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Identification of Hymenoptera (wasps, bees, ants)

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

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30.05.2008 20:01, KingSnake

What kind of bee?

Pictures:
picture: pchela.jpg
pchela.jpg — (137.75 k)

31.05.2008 17:03, PG18

Help identify bees from the south of Ustyurt (first half of May)

Pictures:
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05_01_Kokusim_0060.jpg — (58.03к)

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picture: 05_01_Kokusim_0088.jpg
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picture: 05_07_Mametkazgan_0159.jpg
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picture: 05_15_sands_at_Akkuduk_0166.jpg
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picture: 05_15_sands_at_Akkuduk_0174.jpg
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Likes: 5

03.06.2008 8:46, Alexandr Rusinov

Please tell me what kind of animal is this? Caught in the Yaroslavl region on the dry roadside of a dying birch tree. Body length 15-18mm.
image: _______. jpg

03.06.2008 14:34, Fornax13

Can't it be Orussus?
Likes: 1

03.06.2008 18:29, IchMan

You are lucky, this is really Orussus abietinus Scopoli-a rather rare animal (I have been trying to find it for many years, but so far without much success). We only have 1 of this kind.
Unlike other sessile-bellied webs, its larvae, devoid of eyes and legs, are parasites of various xylobiont beetles and horntails. Adults can easily be distinguished from other sessile-bellied animals by the whiskers attached below eye level, relatively reduced venation (for the suborder), and the first tergite undivided in the middle.
Likes: 3

03.06.2008 20:44, Tigran Oganesov

Can't it be Orussus?

Oh, yes, that's it! I remember catching such a friend once in the PTZ, a rarity!
Likes: 2

04.06.2008 5:33, PG18

Wasps, beauties, from the south of Ustyurt will also showsmile.gif
Only one-the last one-is from the Orenburg Region.

Pictures:
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picture: 05_07_Mametkazgan_0121.jpg
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picture: 05_15_sands_at_Akkuduk_0086.jpg
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picture: 05_15_sands_at_Akkuduk_0214.jpg
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picture: 05_20_sands_at_Akkuduk_0617.jpg
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picture: 04_24_Guberlya_0157.jpg
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Likes: 6

04.06.2008 9:21, Alexandr Rusinov

Thank you for identifying Orussus, I myself suspected that it was him, but since the kettle is full in the eardrums, I decided not to make people laugh. By the way, when I caught him, he was not alone at all, there were 2-4 pieces of them on the birches for a dying or dead tree.
Likes: 1

04.06.2008 10:10, алекс 2611

Help identify bees from the south of Ustyurt (first half of May)



05_01_Kokusim_0083 male Epeoloides or Pasites ? Keep in mind that the network mainly contains photos of females, and they are very different from males. It is easy to distinguish these genera: Pasites has two radiomedial cells on the forewings, while Epeoloides has three.

05_01_Kokusim_0088 and 05_07_Mametkazgan_0159 look like a female of some Tetralonia species

05_01_Kokusim_0065 other Tetralonia species, male

05_01_Kokusim_0060 Andrena ?

05_15_sands_at_Akkuduk_0174 Triepeolus tristis ?

05_15_sands_at_Akkuduk_0166 still some kind of Andrena?

I put question marks because the Central Asian fauna. If there were European species, I would speak more definitely. And so it is very difficult.
For example, 05_01_Kokusim_0088 and 05_07_Mametkazgan_0159 resemble the European Tetralonia armeniaca, but only resemble it. Something Central Asian....
Oh, I'd give a lot for a good book on the bees of Central Asia.
Likes: 1

04.06.2008 19:16, Tigran Oganesov

Wasps, beauties, from the south of Ustyurt will also showsmile.gif
Only one-the last one-is from the Orenburg Region.

Oh, what a beauty! I Envy You smile.gif
Likes: 1

04.06.2008 19:16, Fornax13

Thank you for identifying Orussus, I myself suspected that it was him, but since the kettle is full in the eardrums, I decided not to make people laugh. By the way, when I caught him, he was not alone at all, there were 2-4 pieces of them on the birches for a dying or dead tree.

