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Identification of Hymenoptera (wasps, bees, ants)

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

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03.08.2012 12:15, Роман Ракочий

The first bee may be Andrena nigroaenea.
Likes: 1

03.08.2012 19:22, Arikain

Thanks! I will try to catch it next time and use the keys to drive, although there are more than 200 species in the determinant, this is of course a terrifying variety.

03.08.2012 19:29, Arikain

Is this also Andrena? Yesterday, from Karelia.
picture: SANY6547.jpg

03.08.2012 21:48, алекс 2611

Is this also Andrena? Yesterday, from Karelia.
picture: SANY6547.jpg

Nah, this is some kind of galictus. Lasioglossum, I suppose.
Likes: 1

03.08.2012 22:32, Кархарот

Is this also Andrena? Yesterday, from Karelia.
picture: SANY6547.jpg

Something like Evylaeus calceatus.
Likes: 1

04.08.2012 17:55, greengrocery

  
user posted image

It's one of the Evaniidae.

  user posted image

Let me clarify further, taking this opportunity: it is very similar to Macrocentrus nidus (Nees, 1834) (Braconidae, Macrocentrinae)

07.08.2012 22:08, Arikain

Andren-y caught some fish a couple of days ago, from Karelia. Can you tell me what kind it can be?
picture: Andrena__.jpg
picture: Andrena_lateral_.jpg
picture: Andrena_face_.jpg

08.08.2012 3:02, akulich-sibiria

this is the leafcutter bee Megachile sp.
Likes: 1

08.08.2012 10:45, алекс 2611

Megachile lagopoda?
Likes: 1

08.08.2012 10:51, akulich-sibiria

on the male it would be easier )) if lagopoda )))
Likes: 1

08.08.2012 15:46, Pasha

To be honest, I don't even know if I'm posting the beast in the right branchfrown.gif.
Taken on 5.08.12 in the Leningrad region.

This post was edited by Pasha - 08.08.2012 15: 48

Pictures:
picture: P1010081.JPG
P1010081.JPG — (187.69к)

08.08.2012 17:34, алекс 2611

To be honest, I don't even know if I'm posting the beast in the right branchfrown.gif.
Taken on 5.08.12 in the Leningrad region.

The wrong one. It's a bug. Moustache. Not caught by chance? Where did you see it in the region?
Likes: 1

08.08.2012 17:34, Arikain

To be honest, I don't even know if I'm posting the beast in the right branchfrown.gif.
Taken on 5.08.12 in the Leningrad region.

Not there, it's a bug. I believe Necydalis major, the Mole wing is large, but still it is better to transfer it to beetles, I may be mistaken.
Likes: 1

09.08.2012 5:45, akulich-sibiria

wasps from the genus Sphex, dear colleagues, maybe someone has something fresh from the determinants?
more photos for the general plan
1. Minusinsk south, Krasnoyarsk Region
Claws with two teeth
picture: DSCN0225_.jpg
picture: DSCN0227_.jpg
picture: DSCN0226_.jpg
2. picture: DSCN0228_.jpg
3. picture: DSCN0229_.jpg
4. picture: DSCN0231_.jpg

This post was edited by akulich-sibiria-09.08.2012 05: 45

09.08.2012 7:50, Pasha

09.08.2012 22:59, алекс 2611

No, I'm not a collector, I'm a photographer smile.gif
I saw it at my dacha in Vaskelovo, Vsevolozhsky district.

Damn, I've been visiting the vicinity of Vaskelovo for many years, but I've never met it. I envy You

09.08.2012 23:01, алекс 2611

wasps from the genus Sphex, dear colleagues, maybe someone has something fresh from the determinants?

And Kazenas (fauna of Kazakhstan) is not suitable?

10.08.2012 3:22, akulich-sibiria

That's right, we'll have to see it later. I completely forgot about this source. On the European part, I tried something that doesn't really work out yet. Pasib!! : -)

10.08.2012 21:47, Gansucha

Ukraine, Rivne region, June 8.
Colletes sp. ? Can I get to the view ?
user posted image

This post was edited by Gansucha - 10.08.2012 22: 25

11.08.2012 17:43, AVA

wasps from the genus Sphex, dear colleagues, maybe someone has something fresh from the determinants?


