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Identification of Hymenoptera (wasps, bees, ants)

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

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25.01.2010 19:55, Guest

See here, and not only pereponov http://www.faunaeur.org/
Likes: 1

27.01.2010 0:35, DronT

Good day!
Can you tell me, please, if anyone knows what kind of hymenoptera I photographed?
Filmed in the Rostov region.
The months are different (from July to September...)

№1
picture: __2__1264539771_adkmostx28.jpg

№2
user posted image

№3
picture: ____85_126454_273_lprvxz1235.jpg

№4
user posted image

№5
picture: __92_126454_439_icbpvrl9y3.jpg

№6
picture: _1_1_126454_511_3wq6fgy928.jpg

№7
picture: _1_2_126454_583_hjqstvy236.jpg

Thank you so much in advance!

27.01.2010 14:34, Meyrick

Hello, dear friends. Please identify the cute sawfly, and anything else about the two, from near Nizhny Novgorod:
1 - length about 14 mm, June 23,
2-length 14 mm, May 1,
3-length about 16 mm, August 26.


3 photos Rider sem.Ichneumonidae, n / a family ?Ichneumoninae - not a very good angle smile.gif

27.01.2010 18:51, Александр57

See here, and not only pereponov http://www.faunaeur.org/

Thank you, good resource. But I am confused by information from other sources (APUS.RU, for example):
"Suborder * Sessile bellies-Symphyta
* Superfamily ·Xyeloid - Xyeloidea
* Superfamily * Horntails-Siricoidea
* Superfamily True * Sawflies-Tenthredinoidea
* Superfamily * Pamphilioidea-Pamphilioidea (family Pamphiliidae moved to superfamily Megalodontoidea)
* Superfamily ·Xiphydrioidea - Xiphydrioidea (family Xiphydriidae moved to superfamily Xyeloidea)
* Superfamily ·Anaxyeloidea
* Superfamily ·Orussoidea
* Superfamily Bread ·sawflies - Cephoidea
* Superfamily * Megalodontidae-Megalodontoidea".
Some difference is present. And in particular, I am interested in the position of Megalodontesidae.

27.01.2010 19:07, Юстус

Can you tell me, please, if anyone knows what kind of hymenoptera I photographed?
Filmed in the Rostov region.
The months are different (from July to September...)

№1

Anthidium sp.

27.01.2010 19:17, Dr. Niko

Thank you, good resource. But I am confused by information from other sources (APUS.RU, for example)

Alexander, apus.<url> is a third-rate, incomprehensibly moderated "taxonomic" resource, from which it is not only impossible to take information, it cannot be opened at all in order to avoid brain thinning. Normal taxonomic bases for insects in Runet, in my opinion, only have Zinovsky coleopterologists.

This post was edited by Dr. Niko - 27.01.2010 19: 22

27.01.2010 19:39, Proctos

Take a look here, these are the most reliable sources

http://www.hymatol.org/introduction.html

http://www.morphbank.net/Browse/ByTaxon/?t...nyms=0&images=0

27.01.2010 23:26, DronT

Anthidium sp.


Anthidium? A woolbite bee? Thank you, it seems similar!

28.01.2010 0:32, алекс 2611

Good day!
Can you tell me, please, if anyone knows what kind of hymenoptera I photographed?
Filmed in the Rostov region.
The months are different (from July to September...)
Thank you so much in advance!


1-Justus said exactly right, this is Anthidium sp.
2-Hylaeus, a bee from the family Colletidae
3-Philanthus sp.
7-male Halictus sp. (H. sexcinctus ?)
4-somehow very familiar member of the Sphecidae family

28.01.2010 0:53, Papaver

... ... ...
4-somehow very familiar representative of the family Sphecidae

Well duc Tachysphex like ...

28.01.2010 13:22, алекс 2611

Well duc Tachysphex like...


Yeah, probably him. I just always confuse this genus with another (again I can't remember the name frown.gif), and the box with sphecides is very high, too lazy to climb....

28.01.2010 13:53, Tigran Oganesov

Yeah, probably him. It's just that I always confuse this genus with another (again I can't remember the namefrown.gif), and the box with sphecides is very high, too lazy to climb....

C Astata? wink.gif

28.01.2010 14:15, DronT

1-Justus said exactly right, this is Anthidium sp.
2-Hylaeus, a bee from the family Colletidae
3-Philanthus sp.
7-male Halictus sp. (H. sexcinctus ?)
4-somehow very familiar representative of the family Sphecidae


Thanks!
Unfortunately, # 7 is the best angle, and # 4 is the only one I've ever taken... Red Book Xylocopa valga and Scolia hirta I have already observed thickly

28.01.2010 15:34, алекс 2611

C Astata? wink.gif


No, with Tachytes. frown.gif

29.01.2010 20:45, DronT

Thank you all for your help!
Here are some more "representatives", if anyone knows, I will be grateful.

