E-mail: Password: Create an Account Recover password

About Authors Contacts Get involved Русская версия

show

Identification of Hymenoptera (wasps, bees, ants)

Community and ForumInsects identificationIdentification of Hymenoptera (wasps, bees, ants)

Pages: 1 ...157 158 159 160 161 162 163 164 165... 277

29.05.2015 23:36, Woodmen

Surroundings of Kirovo-Chepetsk, Kirov region. May 25.
Nomada sp. Before the view fails?

user posted image user posted image

30.05.2015 21:52, Nikel

Hello! Who is it, 0.5 mm? Saratov, 29/05/2015. Thanks!

Pictures:
picture: IMG_0929.JPG
IMG_0929.JPG — (287.57к)

picture: IMG_0927.JPG
IMG_0927.JPG — (287.97к)

31.05.2015 21:51, Woodmen

Surroundings of Kirovo-Chepetsk, Kirov region. May 31.

user posted image user posted image

31.05.2015 21:59, Anax chernobila

North of the Moscow region, today.

Pictures:
picture: RSCN8034.JPG
RSCN8034.JPG — (247.28к)

01.06.2015 8:06, Proctos

Hello! Who is it, 0.5 mm? Saratov, 29/05/2015. Thanks!

Hi, this is a cynipoid from the charipinus Alloxysta sp. (Figitidae, Charipinae, Alloxystini) https://www.flickr.com/photos/panoramique/8558434524/
It is a hyperparasite on aphidiids (Braconidae) in infected aphid mummies.
Likes: 4

01.06.2015 9:19, Shamil Murtazin

Hi, this is a cynipoid from the charipinus Alloxysta sp. (Figitidae, Charipinae, Alloxystini) https://www.flickr.com/photos/panoramique/8558434524/
It is a hyperparasite on aphidiids (Braconidae) in infected aphid mummies.

it would be interesting to see its life cycle at least in pictures =)

01.06.2015 13:17, IchMan

Surroundings of Kirovo-Chepetsk, Kirov region. May 31.

male woodworm Camponotus sp.
Likes: 1

01.06.2015 13:21, IchMan

Surroundings of Kirovo-Chepetsk, Kirov region. May 25.
Nomada sp. Before the view fails?


It is unlikely that the top of the posterior tibia, propodeum, and tergite coloration are not visible...
Likes: 1

01.06.2015 16:33, Woodmen

It is unlikely that the top of the posterior tibia, propodeum, and tergite coloration are not visible...

Maybe this will happen?
(Clickable, just like the previous images.)

user posted image user posted image user posted image

This post was edited by Woodmen - 01.06.2015 17: 06

02.06.2015 9:05, Radik

Please help me identify the bumblebee.
Tatarstan Nizhnekamsk raion

02.06.2015 12:45, IchMan

Maybe this will happen?
(Clickable, just like the previous images.)


Definitely still does not work frown.gif
b. m. 3 species have a similar pattern on the abdomen: striata, villosa, symphyti, it seems like you can have all of them in principle. villosa is larger - 10-12 mm. However, see for yourself. It's really in German, but there are pictures. If the carcass is still preserved, you can view it and compare it.
picture: striata.jpg
picture: villosa.jpg
picture: symphyti.jpg
Good luck.
Likes: 2

02.06.2015 13:15, Woodmen

Definitely still does not work frown.gif
b. m. 3 species have a similar pattern on the abdomen: striata, villosa, symphyti, it seems like you can have all of them in principle. villosa is larger - 10-12 mm. However, see for yourself. It's really in German, but there are pictures. If the carcass is still preserved, you can view it and compare it.
Good luck.