The" green " determinant of the European part is outdated in some places, but it works quite well for this and related genera. But its users rarely read footnotes carefully. And there, by the way, it says that these subgenera should be considered independent genera. That's when the riddles will be much less.
Likes: 1

11.08.2012 20:43, Liparus

wasps from the genus Sphex, dear colleagues, maybe someone has something fresh from the determinants?
more photos for the general plan
1. Minusinsk south, Krasnoyarsk Krai
Claws with two teeth
2. picture: DSCN0228_.jpg

male Sphex_funerarius

11.08.2012 20:45, Liparus

Batozonellus lacerticida (Pallas, 1771)

female

12.08.2012 13:19, akulich-sibiria

Thank you, we'll check it out !! :-)

12.08.2012 13:33, Liparus

Thank you, we'll check it out!!: -)

I would like to check your scolium, which is in the upper right corner

12.08.2012 16:28, akulich-sibiria

Yes, there are a couple of pieces caught, one more on top of the center. In addition to the already caught hirta

This post was edited by akulich-sibiria - 12.08.2012 16: 29

16.08.2012 9:48, Gansucha

Ukraine, Rivne region, June 8.
Symmorphus bifasciatus, if I'm not mistaken:
user posted image
I watched the picture when this wasp flew to the mink three times. In the intervals between this, another interesting person also looked in there.:
user posted image
The question is: are Chysis ignita and Chysis angustula synonyms or different species ?

This post was edited by Gansucha - 08/16/2012 14: 37

16.08.2012 22:02, Arikain

Judging by the catalog of Fauna Europaea, different species:
http://www.faunaeur.org/full_results.php?id=68249
Chrysis ignita (Linnaeus 1758)
Chrysis angustula Schenck 1856

This post was edited by Arikain - 08/16/2012 22: 02

17.08.2012 0:36, Gansucha

17.08.2012 2:05, John-ST

Please take a look at my emails
16.08.2012
MO, Zheleznodorozhny

1. Polistes dominula?
[attachmentid()=150961]
[attachmentid()=150962]

2. sabulose?
[attachmentid()=150963]

3. Polistes dominula male?
[attachmentid()=150964]

4. Red bee, I understand the photo shit, well, at least in which group to look
for[attachmentid()=150965]

17.08.2012 8:14, Gansucha

Please take a look at my eponyms

4. Red bee, I understand the photo shit, well, at least in which group to look
for[attachmentid()=150965]

I can assume that some of the bees are halicts.

17.08.2012 8:18, Gansucha

Ukraine, Rivne region, March 25.
Lasioglossum sp. ??
user posted image

19.08.2012 0:18, John-ST

I can assume that some of the bees are halicts.

definitely not galikt, maybe andrena or something
it turns out that the sphecodes are galikts, and for some reason I thought that they were andreny

This post was edited by John-ST-08/19/2012 12: 38

20.08.2012 0:13, Liparus

 
2. sabulose?
[attachmentid()=150963]

It's her again, the female
Likes: 1

20.08.2012 8:38, AVA

Please take a look at my emails
16.08.2012
MO, Zheleznodorozhny

1. Polistes dominula?
2. sabulose?
3. Polistes dominula male?
4. Red bee, I understand the photo shit, well, at least in what group to look for


1 and 2-true;
3-male Polistes nimpha;
4-Sphecodes sp. (Apidae, Halictinae).
Likes: 1

20.08.2012 16:38, С Олег

What wasp?

Pictures:
picture: IMG_7885________.jpg
IMG_7885________.jpg — (164.48 k)

20.08.2012 16:57, akulich-sibiria

Philanthus triangulum probably
Likes: 1

21.08.2012 8:35, AVA

What wasp?


Bee Wolf-Philanthus triangulum

21.08.2012 9:16, алекс 2611

  definitely not galikt, maybe andrena or something
it turns out that the sphecodes are galikts, and for some reason I thought that they were andreny

There are eternal problems with Russian names of insects, but I would not call sphecodes galictus. More like halictyd. It is probably more reasonable to call all representatives of the family Halictidae halictids, and only the former genus Halictus (in the scope of the "green determinant") is called Halictus, Lasioglossum, Evylaeus. Or maybe I'm talking nonsense

21.08.2012 15:10, AVA

There are eternal problems with Russian names of insects, but I would not call sphecodes galictus. More like halictyd. It is probably more reasonable to call all representatives of the family Halictidae halictids, and only the former genus Halictus (in the scope of the "green determinant") is called Halictus, Lasioglossum, Evylaeus. Or maybe I'm being silly


Yeah, almost. Halictinae is, according to modern concepts, one of the subfamilies of the Apidae family, which unites all bees in general. wink.gif

21.08.2012 15:31, Guest

However, almost no one supports this idea, except for the author of that article, on combining all bee families into Apidae (although he is a former graduate student of Michener). Moreover, not only beehives, but also other weepies, the same Brothers, for example, and the rest. At the end of the year, an article will be published in zootaxa with the current state of families in membranes (with the number of fossil and abstract genera and species), there are bees in 7 families wink.gif
Likes: 2

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