I also don't understand smile.gifanything about e-mails, but the "scientific poke" method sometimes gives good results smile.gif
Likes: 1

05.06.2008 11:51, PG18

05_01_Kokusim_0083 male Epeoloides or Pasites ? Keep in mind that the network mainly contains photos of females, and they are very different from males. It is easy to distinguish these genera: Pasites has two radiomedial cells on the forewings, while Epeoloides has three.

The cells are perfectly visible here. Two?

Pictures:
картинка: Epeoloides_____Pasites__male__05_01_Kokusim_0084.jpg
Epeoloides_____Pasites__male__05_01_Kokusim_0084.jpg — (67.15к)

05.06.2008 11:55, PG18

05_01_Kokusim_0088 and 05_07_Mametkazgan_0159 look like a female of some Tetralonia species

Two species of Tetralonia? Agree, the pictures are not the same thingsmile.gif

Pictures:
picture: 05_02_Kokusim_0157.jpg
05_02_Kokusim_0157.jpg — (64.88к)

picture: 05_07_Mametkazgan_0159.jpg
05_07_Mametkazgan_0159.jpg — (80.81к)

05.06.2008 14:03, Transilvania

picture: pchela13_mini.jpg
Tell me, please, what is the name of this red-haired beauty. She is engaged in digging a hole near the beach. Minorca Island (Spain), May.
Thanks!
_______PG18
, thank you for your photos, this is something incredible. I can imagine how much effort and patience it takes to find and remove all these magnificent insects.
Likes: 1

05.06.2008 17:34, IchMan

to PG18 is
Great! The animals are great and the photos are wonderful. But with the definition...
Asia-S... and the south - it's not like in Europe.

This post was edited by Bolivar - 05.06.2008 19: 15

05.06.2008 22:34, алекс 2611

The cells are perfectly visible here. Two?


Yes, two.
What a good picture! I'll definitely say something this weekend.
All the bees would be so. So that the wings are visible....
Likes: 1

05.06.2008 22:39, алекс 2611

Two species of Tetralonia? Agree, the pictures are not the same thingsmile.gif


Yes, I kind of commented 05_01_Kokusim_0088 and 05_07_Mametkazgan_0159 ?
05_02_Kokusim_0157 I didn't see it?
Although I have a feeling that this is all one view?

05.06.2008 22:44, алекс 2611

to PG18 is
Great! The animals are great and the photos are wonderful. But with the definition...
Asia-S... and the south - it's not like in Europe.


Well, up to the genus is still often possible. Sometimes you can immediately see close relatives of our European species.

08.06.2008 13:13, Mikhail M

Please tell me what kind of animal is this? Caught in the Yaroslavl region on the dry roadside of a dying birch tree. Body length 15-18mm.
[attachmentid()=41478]

Orussus, despite the fact that it is included in the Red Book of the Russian Federation, the insect is not so rare. They should be found on dead trees without bark, on poles, etc. in sunny places in warm weather. In addition, most of their years are observed in May-early June, so it doesn't make sense to look for them in summer

09.06.2008 10:26, алекс 2611

The cells are perfectly visible here. Two?



Nda... IchMan is probably right. Asia-S... Now I'm already seeing some kind of megahilida in this photo.
Why is there no bee specialist on the forum?... Even for bedbugs there are....

09.06.2008 10:51, алекс 2611

Wasps, beauties, from the south of Ustyurt will also showsmile.gif
Only one-the last one-is from the Orenburg Region.


05_07_Mametkazgan_0121 reminds me of Katamenes fulvus (Vespidae, Eumeninae). A fairly common wasp in Central Asia.
05_15_sands_at_Akkuduk_0179 and 05_15_sands_at_Akkuduk_0214 are also some kind of Eumenins (are these two photos of the same wasp?).
04_24_Guberlya_0157 it is clear that some kind of sheet, but before the view - alas

burrowing wasps (Sphecidae):

05_15_sands_at_Akkuduk_0151 - some species from the genus Bembix Fabricius, 1775
04_29_Kokusim_0150 some species from the genus Tachysphex Kohl, 1883 ???

The photos are wonderful!!! I want to give up everything, rush to Central Asia and catch, catch...
Likes: 1

13.06.2008 13:08, barry

Scolia hirta? Kharkiv, late May.
It's about the size of a typical wasp, and last summer it was the size of a hornet...