Thanks!
Of these three, only *•N. striata Fabricius, 1793 is listed in the regional list.
(115 species known from materials prior to 1997 are marked "•", including 7 newly found species marked "†". 66 species published for the SC prior to 2001 are marked"°". All 34 new views are marked with"*".)
Just not clear with the labels for N. striata. As if known before 1997 and at the same time a new species for the region.
Here are all the nomads from the list:
Nomada alboguttata Herrich-Schäffer, 1839;
N. armata Herrich-Schäffer, 1839;
*N. castellana Dusmet, 1913;
•N. conjungens Herrich-Schäffer, 1839;
*N. errans Lepeletier, 1841;
•N. ferruginata (Linné, 1767);
°N. flavoguttata (Kirby, 1802);
°•N. flavopicta (Kirby, 1802);
°N. fulvicornis Fabricius, 1793;
*N. furva Panzer, 1798;
•N. fuscicornis Nylander, 1848;
•N. goodeniana (Kirby, 1802);
N. guttulata Schenck, 1861;
•N. integra Brullé, 1832;
°•N. lathburiana (Kirby, 1802;
•N. leucophthalma (Kirby, 1802);
*N. marshamella (Kirby, 1802);
N. moeschleri Alfken, 1913;
N. obscura Zetterstedt, 183;
N. obtusifrons Nylander, 1848;
N. panzeri Lepeletier, 1841;
°•N. roberjeotiana Panzer, 1799;
•N. ruficornis (Linnaeus, 1758);
°•N. rufipes Fabricius, 1793;
°•N. sexfasciata Panzer, 1799;
*•N. striata Fabricius, 1793;
•N. trapeziformis Schmiedeknecht,1882;
N. zonata Panzer, 1798;

02.06.2015 17:40, gstalker

Definitely still does not work frown.gif
b. m. 3 species have a similar pattern on the abdomen: striata, villosa, symphyti, it seems like you can have all of them in principle. villosa is larger - 10-12 mm. However, see for yourself. It's really in German, but there are pictures. If the carcass is still preserved, you can view it and compare it.
picture: striata.jpg
picture: villosa.jpg
picture: symphyti.jpg
Good luck.

Can you tell me which book the scans are from ? shuffle.gif
Likes: 1

02.06.2015 19:49, IchMan

Can you tell me which book the scans are from ? shuffle.gif

This edition is available in several volumes: Band 2-Megachiilidae-Melittidae, Band 3-Andrenidae. I don't know about halictis.
picture: img101.jpg

This post was edited by IchMan - 02.06.2015 19: 57
Likes: 2

02.06.2015 20:28, алекс 2611

I'm afraid to even ask...Doesn't this book exist in electronic form?

02.06.2015 20:32, алекс 2611

Please help me identify the bumblebee.
Tatarstan Nizhnekamsk district

Bombus (Psithyrus) rupestris (Fabricius,1793)
наверное

03.06.2015 7:00, Proctos

it would be interesting to see its life cycle at least in pictures =)

I pulled a couple of pictures from different articles. Quite clearly you can see who is sitting on whom. The diagram indicates that a whole crowd of hyperparasites is sitting on poor afidiina, and they also parasitize each other as parasites of the 3rd order!

Pictures:
picture: ____________________________________________.jpg
____________________________________________.jpg — (168.49 k)

picture: _________________________1_2_3_______.jpg
_________________________1_2_3_______.jpg — (117.33к)

Likes: 6

03.06.2015 13:09, Radik

Tell me please.
What kind of ants do these ants belong to? Tatarstan, Nizhnekamsk district

03.06.2015 21:36, AVA

Tell me please.
What kind of ants do these ants belong to? Tatarstan, Nizhnekamsk district.


Apparently, to Lasius (Cautolasius) flavus (Fabricius, 1782) [Formicidae, Formicinae]

04.06.2015 2:10, Пензуит

Please help me with these ants. Penza region.

1. Fairly large, comparable to Formica rufa and Camponotus vagus

picture: DSCN0464_14.JPG
picture: DSCN0469_15.JPG


2. Maybe Myrmica sp.? Or not?

picture: DSC01548_16.JPG
picture: DSC01553_15.JPG

04.06.2015 22:12, TimK

Apparently, to Lasius (Cautolasius) flavus (Fabricius, 1782) [Formicidae, Formicinae]

Or some other yellow lasius.

04.06.2015 22:20, TimK

Please help me with these ants. Penza region.

1. Fairly large, comparable to Formica rufa and Camponotus vagus

2. Maybe Myrmica sp.? Or not?



1. Camponotus fallax.
2. Most likely Myrmica sp. The female.
Likes: 1

04.06.2015 22:48, astronom

Ukraine, Donetsk region, 04.06
This is not the first time I have met such animals, but usually I could not see it
I wonder who it
is There are no frames from other angles because I am very shy

user posted image

05.06.2015 2:16, Пензуит

Thank you for the definition!

Can you tell me about riders and sawflies? Penza region.