No. 59
was thinking of a honeybee, but then he realized that it wasn't the same thing at all... Isn't that galictus?
user posted image

No. 70
Is this a leaf cutter??
user posted image

No. 90
is, I thought, some kind of defective or mutant individual - a very strange, hypotrophic abdomen-but your opinion is more correct:
user posted image

#97
I don't know, I don't know at all
user posted image

02.02.2010 13:36, алекс 2611

and I would like to show you one more bee right away.
Andrena is a female. 18 wingspan, 11 mm body length.
It was caught on 15.04.2000 in Krasnoyarsk, on the bank of the Yenisei River, on a willow tree.
There are a lot of questions here, and I haven't really come up with any of them. In green as variants-A. bucephala Stephens. (but in size, this species is slightly larger) or A. praecox Scop. (but according to the thesis of this species, the hairs on the hind legs should be bicolored).


I tortured this bee... That's it, I give up. frown.gif
You know how to ask questions...
In my opinion, this is definitely not bucephala or praecox. It seems to me that this is just some kind of your eastern bee, there is no such species in European Russia.
I also raced on the Far East determinant and watched works on Siberian, Kazakh, Far Eastern and Chinese species. I never came to any conclusion. After all, even your high-quality photos are not enough. However, even with a copy in hand, it's not a fact that I would have determined it. Probably need a specialist.

02.02.2010 13:41, алекс 2611

Thank you all for your help!
Here are some more "representatives", if anyone knows, I will be grateful.


59-probably the genus Seladonia (by" green " Halictus)
70-genus Megachile
90 - some kind of megachilid. Not a male Megachile by any chance?

02.02.2010 17:12, DronT

Thanks! Very helpful!

03.02.2010 5:30, akulich-sibiria

I tortured this bee... That's it, I give up. frown.gif
You know how to ask questions...
In my opinion, this is definitely not bucephala or praecox. It seems to me that this is just some kind of your eastern bee, there is no such species in European Russia.
I also raced on the Far East determinant and watched works on Siberian, Kazakh, Far Eastern and Chinese species. I never came to any conclusion. After all, even your high-quality photos are not enough. However, even with a copy in hand, it's not a fact that I would have determined it. Probably need a specialist.


Yes, well, I got a crockery, although I have several of them . weep.gif
And a friend from Kemerovo didn't really tell me anything about it frown.gif

and about the first bee listed as a female Andrena clarkella Kirby?

03.02.2010 23:49, алекс 2611

Yes, well, I got a crockery, although I have several of them . weep.gif
And a friend from Kemerovo didn't really tell me anything about it frown.gif

and about the first bee listed as a female Andrena clarkella Kirby?




In my opinion, it is similar to Andrena clarkella.
I just don't understand, I have almost all the specimens of this species with bright orange pubescence of the midrib, and you have some kind of faded pubescence of the midrib. Maybe they were standing in the sun? Insects fade quickly.

04.02.2010 11:41, akulich-sibiria

yes, it seems that they did not stand in the sun. they are actually all under my wooden covers.
Here's another mystery I have.
Another bee. Male. I think it's from the Melitta family. The last segment of the antennae is cut off . It was caught in an overgrowth of trees in Khakassia, on the umbrella islands.
Length 10 mm, span 18-19 mm. Photo 1
picture: 1.jpg
Head in thick long hairs of white color, only along the edge of the eyes, a row of black hairs. The structure of the platband is not visible. Photo 2
picture: 2.jpg
Middle breast with thick dirty-white hairs with sparse black hairs in the center. Matte finish, shagreen in rare shallow spots. Photo 3
picture: 3.jpg
The median field is bare, not glistening in faint gutch transverse wrinkles. Tergites with thick hairs . 1-2 tergite in long white hairs, 3rd tergite in white hairs with sparse black hairs. 4-1 in longer white and shorter dark hairs. 5-th tergite in long dark hairs, white on the sides. Faintly shiny, in rather dense notched shallow points. On 2-4 tergites there are very weak baldings on the tops. The last segment of the antennae is cut off. Photos 4-5
picture: 4.jpg
picture: 5.jpg
On the 6th stubble there is no longitudinal keel. photo 6
picture: 6.jpg
picture: 7.jpg
picture: 8.jpg
picture: 9.jpg

05.02.2010 0:10, алекс 2611

yes, it seems that they did not stand in the sun. they are actually all under my wooden covers.
Here's another mystery I have.
Another bee. Male. I think it's from the Melitta family. The last segment of the antennae is cut off . It was caught in an overgrowth of trees in Khakassia, on the umbrella islands.
Length 10 mm, span 18-19 mm. Photo 1


I also immediately thought it was Melitta.
For me, this is a very difficult genus to define. There are certain doubts even in the instances I have identified. I can't tell from the photo exactly.
I have a great work in English - Monographic revision of the bee genus Melitta Kirby 1802. With identifying keys, color photos, and maps of the distribution of species in the Palearctic. If you are interested , I can send it to you. You seem to be very good at determining for yourself.