This post was edited by barry - 13.06.2008 13: 10

Pictures:
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picture: IMG_5165.jpg
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14.06.2008 12:43, Timandr

Help me identify the correspondence:
1-Kemerovo, 5.2008, on the birch (sap), the rest-Kazakhstan, near Kapchagai, Ili River bank, on tamariks, 1.7.1996

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04_____.1.jpg — (58.61 k)

picture: 04_____.2.jpg
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picture: 04_____.3.jpg
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picture: 04_____.4.jpg
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picture: 04_____.5.jpg
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14.06.2008 12:45, Timandr

Please only indicate the family (scolias, etc.)

14.06.2008 14:28, Guest

Heh-heh.. I suspect that you are on student practice, and with the help of the forum you are counting on the definition. And you can sit with the determinant yourself?

14.06.2008 14:30, Guest

bb

14.06.2008 17:54, Mylabris

I don't think that students from Kemerovo will be "loaded" with Central Asian fauna. Just interested in the person.

15.06.2008 7:24, Timandr

Exactly. But I've been doing my internship for a long time, and this was from an independent trip. E-May, the first time I resorted to help for this group and such a reaction... I think there is no such "polyglot" anywhere that I am an expert in all groups. Moreover try to find such literature in the following regions smile.gif
Likes: 1

15.06.2008 12:10, алекс 2611

Help me identify the correspondence:
1-Kemerovo, 5.2008, on the birch (sap), the rest-Kazakhstan, near Kapchagai, Ili River bank, on tamariks, 1.7.1996


The first bee is undoubtedly from the genus Andrena, a female. I will try to define up to the view, but it will take me some time. I'll try to respond sometime on Wednesday - there won't be time before then.
As far as I understand, the bee is quite large, more than 10 mm in length? .

The second bee is painfully familiar, but I can't figure it out. I'll look at the training camp on Wednesday and think about it. Maybe I'll say something...

This post was edited by alex 2611-15.06.2008 12: 12

15.06.2008 19:36, DOK

Today I heard a strong "buzzing" in the grass. Coming closer, I saw this insect. I was interested in entomology at one time, but I don't recall such an insect. Does anyone know?

Size (in length) with a matchbox, i.e. somewhere 5.0 cm...

I don't know how to attach a photo. Photo in a similar topic on another site

http://www.kharkovforum.com/showthread.php?t=224050

or here

http://forum.saltov.home/index.php?showtopic=15038

15.06.2008 19:53, DOK

in general, I saw it for the first time...
Tell me. very interested...

15.06.2008 22:55, REDBOOK

Steppe zone of the Chelyabinsk region, 1-15. 07
1.
user posted image
2.
user posted image
3.
user posted image
4.
user posted image

16.06.2008 0:13, RippeR

I can't see the photo on the forum, there is no registration..
the second link doesn't open.
they write that it's a hornet, which means that it probably is..

16.06.2008 6:16, DOK

I'll attach the photo here today. will try. It's not a hornet exactly...

16.06.2008 6:23, DOK

here are the promised photos

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picture: DSC04472.JPG
DSC04472.JPG — (132.3к)

picture: DSC04460.JPG
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picture: DSC04469.JPG
DSC04469.JPG — (132.17к)

Likes: 1

16.06.2008 6:33, DOK

I was told that this is a giant scolia (Scolia maculata).
Thanks everyone...

16.06.2008 8:08, Timandr

alex 2611, yes, large; the second is also large in comparison with other species of the genus, in more northern regions I have not seen

17.06.2008 1:28, RippeR

it's wink.giflike this

17.06.2008 10:22, Guest

ooo, I tried to catch such a thing yesterday, it looks a little scary, although it behaves non-aggressivelysmile.gif))) does it sting painfully probably???smile.gif

17.06.2008 11:10, алекс 2611

ooo, I tried to catch such a thing yesterday, it looks a little scary, although it behaves non-aggressivelysmile.gif))) does it sting painfully???smile.gif


I tried to figure out how the scolias sting. I understood with interest. that I was stung by representatives of all families found in Europe except scolias. They are very non-aggressive. I've never been able to lose my temper.

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