1. More or less large ichneumonid

picture: DSC_1684_21.JPG



2.
picture: DSC_1357_20.JPG



3.
picture: DSCN0982_16.JPG



4.
picture: DSC_0753_15.JPG
picture: DSC_0668_15.JPG



5.
picture: DSCN1029_15.JPG



6.
picture: DSC_1173_1.JPG



7.
picture: DSC_0539_16.JPG
picture: DSC_0553_26.JPG



8.
picture: DSC_1113_15.JPG



9.
picture: DSC_0520_1.JPG
picture: DSC_0539_15.JPG


Thank you in advance!

05.06.2015 13:17, IchMan

I'm afraid to even ask...Doesn't this book exist in electronic form?

wrote in PM (on mail.ru)
Likes: 1

05.06.2015 13:17, IchMan

Ukraine, Donetsk region, 04.06
This is not the first time I have met such animals, but usually I could not see it
I wonder who it
is There are no frames from other angles because I am very shy


Some kind of braconida

05.06.2015 14:07, IchMan

Thank you for the definition!

Can you tell me about riders and sawflies? Penza region.


1. Echthrus reluctator (Linnaeus,1758) - (Cryptinae)
2. Ichneumoninae
3. Tenthredinidae
4. Pamphilidae
5. Tenthredinidae
6. Female Pseudoclavellaria amerinae L. (Cimbicidae)
7. Trichiosoma sp. (Cimbicidae)
8. Trichiosoma sp. (Cimbicidae)
9. If it is removed now, it is most likely Ophion obscuratus Fabricius, 1798 (Ophioninae), but if not, there may be options.
Likes: 1

05.06.2015 14:21, IchMan

Thanks!
Of these three, only *•N. striata Fabricius, 1793 is listed in the regional list.
(115 species known from materials prior to 1997 are marked "•", including 7 newly found species marked "†". 66 species published for the SC prior to 2001 are marked"°". All 34 new views are marked with"*".)
Just not clear with the labels for N. striata. As if known before 1997 and at the same time a new species for the region.
Here are all the nomads from the list:
Nomada alboguttata Herrich-Schäffer, 1839;
N. armata Herrich-Schäffer, 1839;
*N. castellana Dusmet, 1913;
•N. conjungens Herrich-Schäffer, 1839;
*N. errans Lepeletier, 1841;
•N. ferruginata (Linné, 1767);
°N. flavoguttata (Kirby, 1802);
°•N. flavopicta (Kirby, 1802);
°N. fulvicornis Fabricius, 1793;
*N. furva Panzer, 1798;
•N. fuscicornis Nylander, 1848;
•N. goodeniana (Kirby, 1802);
N. guttulata Schenck, 1861;
•N. integra Brullé, 1832;
°•N. lathburiana (Kirby, 1802;
•N. leucophthalma (Kirby, 1802);
*N. marshamella (Kirby, 1802);
N. moeschleri Alfken, 1913;
N. obscura Zetterstedt, 183;
N. obtusifrons Nylander, 1848;
N. panzeri Lepeletier, 1841;
°•N. roberjeotiana Panzer, 1799;
•N. ruficornis (Linnaeus, 1758);
°•N. rufipes Fabricius, 1793;
°•N. sexfasciata Panzer, 1799;
*•N. striata Fabricius, 1793;
•N. trapeziformis Schmiedeknecht,1882;
N. zonata Panzer, 1798;

Question: how well has the area been studied? If all this is the work of one person, there is a very high probability that many species were simply missed. I think Yuferev worked there, is this his list? And he didn't seem to be a pure apidologist... Although there are quite a few species.
I can hardly help more than I have already written, not my diocese.

This post was edited by IchMan - 05.06.2015 14: 23

05.06.2015 15:27, Woodmen

Question: how well has the area been studied? If all this is the work of one person, there is a very high probability that many species were simply missed. I think Yuferev worked there, is this his list? And he didn't seem to be a pure apidologist... Although there are quite a few species.
I can hardly help more than I have already written, not my diocese.

Thanks!
This is an updated list from T. Levchenko. I will question him.

05.06.2015 18:11, Коллекционер

Voronezh
" dazed " aphid, and someone is sitting on it

06.06.2015 10:58, greengrocery

user posted image
This is Vipio (Braconinae)

06.06.2015 20:38, Nikel

Hello! Came out of the cocoons (photo 9338) 06/06/15 9 pcs in a twisted caterpillar leaf of white turf. From the caterpillar remained the skin. There are 9 cocoons in total and a larva. Who is it? Braconinae?

