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Identification of Hymenoptera (wasps, bees, ants)

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

Pages: 1 ...168 169 170 171 172 173 174 175 176... 277

22.09.2015 19:53, AVA

something is not Googled this word


Duc, no wonder, since it is correct-Gastrosericus
Miles sorry. frown.gif
Likes: 1

22.09.2015 20:14, Mantispid

Duc, no wonder, since it is correct-Gastrosericus
Miles sorry. frown.gif

Thank you, don't you recognize anyone else?

22.09.2015 21:40, gstalker

Is it like a wasp ?
Italy, Venice 06.08.15 7mm

Pictures:
картинка: 7mm_06.08.15_Bibione__VE__Italia_45_38_34.2N_13_02_19.7E_.jpg
7mm_06.08.15_Bibione__VE__Italia_45_38_34.2N_13_02_19.7E_.jpg — (290.54к)

picture: 2.jpg
2.jpg — (291.07к)

picture: 3.jpg
3.jpg — (879.15к)

23.09.2015 2:11, Трофим

1-Rhyssella approximator - there are no white spots, what is the rhyssa? Stop! Are you sure that the first picture shows Rissina at all? Something about the sculpture of tergites inspires me with doubts, and the mirror is not like that... Does the rider have transverse wrinkling on the mesoscutum? If not, then this is some Dolichomitus or Ephialtes from Pimplinae
2-Braconidae - something definable, if Kostya looks, he will probably say
3-4 Ophion spp. (Ichneumonidae, Ophioninae) - different species


No, I'm not sure, I don't know anything about e-mails. Thank you again for your help.

23.09.2015 8:16, greengrocery

  
user posted image

Braconidae, Glyptomorpha. It will go well for the Determinant of the European part (T3, part 4) .

23.09.2015 10:56, алекс 2611

Please help me with the definition of the Egyptian eponyms.

At least approximately, it is possible even to the genus, where it is impossible to the species.

Egypt_Hymen_4

Horseman of the Evaniidae family.
the genus Evania or close Prosevania.
Parasite of cockroaches
Likes: 1

23.09.2015 11:13, алекс 2611

Thank you very much! Please tell me more about the bees taken in August. Penza region.

Panurgus ?
Lasioglossum ?
Hylaeus sp.
Nomada sp.
Likes: 2

23.09.2015 12:19, AVA

Thank you, don't you recognize anyone else?


I find out, of course, before the family-subfamily. And here's the rest... rolleyes.gif
I'm not a fortune teller.

23.09.2015 13:27, Mantispid

I find out, of course, before the family-subfamily. And here's the rest... rolleyes.gif
I'm not a fortune teller.

well, at least up to families, I don't understand anything, but I need to put them in a box

23.09.2015 13:54, Mantispid

Another wasp from Egypt.
Wingspan 35 mm

Pictures:
picture: Egypt_Hymen_9.jpg
Egypt_Hymen_9.jpg — (297.21к)

23.09.2015 17:46, John-ST

Another wasp from Egypt.
Wingspan 35 mm

male Campsomeriella sp.
Likes: 1

23.09.2015 17:56, Mantispid

male Campsomeriella sp.

thank
you I have a female Campsomeriella thoracica from there, I thought it was different species)))

23.09.2015 18:06, John-ST

thank
you I have a female Campsomeriella thoracica from there, I thought it was different species)))

And not the fact that Campsomeriella from Egypt is thoracica

23.09.2015 18:25, алекс 2611

well, at least as far as families, I don't understand anything, and I need to put them in a box


Well, if it's up to the family...
2-3 Megachilidae
6-8 Halictidae
Likes: 1

23.09.2015 18:26, AVA

well, at least as far as families, I don't understand anything, and I need to put them in a box


Well, something like this (in order of Superfamily, Family, Subfamily, Tribe, Subtribe-Genus):
1
- Vespoidae, Pompilidae, Pompilinae
2-3
- Apoidea, Apidae, Megachilinae, Anthidiini
4
- Evanoidea, Evaniidae – Evania sp.
5
- Apoidea, Crabronidae, Crabroninae, Larrini, Gastrosericina – Gastrosericus sp.
6-7
- Apoidea, Apidae, Halictinae, Halictini, Halictina
8-9
- Apoidea, Apidae, Halictinae, Halictini, Sphecodina
Likes: 1

24.09.2015 2:05, Пензуит

Panurgus ?
Lasioglossum ?
Hylaeus sp.
Nomada sp.


