user posted image user posted image

Alternatively - ostracod crustaceans shuffle.gif
Likes: 1

19.08.2017 21:06, Dracus

Southern Urals, Ufa, 06.08.2017
Looks like a bug larva =)

As for me, it looks more like a hay-eating nymph - the antennae are multi-segmented, flexible, and in the first photo you can't see the proboscis bent under the body.
Likes: 1

20.08.2017 6:52, ИНО

I agree. I looked now, there are similar hay eaters (not from the apartment). So if there is no proboscis, then this is one of them. Although I'm not sure that it's not there, maybe it's just not visible in the photo, in which case it will be something from Homoptera. But not a bedbug definitely.

This post was edited by ENO-08/20/2017 06: 57

20.08.2017 14:47, IchMan

There can be no doubt that this is a hay eater

20.08.2017 20:13, Woodmen

Surroundings of Kirovo-Chepetsk, Kirov region, peat bog. 20.08.2017.
On the galle (galls) on the segmented sitnik - Juncus articulatus (Juncaceae).

user posted image user posted image user posted image

20.08.2017 21:31, Zum-Graat

Tell me what kind of insects fly to the window at night. Among the piles of small mosquitoes and midges, it stands out quite large in size (3 centimeters with a mustache).
user posted image
SDC15109.JPG
user posted image
SDC15114.JPG
user posted image
SDC15115.JPG

03.09.2017 15:21, Arch1tect

Hello, please tell me what kind of praying mantis. Caught in the Crimea, near the pike perch.

Pictures:
picture: rU6nm3seHdg.jpg
rU6nm3seHdg.jpg — (36.37к)

03.09.2017 21:50, Dracus

Bolivaria brachyptera

03.09.2017 23:26, xoshAmadam

Can you identify a cockroach? At least until Rod. Presumably Pseudophoraspis, but very presumably.

Tenasserim, eastern Burma, about 1000mnum, in a pile of leaves in a forest.

A male who didn't live to see the photo shoot. He flew well, though not very willingly.

From above:

picture: ready1.jpg

Below:

picture: ready2.jpg

Female, alive and well for now:

picture: ready3.jpg

This post was edited by xoshAmadam - 03.09.2017 23: 38

03.09.2017 23:47, ИНО

Yes, probably Pseudophoraspis is. The lower image shows a larva, while the adult female is also winged. So, alas, the culture failed.

03.09.2017 23:59, xoshAmadam

Ogol, are you a group specialist? Why the hell do you go into all topics, regardless of your competence?

You once clogged your aquarium and terrarium resources with your flood, now you decided to make this one a mess?

04.09.2017 0:19, ИНО

And you, Mr. Hamlo, were waiting for a response from Zompro here, weren't you? Hope and wait - your whole life is ahead of you. So help people from now on...

04.09.2017 13:04, xoshAmadam

Can you identify a cockroach? At least until Rod. Presumably Pseudophoraspis, but very presumably.


The cockroach was previously called Ricnoda - for now, let it be so.

04.09.2017 13:10, Zlopastnyi Brandashmyg

Adult female (see developed elytra) - Rhicnoda sp.
The male is also most likely a Rhicnoda, if the male and female belong to the same species, or Pseudophoraspis sp., wink.gif

Rhicnoda and Pseudophoraspis are either very close genera, or the second is a subgenus of the first, or maybe a synonym.

This post was edited by Zlopastnyi Brandashmyg - 04.09.2017 13: 11
Likes: 1

04.09.2017 21:33, Gusha

Dratuti!
We came to relax by the sea... sun, sand, fresh breeze... After sunset, insects of unprecedented beauty appeared in the field of view. Help plsta identify these creatures. Azov Sea coast near Temryuk

Pictures:
picture: 20170904_200945.jpg
20170904_200945.jpg — (296.62к)

04.09.2017 21:56, Zlopastnyi Brandashmyg

Labidura riparia (Pallas, 1773).
Earwig coastal. 2 males. What are they eating?
Likes: 1

04.09.2017 22:59, xoshAmadam

  
The male is also most likely a Rhicnoda, if the male and female belong to the same species, or Pseudophoraspis sp., wink.gif

Well, they fucked like they belonged, and now the second instar looks something like this:

picture: ready4.jpg

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