This post was edited by Nikel - 06.06.2015 21: 34

Pictures:
picture: IMG_9356.JPG
IMG_9356.JPG — (304.19к)

picture: IMG_9335.JPG
IMG_9335.JPG — (297.72к)

picture: IMG_9338.JPG
IMG_9338.JPG — (309.17к)

Likes: 1

07.06.2015 2:41, Пензуит

  
9. If it is taken now, it is most likely Ophion obscuratus Fabricius, 1798 (Ophioninae), but if not, there may be options.


It was taken on April 30. Thank you so much for the definition!

And can you tell me about this - I don't even understand the genus, but also what family it can belong to?

picture: DSC_0579_16.JPG
picture: DSC_0593_16.JPG

07.06.2015 9:01, алекс 2611

It was taken on April 30. Thank you so much for the definition!

And can you tell me about this - I don't even understand the genus, but also what family it can belong to?



Pompilidae
Batozonellus lacerticida наверное
Likes: 1

07.06.2015 17:07, Коллекционер

Voronezh

08.06.2015 19:39, greengrocery

Who is it? Braconinae?

Yes, this is Bracon / Habrobracon hebetor Say
Likes: 1

09.06.2015 13:16, Nikel

Yes, this is a Bracon / Habrobracon hebetor Say


Thanks! I keep it in a Petri dish, feed it jam, and sing it with water. I put 4 smooth and 2 fluffy caterpillars, one very large, the other smaller. Infected everyone! Pre-paralyze. A lot of eggs fly off the caterpillars, they somehow act irrationally! Is this always the case? (I'm a schoolboy for now)))

Pictures:
picture: IMG_9573.JPG
IMG_9573.JPG — (292.43к)

10.06.2015 17:02, AVA

Pompilidae
Batozonellus lacerticida probably


Everything is correct, but only more precisely-a male Parabatozonus lacerticida (Pallas, 1771).
The generic name Batozonellus Arnold, 1937 is a junior synonym for Parabatozonus Yasumatsu, 1936 (nec Haupt, 1950).
Likes: 2

11.06.2015 0:33, greengrocery

Likes: 1

11.06.2015 8:28, Nikel

I thought they weren't very good at it, either. It may be that gabrobracons specialize in hidden hosts like leafhoppers, from which you bred them, so with open tracks it turns out worse. You can put paper crumpled with an accordion in cups with new caterpillars.
Here are a couple of breeding guides.

Only if the females have not mated, all the offspring will, of course, be males. And even if the males were also among the 9 parents, mating still could not be, because females avoid brothers. Males have long whiskers and a dark spot on the top of the abdomen (well, without an ovipositor).


Many THANKS for the literature! One more question torments me. Females lay their eggs as if they were inflating a balloon. How is this so? I thought they had a small egg inside the oviduct, but here the oviduct is used as a rail for laying a large egg. The male has 20 antennae, while the female has 15. When the male is about to mate, he twists his whiskers into rings - is this a mating ritual? Sorry, I tormented you, I repeat, I'm a schoolboy)

Pictures:
picture: 2015_06_11_08_25_29________________.png
2015_06_11_08_25_29________________.png — (393.56к)

Pages: 1 ...157 158 159 160 161 162 163 164 165... 277

New comment

Note: you should have a Insecta.pro account to upload new topics and comments. Please, create an account or log in to add comments.

* Our website is multilingual. Some comments have been translated from other languages.

Random species of the website catalog

Insecta.pro: international entomological community. Terms of use and publishing policy.

Project editor in chief and administrator: Peter Khramov.

Curators: Konstantin Efetov, Vasiliy Feoktistov, Svyatoslav Knyazev, Evgeny Komarov, Stan Korb, Alexander Zhakov.

Moderators: Vasiliy Feoktistov, Evgeny Komarov, Dmitriy Pozhogin, Alexandr Zhakov.

Thanks to all authors, who publish materials on the website.

© Insects catalog Insecta.pro, 2007—2024.

Species catalog enables to sort by characteristics such as expansion, flight time, etc..

Photos of representatives Insecta.

Detailed insects classification with references list.

Few themed publications and a living blog.