Thank you very much! Please help me identify another batch of July bees, Penza region.

1. Can this bee be identified before the genus? Unfortunately, there is no other photo.

picture: DSCN8126_14.JPG



2. ???

picture: DSCN9270_15.JPG
picture: DSCN9267_15.JPG



3. ???

picture: DSCN8795_25.JPG



4. Probably the same species, only male

picture: DSCN8808_36.JPG



5. Probably Dasypoda?

picture: DSCN7148_13__.JPG

24.09.2015 11:47, Nikel

Hello! Left gall on wormwood 22/09/2015 Saratov region, Bald Mountains. The size is approximately 1.2 mm. Thanks!

Pictures:
picture: IMG_6555_1_.JPG
IMG_6555_1_.JPG — (306.75к)

24.09.2015 20:05, алекс 2611

Thank you very much! Please help me identify another batch of July bees, Penza region.


2, 3 and 4 Coelioxys
2 and 4 female, 3 male

5 Yes Dasypoda male
Likes: 1

26.09.2015 0:22, Пензуит

2, 3 and 4 Coelioxys
2 and 4 female, 3 male

5 Yes Dasypoda male


Thank you very much! And also the September ones, please help me recognize them, also from Penza.

1. Some small green-eyed bee, very fast moving, so it was not possible to shoot well.

picture: DSCN2365_27__.JPG
picture: DSCN2364_30.JPG



2. Probably Halictus of some kind?

picture: DSCN2078_15.JPG



3. ???

picture: DSCN2040_16.JPG
picture: DSCN2058_15.JPG
picture: DSCN2068_15.JPG



4. A bee with reddish tips of antennae and a rider. Maybe at the same time identify this rider?

picture: DSCN1699_16.JPG
picture: DSCN1703_10.JPG

26.09.2015 1:03, Кархарот

Thank you very much! Please help me identify another batch of July bees, Penza region.

1. Can this bee be identified before the genus? Unfortunately, there is no other photo.

2. ???

3. ???

4. Probably the same species, only male


2-Coelioxys alata, female.

4-No, it is a female, probably C. conoidea, but not a fact.
The male is just under number 3, but it is more difficult to see the view from this angle.
Likes: 1

26.09.2015 1:39, Proctos

Hello! Left gall on wormwood 22/09/2015 Saratov region, Bald Mountains. The size is approximately 1.2 mm. Thanks!

Hi, this is a parasite of Aphidiidae aphids, previously considered a subfamily of braconids. There is an excellent specialist in St. Petersburg Elena Davidyan
http://www.dissercat.com/content/afidiidy-...nykh-territorii
Likes: 1

26.09.2015 22:32, Коллекционер

Indonesia. Please tell me what kind of ant is
Acropyga?

This post was edited by Collector - 27.09.2015 20: 36

27.09.2015 10:22, greengrocery

from gall to wormwood 22/09/2015 Saratov region, Bald Mountains. The size is approximately 1.2 mm.
This is a Braconidae, Aphidiinae, aphid parasite.
Maybe at the same time identify this rider?
Bracon sp.
Likes: 2

27.09.2015 14:59, Nikel

This is a Braconidae, Aphidiinae, aphid parasite.
Bracon sp.


Thank you very much! On wormwood accidentally, probably, was, collected with tansy.