05.02.2010 0:13, алекс 2611

yes, it seems that they did not stand in the sun. they are actually all under my wooden covers.


I looked at my fees - yes, I also have one pale copy out of a couple of dozen copies of Clarkell, as if faded.

05.02.2010 0:27, Andrey Ponomarev

confused.gif Please tell me this sawfly Megalodontes cephalotes or not.Taken on 30.06.2009 10: 11 Moscow region, Orekhovo-Zuyevsky district, on the bank of the Klyazma river.

The post was edited by Gennadich - 07.02.2010 15: 29

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Likes: 1

05.02.2010 5:03, akulich-sibiria

I also immediately thought it was Melitta.
For me, this is a very difficult genus to define. There are certain doubts even in the instances I have identified. I can't tell from the photo exactly.
I have a great work in English - Monographic revision of the bee genus Melitta Kirby 1802. With identifying keys, color photos, and maps of the distribution of species in the Palearctic. If you are interested , I can send it to you. You seem to be very good at determining for yourself.


To be honest, I do better with bark beetles. wink.gif Well, it would be possible to look at work, send it smile.gif
It's just that I didn't find anything like this from melittae either in Zeleny or in DV, especially since this genus is very poorly represented there. I think Melitt was partly united with the Andrens...
Well, here's another bee for you, too, from Andren. Probably the strangest of my bees...Once again I drove through the green, just a dead end!!! confused.gif A set of such signs does not exist if the thread is just in the Caucasus.

Female, was caught on 27.07.05 in Khakassia in a flower bed with calendula. It is 11-12 mm long and has a wingspan of 16 mm. Photo 1.
picture: 1.jpg
Her face was streaked with light hair, the trim was white, and behind the antennal pits it was reddish. The casing is shagreen in sparse shallow points, without a longitudinal bare strip. The upper lip is broad and notched at the apex. Photo 2,3
picture: 2.jpg
picture: 3.jpg
Srednespinka in thick short red hairs, coarse-grained with very rare poorly visible points. The shield in the center is faintly shiny, with sharp large dots. Photo 4
picture: 4.jpg
Tergites in thick slightly raised red hairs. The hind thighs are brown with reddish hairs. Photo 5
picture: 5.jpg
The median field of the intermediate segment is shagreen, without dots and wrinkles, with gentle longitudinal wrinkles on top.
picture: 6.jpg
picture: 7.jpg
By the way, how are you doing with the Colletes family? There is a small blockage on them.

05.02.2010 5:12, akulich-sibiria

In general, this animal was caught in Khakassia, on a bed of calendula, in early August. It is 10-11 mm long and has a wingspan of 16-17 mm. Pubescence of the mid-spine is reddish-brown, without admixture of black hairs, in large deep points with a longitudinal furrow. Only in the center of the point is slightly rarer. Shiny, feathery hairs. Photos 1-2
picture: 1.jpg
picture: 2.jpg
Head with lighter hairs. The eye grooves are very small, glabrous, teardrop-shaped, located at the upper edge of the eye.
The trim is shiny. The dots are large, form longitudinal wrinkles, and there are no dots at the top. On top of 2 brushes of golden hairs, along the edges of another thicker brush. Photo 3-4
picture: 3.jpg
picture: 4.jpg
The lower leg is dark brown, the hairs on it are light, reddish. Photo 5
picture: 5.jpg
2-5 tergites with white bandages. 1st tergite with lateral spots. On the base of the 2nd tergite, the pressed short bristles form a thin band. The top of the 1st tergite is transparent red. On the base of the 1st tergite (vertical side) in the center reddish long and short slightly raised, thick hairs, white and long to the sides. Photos 6-8
picture: 6.jpg
picture: 7.jpg
picture: 8.jpg
1-2 th tergites are shiny. On the 1st floor, the dots are larger and rarer. Between large points, there are smaller ones. The dots get smaller at the top. On the 2nd tergite, the dots are small and identical.
3-5 tergites are weakly drained in notched dense points.
The anal fringe is underdeveloped.
Intermediate segment on the sides in long reddish hairs in the center is glabrous. Its median field is shiny and mirror-like in the center. On top of it in large cells, on the sides cellular-wrinkled photo 9
picture: 9.jpg
picture: 10.jpg
As an option Mellita dividiata or is it taken as Colletes

05.02.2010 12:25, Andrey Ponomarev

wink.gif If on the macroid, then everything is not completely clear there, read the comments,posted it here until the final clarification.I'm not an expert myself.
Thank you. Found a similar one: Megalodontes cephalotes (Megalodontesidae). On " MacroID.RU - Hymenoptera", but even there the community is not sure of its definition.

