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Identification of Orthoptera (grasshoppers, crickets, etc.)

Community and ForumInsects identificationIdentification of Orthoptera (grasshoppers, crickets, etc.)

Pages: 1 ...20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28... 111

17.11.2009 13:20, vasiliy-feoktistov

Please help me identify the plastinokryla.
Taken here: M. O. Balashikha district, Zheleznodorozhny district (date in the file name).

Pictures:
picture: 13.08.2005..jpg
13.08.2005..jpg — (79.38к)

17.11.2009 13:57, barko

Please define it. Hungary, November

Pictures:
picture: 006.jpg
006.jpg — (266.67к)

17.11.2009 14:00, Vlad Proklov

Please help me identify the plastinokryla.
Taken here: M. O. Balashikha district, Zheleznodorozhny district (date in the file name).

In MO, this is without the Phaneroptera falcata variants.
And what are the surroundings of the Railway Station? It's just too much of a stretch... Me for the point, as usual smile.gif
Likes: 1

17.11.2009 14:01, Vlad Proklov

Please define it. Hungary, November

Ephippiger ephippiger s.str.
Likes: 1

17.11.2009 14:04, vasiliy-feoktistov

In MO, this is without the Phaneroptera falcata variants.
And what are the surroundings of the Railway Station? It's just too much of a stretch... Me for a point, as usual smile.gif

The meadow is swampy, on the outskirts of the city.

17.11.2009 14:08, Vlad Proklov

The meadow is swampy, on the outskirts of the city.

So on what outskirts? North? Eastern? smile.gif

17.11.2009 14:14, vasiliy-feoktistov

So on what outskirts? North? Eastern? smile.gif

The eastern outskirts of the city (when I had a chameleon alive, I caught dozens of them there to feed him). And this year I actually found Tetigonia viridissima there (it seems that we should not have it).
Likes: 1

17.11.2009 14:30, vasiliy-feoktistov

Yes, Vlad. This is the neighborhood of the former collective farm named after Kirov (now the district of the city "Agrogorodok").
Likes: 1

17.11.2009 14:33, Vlad Proklov

The eastern outskirts of the city (when I had a chameleon alive, I caught dozens of them there to feed him). And this year I actually found Tetigonia viridissima there (it seems that we should not have it).

Interesting! Is viridissima accurate? In the center of the SEAS, caudata is more likely to be made up of long-winged tettigonias...
Do you have an instance? Can I take a look?"

17.11.2009 14:35, vasiliy-feoktistov

Interesting! Is viridissima accurate? In the center of the SEAS, caudata is more likely to be made up of long-winged tettigonias...
Do you have an instance? Can I take a look?"

Now I'll take a picture of it and post it (this is the first time I've found one here).

17.11.2009 14:47, vasiliy-feoktistov

Here it is (if you can say anything about it). I've never been able to dry them.
Length of copies. without ovipositor=65mm.

Pictures:
picture: PB172011.jpg
PB172011.jpg — (80.24к)

17.11.2009 17:31, Vlad Proklov

Here it is (if you can say anything about it). I've never been able to dry them.
Length of copies. without ovipositor=65mm.

Like, T. caudata: black spines on the hind legs plus an ovipositor peeking out from under the wings.
Likes: 1

19.11.2009 17:28, Alex KNZ

Interesting..interesting. What it is is T.Caudata no doubt..Black spikes and a massive head. This female still has quite long wings. The ovipositor usually sticks out half a centimeter or more. In T. viridissima, by the way, the ovipositor also happens to look out (photos from England are a witness to this, although this is very rare in our country). I didn't meet either of them in the Ministry of Defense. I often visit the Volokolamsk district, but I have only heard T. Cantans. If you go by train to the south, you can constantly hear T from the window.viridissima is already in the very south of the Moscow Region (Paveletsky direction), in Tula. In the Kursk direction - in Tula. Somewhere after G. Orel, T. Cantans disappears and the sounds of T. caudata & T. tolko remain.viridissima. In the Paveletsky direction (railway line Necklace - Yelets) T. cantans disappears in the Tula region.

