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 ...14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22... 277

17.06.2008 13:22, omar

Vaughn Beetle wrote that he was stung by such a scolia. It seems like they just put a needle in your hand and that's it. eek.gif There is almost no poison type at all.

17.06.2008 13:25, Zhuk

Yes, Kabut was pricked with a needle and that's all. And small scolias, which have 2 yellow bandages on the belly, could not pierce the skin at all.
Likes: 1

17.06.2008 13:36, omar

This is valuable. Now I will boldly grab the Moscow region with my hand. smile.gif

17.06.2008 13:47, RippeR

A friend told me about it. that his scolias were stinging and the same as Zhuk's no special pain sensations..
By the way interesting! Maybe this feature of scolias is a remnant of former forms that lost their venom as unnecessary in the process of evolution?

17.06.2008 13:57, Fornax13

This thing tried to fuck me (in the sense of maculata). Moreover, samets. I don't know what smile.gif) but noticeable smile.gif)

17.06.2008 14:10, omar

the male can prick with some thorns on the tip of the abdomen. Are they genitals? I don't know. confused.gif

17.06.2008 14:16, Zhuk

This is valuable. Now I will boldly grab the Moscow region with my hand. smile.gif

And you never know I have hard skin smile.gif
Likes: 1

17.06.2008 14:37, Fornax13

the male can prick with some thorns on the tip of the abdomen. Are they genitals? I don't know. confused.gif

That's it. And I didn't get it. I'll look at it at my leisure smile.gif

17.06.2008 15:55, алекс 2611

the male can prick with some thorns on the tip of the abdomen. Are they genitals? I don't know. confused.gif


In the fauna of the USSR, D. M. Steinberg writes that in males of scolium 9, the sternite of the abdomen has three strong teeth. Like it's not genitals.
Likes: 1

20.06.2008 11:45, 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 clearly from the subgenus Melandrena Perez. Reminds me of Andrena (Melandrena) thoracica F., naturally female. Well, very similar. In Siberia (she's from Kemerovo, isn't she?) it definitely occurs.

If you are interested in reducing the percentage of errors in the definition , it would be good to take several photos (side, front - a close-up photo of the face, a close-up of the abdomen, so that the nature of pubescence and dotted lines would be clearly visible)
Likes: 1

20.06.2008 13:23, Dinusik

Please tell me who it is?

Pictures:
picture: P6200049.JPG
P6200049.JPG — (311.75к)

20.06.2008 15:02, алекс 2611

Please tell me who it is?


Some kind of sawfly. It seems to be from the family Tenthredinidae. Further, I'm afraid, complete hopelessness. It seems there is no forum specialist in sidyachebryuhim.
Likes: 1

20.06.2008 16:46, Охотник за осами

In the fauna of the USSR, D. M. Steinberg writes that in males of scolium 9, the sternite of the abdomen has three strong teeth. Like it's not genitals.

I wonder if the stinging apparatus developed just from these spines, and in the far shem it degraded in males, and improved in females, and polist wasps also have a similar phenomenon, when I caught it, it tried to prick me with its three black spines, and the end of the brbshka, and they are neat stacked were

20.06.2008 17:02, Bad Den

I wonder if the stinging apparatus developed just from these spines, and in the far shem it degraded in males, while in females it improved

No, not one of them.
Likes: 1

20.06.2008 17:19, Tigran Oganesov

stinger-modified ovipositor

21.06.2008 1:11, IchMan

Likes: 1

21.06.2008 23:10, Konstantin Shorenko

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

I saw the burrowing wasps, was happy, and now I write immediately smile.gif. Unfortunately, there is no time to dig, I indicate the last figures of the photo-0150 and 0103 Crabronidae, Tachysphex, 0151 and 0617 the family is also the genus Bembix, 0094 from the same family. genus Cerceris, 0086 Sphecidae, apparently the genus Prionyx. Well, what I could do helped smile.gif.

23.06.2008 19:04, Transilvania

picture: kto_eto.jpg
Please tell me who it is. Filmed in the Moscow region. In the forest.
Thanks!

23.06.2008 20:36, IchMan

to Transilvania

The photo is not very high-quality, and I, as I have repeatedly mentioned here, am not an expert on Symphyta, but since such specialists are not yet seen here, I will say that this sawfly reminds me of Tenthredo (Temuledo) temula Scopoli. The family, respectively, is Tenthredinidae
Likes: 1

23.06.2008 21:58, Transilvania

Thank you very much!
Alas, there is no macro lens.

26.06.2008 10:59, BO.

