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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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24.03.2007 0:25, okoem

I searched for images -
http://whalonlab.msu.edu/mites/Mite_Websit...idae-larvae.jpg
http://macroclub.ru/glr/displayimage.php?a...cat=10250&pos=0
http://www.goodbugs.org.au/other%20natural...s/otherbcas.htm
http://www.fathom.com/feature/190259/index.html
Babbling water! Definitely her!
Thank you all!:-)

24.03.2007 9:42, Sv Kononova

confused.gif
Good afternoon, dear ones!
Tell me, please, who is this?

user posted image

24.03.2007 13:10, andr_mih

Aculepeira ceropegia from roundworms
Likes: 1

26.03.2007 7:38, Сергей-Д

Dear entomologists, help us identify these insects!! Photographed the other day.
Here is such a small thing, we crawl along the trunks of trees and in the moss.:
picture: _________________1_2__________.jpg
picture: _________________2_2_____.jpg
This is also on moss, caterpillars with a cover, that's whose one...
picture: ____________________1_2__________.jpg
picture: ____________________1_3__________.jpg
I also saw this in the moss:
picture: __________1___________.jpg

26.03.2007 8:21, omar

The second one from above is the larva of some kind of reticulate wing, like goldeneye. Caterpillar - the caterpillar of the bagworm. The last larva is a bug larva.

26.03.2007 8:25, okoem

1. This is also seen the other day, it seemed that it looks like a larva of a reticulate wing.
2. Sac caterpillar, possibly Dahlica sp. or Diplodoma sp., whether the cover was not trihedral? How long is it?
3. Similar to Japyx (Japygidae), from the primiptera.

update
Indeed, it looks like goldeneye
http://zooex.baikal.ru/neuropteroidea/chrysopidae.htm

This post was edited by okoem - 03/26/2007 08: 30

26.03.2007 10:59, Bad Den

The last one is the larva of the pyrochroid beetle (Pyrochroidae)
Likes: 1

26.03.2007 13:40, Сергей-Д

thank you all very much for the definition
of to okoem:
triangular or not, I didn't consider it, I don't think so. And the dimensions are small, the length by eye is 6 millimeters.
This is the larva of the golden-eyed aphid that has eaten so many aphids and made a cover? Interesting

26.03.2007 13:55, Sv Kononova

Hello, dear ones!
Tell me, please, who is this?

user posted image

26.03.2007 14:01, okoem

  
triangular or not not considered, it seems not. And the dimensions are small, the length by eye is 6 millimeters.


Judging by the photo, it looks like they are trihedral.I.e., there are three slightly pronounced edges on the cover. And 6 mm-suitable for Dahlica sp. at least. True, they feed on lichens, but here moss for some reason...

26.03.2007 14:05, okoem

Tell me, please, who is this?


Argiope bruennichi wasp spider
(Scopoli, 1772)
Likes: 1

26.03.2007 14:21, Guest

Thank you so much for identifying the wasp spider! I found additional information about it on the Internet - a very interesting creation :0 Especially females smile.gif

But I have one more question - who is it?

user posted image

26.03.2007 20:45, okoem

2 Sv_Kononova: Probably Micromata virescens (Clerck, 1758)

2 All: These are the flies we fly. Does anyone know their names?

This post was edited by okoem - 26.03.2007 23: 04

Pictures:
picture: 20070304_100355.jpg
20070304_100355.jpg — (15.55 k)

Likes: 1

27.03.2007 19:11, andr_mih

> Wasp spider
> Argiope bruennichi (Scopoli, 1772)

Please note: the photo was taken in the Moscow region! We didn't have this spider before. (This is on the topic of warming)
Likes: 1

27.03.2007 22:54, omar

Where does it say that in the Moscow region? It can't be! Argyops don't live here!

27.03.2007 23:01, omar

This is nonsense! There is also an empty window with the label "temporarily unavailable" for karakurt! Do you also want to believe that karakurts are also found in the Moscow region? Maybe Svetlana will explain this situation!?

28.03.2007 0:04, okoem

I've read that in warmer years, Karakurt is only occasionally registered even in the Moscow region...

28.03.2007 7:51, Sv Kononova

Where does it say that in the Moscow region? It can't be! Argyops don't live here!

That's right, dear ones!
Spider-wasp photographed in the Moscow region last summer (Podolsky district).

28.03.2007 8:18, omar

In this case, it's very cool! It is not clear why Svetlana does not indicate the filming locations under the photos, at least up to the district...in this light, it looks very stupid.

28.03.2007 8:33, Sv Kononova

It is not clear why Svetlana does not indicate the filming locations under the photos, at least up to the district...in this light, it looks very stupid.