This post was edited by Alex KNZ - 11/19/2009 17: 32
Likes: 1

19.11.2009 17:40, vasiliy-feoktistov

Interesting..interesting. What it is is T.Caudata no doubt..Black spikes and a massive head. This female still has quite long wings. The ovipositor usually sticks out half a centimeter or more. In T. viridissima, by the way, the ovipositor also happens to look out (photos from England are a witness to this, although this is very rare in our country). I didn't meet either of them in the Ministry of Defense. I often visit the Volokolamsk district, but I have only heard T. Cantans. If you go by train to the south, you can constantly hear T from the window.viridissima is already in the very south of the Moscow Region (Paveletsky direction), in Tula. In the Kursk direction - in Tula. Somewhere after G. Orel, T. Cantans disappears and the sounds of T. caudata & T. tolko remain.viridissima. In the Paveletsky direction (railway line Necklace - Yelets) T. cantans disappears in the Tula region.

However, here it is. I myself was very surprised when I saw it almost next to the house and picked it up accordingly (we only have T. cantans all the time). Very close to Moscow after all (20 minutes to the metro by train), although I found it for the first time.

19.11.2009 18:15, Victor Titov

I really ask for these, not too high-quality, photos to identify these straight-winged birds.

June 2008, Gelendzhik, Krasnodar Region. The nymph Tettigonia caudata?
picture: DSC01840_1.jpg


July 13, 2009, Crimea, Koktebel village, Kara-Dag
picture: DSC04572_2.jpg

Same day and same place
Picture: DSC04571_2.jpg

19.11.2009 18:17, Vlad Proklov

I really ask for these, not too high-quality, photos to identify these straight-winged birds.

1 - Tettigonia sp.
2 - Tylopsis lilifolia
3 - Dociostaurus sp.
Likes: 1

19.11.2009 18:19, Vlad Proklov

However, here it is. I myself was very surprised when I saw it almost next to the house and picked it up accordingly (we only have T. cantans all the time). Very close to Moscow after all (20 minutes to the metro by train), although I found it for the first time.

It is also available in Moscow. In general, it is quite widespread in the MO, although it is much less common than T. cantans (see Mikhailenko's article in one of the latest "Eversmannia").
Likes: 3

19.11.2009 18:28, Alex KNZ

[quote=Dmitrich,19.11.2009 18:15]
Likes: 1

19.11.2009 18:32, Alex KNZ

By the way, in the Red Book of Moscow for the city is marked T.viridissima, which has the 2nd category of rarity. He met on the Khodynka field, the Krylatsky hills, the valley of the Khimki River, near the Tushinsky airfield. Nothing is said about T. caudata.

19.11.2009 18:32, Vlad Proklov

The first nymph is Tettigonia viridissima.

Ovipositor or what?
I just don't know them smile.gif

19.11.2009 18:33, Vlad Proklov

By the way, in the Red Book of Moscow for the city is marked T.viridissima, which has the 2nd category of rarity. He met on the Khodynka field, the Krylatsky hills, the valley of the Khimki River, near the Tushinsky airfield. Nothing is said about T. caudata.

By the way, I have a suspicion that the CC of Moscow is talking about incorrectly defined caudates smile.gif

19.11.2009 18:38, Alex KNZ

It does not produce an ovipositor, but a brown stripe on top of the pronotum, which caudates never have. The eyes of caudates (in nymphs and adults) are usually white, the color of caudates of larvae is completely mottled.
Likes: 2

19.11.2009 18:45, vasiliy-feoktistov

It does not produce an ovipositor, but a brown stripe on top of the pronotum, which caudates never have. The eyes of caudates (in nymphs and adults) are usually white, the color of caudates of larvae is completely mottled.

Well, mine definitely didn't have a brown stripe (visual memory) smile.gif. So this is caudata.

19.11.2009 19:22, Alex KNZ

By the way, I have a suspicion that the CC of Moscow is talking about incorrectly defined caudates smile.gif


I didn't even think about it, it's very possible that they mixed smile.gifit up Or maybe they put it in the book of the most popular Great Green Bush-cricket?: -)

19.11.2009 19:30, vasiliy-feoktistov

I didn't even think about it, it's very possible that they mixed smile.gifit up Or maybe they put it in the book of the most popular Great Green Bush-cricket?: -)

Yes, there (in the CC) is generally full of obvious nonsense. There's nothing to be surprised about.