05.02.2010 14:07, Ruslan2

Gentlemen, help me deal with the sawfly larvae, please!
One on roses (in the photo - Vyborg, similar in the mass-Kiev, Kherson, Odessa):
http://molbiol.ru/forums/uploads/post-56629-1263920406.jpg

Another on the apple trees (St. Petersburg):
http://molbiol.ru/forums/uploads/post-41275-1265193333.jpg

05.02.2010 17:08, Arikain

I lay out hymenoptera for definition:
picture: Цветы_548.јрд
picture: Цветы_723.јрд
picture: Усадьба_035.јрд

05.02.2010 17:17, vasiliy-feoktistov

1) Cimbex femorata Linnaeus, 1758
Likes: 2

07.02.2010 15:07, Andrey Ponomarev

mol.gif Help identify the best riders.Taken in the Orekhovo-Zuyevsky district, the first body length is 10-12 mm., 27.06.09, the second 22-25 mm.01.07.2009

The post was edited by Gennadich - 07.02.2010 15: 25

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07.02.2010 15:12, Andrey Ponomarev

confused.gif A road wasp from Pompilidae,but which one?The body color is metallic with a blue tint.Moscow: O Okresnosti Orekhovo-zuyevo 27.06.2009

The post was edited by Gennadich - 07.02.2010 15: 25

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07.02.2010 15:17, Andrey Ponomarev

confused.gif Tell me who the hunter is, the victim is most likely a ktyr.Moscow, Orekhovo-zuyevsky district,16.07.2009.

The post was edited by Gennadich - 07.02.2010 15: 26

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07.02.2010 16:09, Andrey Ponomarev

Can you tell me who it is? Taken in the Yaroslavl region.

user posted image

user posted image

the first one is similar to Tenthredo vespa (sawfly wasp-like)

07.02.2010 16:15, Andrey Ponomarev

  confused.gif A road wasp from Pompilidae,but which one?The body color is metallic with a blue tint.Moscow: O Okresnosti Orekhovo-zuyevo 27.06.2009
sorry for the quality of the pictures,it's too fast, in 3 minutes it dragged its prey along the intersection by more than 2 meters

07.02.2010 20:12, Bad Den

  confused.gif Tell me who the hunter is, the victim is most likely a ktyr.Moscow, Orekhovo-zuyevsky district,16.07.2009.

As far as I know, we only have Bembex sp for flies. hunting.
Likes: 1

07.02.2010 20:39, Andrey Ponomarev

As far as I know, we only have Bembex sp for flies. hunting.
There are some doubts about Bembex sp.the legs are yellow and the whiskers are longer http://www.flickr.com/photos/69262325@N00/312089565/

07.02.2010 22:34, Papaver

  confused.gif Tell me who the hunter is, the victim is most likely a ktyr.Moscow, Orekhovo-zuyevsky district,16.07.2009.

As far as I know, we only have Bembex sp for flies. hunting.

There are some doubts about Bembex sp.the legs are yellow and the whiskers are longer http://www.flickr.com/photos/69262325@N00/312089565/

In general, you would at least indicate the size of the animal ...
Pay attention to how the wasp drags the victim - with its hind legs; small things can also stick on the sting. Bembixes transport the victim in a different way.
This is Oxybelus sp. Presumably-Ox. argentatus. But the main specialist for them is AVA.
Likes: 2

07.02.2010 22:36, Bad Den

There are some doubts about Bembex sp.the legs are yellow and the whiskers are longer http://www.flickr.com/photos/69262325@N00/312089565/

I meant - species of the genus Bembex. I believe we have several of them, but I do not know anyone other than Bembex rostratus, and I cannot say that this is it. And according to your link - one of the American species of this genus. That's probably why it doesn't look like the one in your photo.
Likes: 1

07.02.2010 23:15, Andrey Ponomarev

In general, you would at least indicate the size of the animal ...
Pay attention to how the wasp drags the victim - with its hind legs; small things can also stick on the sting. Bembixes transport the victim in a different way.
This is Oxybelus sp. Presumably-Ox. argentatus. But the main specialist for them is AVA.
I apologize that I did not specify the size of this animal, but its size is slightly smaller than ktyr, i.e. somewhere 14-16mm.

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