I understand your point of view, dear Omar, and I fully accept it.
In the future, I will try to accompany each question card with text comments regarding the date and place of shooting.

28.03.2007 9:17, sealor

Yes, these should not be so rare, argiopods are probably found north of the Moscow region. The fact is that they fly, like karakurts, so they go far, and they are not whimsical. Even tarantulas were found in the Altai Territory, especially these ones.

This post was edited by sealor - 03/28/2007 09: 19

28.03.2007 9:30, omar

Tatantul in the Altai Territory or in the Moscow region is not as interesting as agriop or karakurt in the Moscow region. It is these that are extremely rare in the Moscow region, if they occur at all. Andrey Mikhaylenko was surprised for a reason, believe me. I'm also a Muscovite, and I've never seen anything like it before.

28.03.2007 11:18, Tigran Oganesov

Figasse, argiope in the Moscow region is super cool! Svetlana, be sure to write the area where the photo was taken!

omar, it looks like there is a place to stretch wink.gif
Likes: 1

28.03.2007 15:14, Sv Kononova

Well, well! I couldn't even imagine that I saw and photographed such a rarity ... If I meet you again this season , I'll catch you, put you in a jar , and bring you to the forum smile.gif
This spider attracted my attention by weaving a very interesting network - with such a "patch" in diameter. I noticed it first, the patch, and then the spider itself. If not for the "patch", then the spider would not have been photographed.

But now I've learned your tips and tricks - I'll pay more attention in the coming season smile.gif

28.03.2007 16:35, Sv Kononova

I still have twelve cards left unidentified.
Please help me.
Number one -

user posted image
Taken in the vicinity of Lake Seliger in July 2005

28.03.2007 18:13, andr_mih

This is a male Araneus sp. If they had also shown the belly from above,it would have been possible to view it. And so, presumably A. marmoreus
Likes: 1

29.03.2007 6:54, Sv Kononova

And I have another question about spiders - who is it?

user posted image

29.03.2007 7:59, omar

Is it big?

29.03.2007 9:35, Archypus

Figasse, argiope in the Moscow region is super cool! Svetlana, be sure to write the area where the photo was taken!

Omar, it looks like there is a place to warm up wink.gif


I was very surprised when a couple of years ago I saw Argyope on my dacha plot in about the same position as in the photo (Istra district of Moscow region), but Mr. MAF, a great connoisseur of all 8-legged animals, assured that this spider is sometimes found in the south of the Moscow region. So the findings are not isolated
Likes: 2

29.03.2007 11:10, Tigran Oganesov

Argyops must be flying on spider webs, as sealor had suggested. They are unlikely to overwinter.
I wonder what will happen this year with such anomalous winter and spring.

29.03.2007 19:54, Sv Kononova

Is it big?
No! the abdomen is about 5 mm, plus the legs-then the entire diameter is no more than 15 mm.

30.03.2007 18:38, andr_mih

Argyops must be flying on spider webs, as sealor had suggested. They are unlikely to overwinter.
I wonder what will happen this year with such anomalous winter and spring.


This year karakurts will fly to us on cobwebs. So all entomologists-urgently write wills. Already flying smile.gif
Likes: 2

30.03.2007 21:20, Tigran Oganesov

Everything is much cooler - the bird eaters will come to us...

30.03.2007 21:38, RippeR

Well, if not the riot police on carbines..

01.04.2007 10:00, Sv Kononova

I promise that if in the new season I meet a spider-wasp that excites you so much , I will immediately write here and even invite you to come and see it with your own eyes, and until then I will sit next to it, sing tender songs to it so that it does not run away, and guard it like the apple of the eye of my enemy smile.gif

Now, please help me identify other spiders that are more common and completely uninteresting to you! mol.gif

I can't do it without you!

My spiders live here.

03.04.2007 20:16, Sv Kononova

As far as I understand, questions with direct illustrations are welcome, and not with links to the pages where they are located smile.gif

Okay, then I'll ask with an illustration-who is this?

user posted image
figure 1

user posted image
figure 2

user posted image
figure 3

Thanks!

03.04.2007 21:59, Bad Den

Figure 3-I think Misumena vatia (crab spider)
Likes: 1

05.04.2007 6:24, Sv Kononova

Good afternoon I got to the hymenoptera and decided to start with the sawflies first smile.gif
This is one of them, isn't it?

user posted image

05.04.2007 8:14, omar

On the photo fly smile.gif
Likes: 1

05.04.2007 8:41, Bad Den

In the photo is a fly smile.gif

It seems to be from the Conopidae family?
Likes: 1

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