27.09.2015 23:05, Anton Kozyrev

Saratov Region, May 2015.

Pictures:
picture: IMG_5271_copy.jpg
IMG_5271_copy.jpg — (326.77к)

28.09.2015 9:33, Nikel

Hello! In a cup with galls on tansy collected on 21/08/2015 in Saratov, a community of parasites came out (gall also came out). Please help me with the definition. Thanks!

This post was edited by Nikel - 28.09.2015 09: 35

Pictures:
picture: IMG_6762.JPG
IMG_6762.JPG — (334.31к)

picture: IMG_6764.JPG
IMG_6764.JPG — (244.55к)

picture: IMG_6767.JPG
IMG_6767.JPG — (268.13к)

picture: IMG_6785.JPG
IMG_6785.JPG — (311.48к)

picture: IMG_6789.JPG
IMG_6789.JPG — (308.79к)

28.09.2015 17:23, Woodmen

Thank you very much! And also the September ones, please help me recognize them, also from Penza.
1. Some small green-eyed bee, very fast moving, so it was not possible to shoot well.

In my unprofessional opinion, some kind of Anthophora.
Likes: 1

29.09.2015 6:50, Proctos

Hello! In a cup with galls on tansy collected on 21/08/2015 in Saratov, a community of parasites came out (gall also came out). Please help me with the definition. Thanks!

Hi! These are our old familiar chalcidoids from the Eulophidae family.
I call them "dark greens", because of the difficulty in identifying, especially before the species.
Likes: 1

29.09.2015 7:37, Пензуит

Thank you very much!

1. And this one, taken in August, Penza region,
maybe it's Tiphia femorata ?

picture: DSCN9728_15.JPG
picture: DSCN9736_16.JPG



2. This one was taken in July. Probably the same thing?

picture: DSCN7152_25.JPG



3. And I had a bee above, at number 3. Maybe
Halictus of some kind? Or a male andrena? A little wet.

picture: DSCN2037_16.JPG

29.09.2015 12:59, AVA

Thank you very much!

1. And this one, taken in August, Penza region,
maybe it's Tiphia femorata ?
2. This one was taken in July. Probably the same thing?
3. And I had a bee above, at number 3. Maybe
Halictus of some kind? Or a male andrena? A little wet.


The first three images (#1-2) are of a female Tiphia femorata
Last (#3) - male Halictus
Likes: 1

29.09.2015 13:47, Gorschki

Hello. Please help me determine the type of ants (at least up to the genus) that I accidentally brought from Phu Quoc Island in myrmecophilic plants. Phu Quoc Island is located in the Gulf of Thailand, 15 km from Cambodia and 40 km away. from Vietnam.

Biotope, melaleuca savanna. I have seen these ants living with every epiphyte and in every epiphyte community. Specifically these (pictured) in the fern Lecanopteris sinuosa
August 2015.

Melaleuca savanna
user posted image

Fern Lecanopteris sinuosa
user posted image

user posted image

picture: DSC_0151.JPG

user posted image

picture: DSC_0107.JPG

This post was edited by Gorschki - 04.10.2015 01: 29

29.09.2015 13:57, Gorschki

And these live in a hydrophytum, in a mangrove community.
August 2015

Hydnophytum sp. in the mangrove forest.
user posted image

They are smaller than the previous ones.
user posted image

user posted image

picture: DSC_0014.JPG

The ant is lying on a piece of paper in a notebook.
picture: DSC_0168.JPG

This post was edited by Gorschki - 04.10.2015 01: 29

29.09.2015 21:39, Кархарот

Thank you very much!
3. And I had a bee above, at number 3. Maybe
Halictus of some kind? Or a male andrena? A little wet.

picture: DSCN2037_16.JPG

I think it's a female Lasioglossum sp.
Likes: 1

30.09.2015 9:08, AVA

Likes: 1

30.09.2015 18:58, Кархарот

Strange indeed. Usually males have longer whiskers and are generally more slender.