Can you tell me who it is ?
large wasp 4-cm. body length, completely black.
Astrakhan region On the flowers of " tumbleweeds 2

Pictures:
picture: SG104815.jpg
SG104815.jpg — (84.7к)

picture: SG104828.jpg
SG104828.jpg — (68.77к)

27.06.2008 0:10, Konstantin Shorenko

A good wasp, the right smile.gifone . Seriously, this is a burrowing wasp from sem. Sphecidae, a subfamily. Sphecinae, I would say from the genus Sphex, although possibly Prionyx. I don't know.
Likes: 1

07.07.2008 15:42, barry

Help me determine...
Kharkiv, 09.07.2007.
About the size of a typical bumblebee.

Pictures:
picture: 1.jpg
1.jpg — (101.33 k)

picture: 2.jpg
2.jpg — (111.89 k)

07.07.2008 18:03, Konstantin Shorenko

Bombus lapidarius?
Likes: 1

07.07.2008 23:16, barry

Bombus lapidarius?

Is that him, too?" So very different...

Pictures:
picture: IMG_8943.jpg
IMG_8943.jpg — (111.22к)

08.07.2008 0:07, Konstantin Shorenko

I don't know much about them, that's just a guess...

08.07.2008 0:14, Fornax13

Can you tell me what kind of animal it is? They come across regularly, but I can't even imagine who they are teapot.gif

This post was edited by Fornax13-08.07.2008 00: 14

Pictures:
picture: P7080192.JPG
P7080192.JPG — (128.57к)

08.07.2008 0:16, IchMan

So on IMG_8943.jpg - female, and in the previous photos male (males have more than 1 segment in the antennae and there is no basket on the hind legs to collect pollen). True, I am a little confused by the rather short cheeks of this male, and the rather light color of the pubescence of the mesosome and basal tergites. For a b. m. confident determination of male bumblebees, it would be necessary to look at the genitals.
Likes: 1

08.07.2008 0:20, IchMan

Likes: 1

08.07.2008 0:40, Bad Den

I have a question too. These membranes are regularly found in the litter. I know in my gut that I'm a rider, but I can't figure out who exactly...
Can you tell me?smile.gif
user posted image

08.07.2008 0:47, Fornax13

This is a betyloid oska (family Bethylidae), and more specifically-offhand not to say

Funny animals... Posobirat that whether... smile.gif

08.07.2008 1:13, IchMan

Likes: 1

08.07.2008 6:26, Bad Den

This is indeed a sem rider. Ichneumonidae, a subfamily of Cryptinae. And, apparently, this is a representative of the genus Gelis, in which wingless females are common. Is it hard to see the wings are completely reduced or is there still something left of them? Determining them to the specific level, and having the material on hand, is quite problematic, and even from the photo...

Thanks!

08.07.2008 12:12, barry

Help me determine it... Crimea, 16.08.2007.
I found something vaguely similar - Delta unguiculatum, but it doesn't seem to be it.

Pictures:
picture: IMG_2526.jpg
IMG_2526.jpg — (97.1к)

picture: IMG_25280.jpg
IMG_25280.jpg — (100.84к)

08.07.2008 12:58, алекс 2611

Help me determine it... Crimea, 16.08.2007.
I found something vaguely similar - Delta unguiculatum, but it doesn't seem to be it.

It is a fold-winged wasp from the genus Eumenes (Eumeninae, Vespidae).
Before the view from the photo is unlikely.
Likes: 1

13.07.2008 20:54, DYNASTES

Please help me determine who this person is?

Pictures:
picture: 1053.jpg
1053.jpg — (101.16к)

13.07.2008 21:32, алекс 2611

Please help me determine who this person is?

This is a bumblebee-cuckoo from the genus Psithyrus. Now this genus is increasingly placed in the genus Bombus as a subgenus.
Now the collection is not available to me, when I can get it, I'll try to say up to the view at least approximately.
Likes: 1

13.07.2008 22:56, Victor Titov

Please help me identify a cute guy. 16.06.2008, Gelendzhik.
picture: DSC01998_2.jpg

14.07.2008 8:58, DYNASTES

alex 2611, thank you, I will be waiting for help with the classification of the species.

14.07.2008 9:31, алекс 2611

Please help me identify a cute guy. 16.06.2008, Gelendzhik.
picture: DSC01998_2.jpg

It reminded me of the burrowing wasp Stizoides tridentatus.
I apologize in advance for any possible errors in the correct spelling. I write from memory, I can't really get to the collection and literature - I'm still lying down.
Likes: 1

Pages: 1 ...14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22... 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.