19.11.2009 19:41, Victor Titov

Please help me identify the grasshoppers. All taken in June 2008 in Gelendzhik.
Photo 2.
[attachmentid ()=51247]
Photo 3.
[attachmentid()=51248]

I dare to go back to my previous questions and clarify them (if possible) definitively. In these images (2 and 3), is it Isophya schneideri or Isophya redtenbacheri?

This post was edited by Dmitrich - 19.11.2009 19: 43

19.11.2009 19:42, Vlad Proklov

I didn't even think about it, it's very possible that they mixed smile.gifit up Or maybe they put it in the book of the most popular Great Green Bush-cricket?: -)

I think that the candidate of caudata was simply not considered in the determination: in Chernyakhovsky's "faunistic summary" * only kantans and viridissima are mentioned for the MO.

*I wrote in quotation marks, because the mentioned article is a complete collapse of all hopes, six letters, the last "c"...

This post was edited by kotbegemot - 19.11.2009 19: 43
Likes: 1

19.11.2009 20:32, Vlad Proklov

I dare to go back to my previous questions and clarify them (if possible) definitively. In these images (2 and 3), is it Isophya schneideri or Isophya redtenbacheri?

Interesting stuff, of course -- but I'm not much of an assistant for Caucasian phaneropterins...
Sorry frown.gif
Likes: 1

20.11.2009 23:55, PVOzerski

I haven't seen Chernyakhovsky's faunal report. But his work in the 60s-70s on the life forms of locusts was good. At least, the approaches are correct, in some ways more interesting than Stebaev's later (sorry for the offtopic). Related: I haven't been surprised by anything for a long time. Sometimes I catch migratory locusts in the Novgorod region, sometimes I catch a blue-winged oedipus in the middle of Pskov region, or I get a bush-loving plant (Pholidoptera greseoaptera) from the Leningrad region.

This post was edited by PVOzerski - 11/21/2009 00: 31

21.11.2009 22:54, barko

Help me determine it. Slovenia, karst, 21.11.2009

picture: 001.jpg

picture: 005.jpg

picture: 006.jpg

22.11.2009 1:21, Vlad Proklov

Help me determine it. Slovenia, karst, 21.11.2009

Aiolopus strepens
Likes: 1

22.11.2009 11:47, Evgenich

Does anyone know what this beautiful beast is? smile.gif
Sudan. 2009
It's not my photo. They asked for help with the definition.

This post was edited by Evgenich - 22.11.2009 11:47 am

Pictures:
picture: ________.jpg
________.jpg — (52.18к)

23.11.2009 17:37, Alex KNZ

I can't say for sure, but there may be some African Zonocerus sp.
Likes: 1

28.11.2009 13:35, barko

Please identify and, if possible, tell us what happened here.
Slovenia, Julian Alps, ~1200m July

Pictures:
picture: 002.jpg
002.jpg — (322.4 k)

28.11.2009 18:19, Vlad Proklov

Please identify and, if possible, tell us what happened here.
Slovenia, Julian Alps, ~1200m July

Apparently, some bird ate a certain grasshopper (it is difficult to say which one) -- and, apparently, the Pholidoptera aptera bush lover (the angle is bad, so an error is possible) came (or rather, came) to finish smile.gifeating
Likes: 1

28.11.2009 18:36, barko

"Just a couple more." Same place.

Pictures:
picture: 003.jpg
003.jpg — (154k)

28.11.2009 19:18, chebur

Please help me identify these beauties.
First two - Moscow
Last two - Chekhov district of Moscow region

Pictures:
picture: 10.09.08_________2_.JPG
10.09.08_________2_.JPG — (129.45к)

picture: 27.05.09_________2_.JPG
27.05.09_________2_.JPG — (171.19к)

picture: 05.06.07_________.JPG
05.06.07_________.JPG — (245.81к)

picture: 12.06.08___________3_.JPG
12.06.08___________3_.JPG — (295.72к)

28.11.2009 19:32, vasiliy-feoktistov

2 and 3 are similar to Tetrix sp? some (it's easier to wait for someone else).

28.11.2009 20:33, Vlad Proklov

"Just a couple more." Same place.

Miramella ?carinthiaca
Likes: 1

28.11.2009 20:34, Vlad Proklov

Please help me identify these beauties.
First two - Moscow
Last two - Chekhov district of Moscow region

1, 2, 3 - Tetrix subulata
4 - Tetrix bipunctata/tenuicornis
Likes: 2

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