P. S. Although no, it is in Lasioglossum in the narrow sense (according to Pesenko) that they are exactly like that, so, yes-male Lasioglossum, 100%.

This post was edited by Carcharot - 30.09.2015 19: 01
Likes: 1

30.09.2015 19:45, AVA

Strange indeed. Usually males have longer whiskers and are generally more slender.

P. S. Although no, it is in Lasioglossum in the narrow sense (according to Pesenko) that they are exactly like that, so, yes-male Lasioglossum, 100%.


beer.gif
I confess that I still call all of them halicts, without delving into the latest research of apidologists.
Likes: 1

30.09.2015 19:56, Кархарот

I distinguish them like this. According to Pesenko, Halictus has light bandages on the tops of tergites, Seladonia (according to Michener this is also Halictus) usually also has them (less developed), but the body has a metallic luster, Vestitohalictus (according to Michener this is also Halictus) has the whole body with suede hair and a metallic luster.
Lasioglossum and Evylaeus (according to Michener, this is also Lasioglossum) do not have apical ligatures, while Lasioglossum has developed ligatures in the bases of tergites, and Evylaeus has not developed or developed very weakly on the sides (and not on all tergites). If the abdomen is partially red, it is Evylaeus (although most are without the red pattern).
That is, according to Pesenko, we have five genera, and according to Michener, these are only two genera.
Likes: 1

30.09.2015 21:29, алекс 2611

It can also be Lasioglossum...
But I'm not so sure about Paul. What if we calculate the number of antenna segments? An earlier snapshot of the same instance (see URL 6862) shows them better than this one.
wink.gif


I was also confused by the gender issue. It seems purely in appearance, the antennae are like a female, and if you count the number of segments, then it seems to be a male. Although I was constantly getting knocked down
Likes: 1

30.09.2015 21:43, алекс 2611

I distinguish them like this. According to Pesenko, Halictus has light bandages on the tops of tergites, Seladonia (according to Michener this is also Halictus) usually also has them (less developed), but the body has a metallic luster, Vestitohalictus (according to Michener this is also Halictus) has the whole body with suede hair and a metallic luster.
Lasioglossum and Evylaeus (according to Michener, this is also Lasioglossum) do not have apical ligatures, while Lasioglossum has developed ligatures in the bases of tergites, and Evylaeus has not developed or developed very weakly on the sides (and not on all tergites). If the abdomen is partially red, it is Evylaeus (although most are without the red pattern).
That is, according to Pesenko, we have five genera, and according to Michener, these are only two genera.


Among Lasioglossum in the narrow sense (according to Pesenko) there are also metallic-shiny species. For females, the thickness of the forewing veins works well. Halictus and Seladonia are all "thick" veins. In Evylaeus, a pair of veins is thinner than the others. Lasioglossum has even more "thin" veins. There is no point in giving names here. A good determinant of genera with illustrations in the Determinant of insects of the Far East. 5 part 4 volumes.
Likes: 1

30.09.2015 22:27, AVA

I distinguish them like this. According to Pesenko, Halictus has light bandages on the tops of tergites, Seladonia (according to Michener this is also Halictus) usually also has them (less developed), but the body has a metallic luster, Vestitohalictus (according to Michener this is also Halictus) has the whole body with suede hair and a metallic luster.
Lasioglossum and Evylaeus (according to Michener, this is also Lasioglossum) do not have apical ligatures, while Lasioglossum has developed ligatures in the bases of tergites, and Evylaeus has not developed or developed very weakly on the sides (and not on all tergites). If the abdomen is partially red, it is Evylaeus (although most are without the red pattern).
That is, according to Pesenko, we have five genera, and according to Michener, these are only two genera.


Yeah... And what, do you order all this to be perceived as significant signs of the generic level? eek.gif Nope, let the bee colonies suffer themselves rolleyes.gif.
Likes: 1

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