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Identification of Orthoptera (grasshoppers, crickets, etc.)

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

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25.02.2011 19:38, phlomis

Yes, he flew to the lantern himself! cool.gif Send it in full?
Likes: 1

25.02.2011 22:25, PVOzerski

I'd love to get it! And if you allow me to use it as an illustration in the publication (of course, indicating your authorship) - and in general it would be great smile.gif

26.02.2011 22:44, Dracus

This is an Egyptian filly (Anacridium aegyptium). In Sochi - a local view. However, how early I got out...

26.02.2011 23:35, Mower

Thank you for identifying, is it not a pest?

And why is it so big, overwintered? Just 4 days ago, snow lay for 4 days and frosts for two weeks at night to minus 10...

27.02.2011 16:03, phlomis

For the kettle. teapot.gif
Steppe dybka? 07.2008. Rostovsky Nature Reserve, Krasnopartizansky district
picture: a1.jpgpicture: a2.jpgpicture: a3.jpgpicture: a4.jpg

27.02.2011 16:12, phlomis

I already asked, but I lost the answer weep.gifTurkey, Antalya, and Tekirova. So it was, barely noticed.
picture: a1.jpg

27.02.2011 16:33, Vorona

For the kettle. teapot.gif
Steppe dybka?

And for the second teapot.gif- what's red under the arm?

27.02.2011 16:36, Vlad Proklov

For the kettle. teapot.gif
Steppe dybka? 07.2008. Rostovsky Nature Reserve, Krasnopartizansky district

That's the one. Krasnenkoe - parasitic mites.
Likes: 1

27.02.2011 16:37, Vlad Proklov

I already asked, but I lost the answer weep.gifTurkey, Antalya, and Tekirova. That's what she was, I barely noticed.

Anacridium aegyptium. It is easy to notice it because of its size =)

27.02.2011 17:16, phlomis

  Anacridium aegyptium. It is easy to notice it because of its size =)

In my opinion, it was not very large, 4 centimeters. It was a long time ago, however, I can lie inadvertently. wink.gif

27.02.2011 21:13, Dracus

I haven't heard of it doing any noticeable damage. As for the size - so imago, an adult, apparently, yes, overwintered.

28.02.2011 14:03, Amplion

Can anyone guess what kind of cricket it is? Found in a pot of exotic plants (yucca, I think), about one and a half centimeters long. We don't even know where it came from.
http://imageshost.ru/photo/348974/id478729.html

01.03.2011 12:01, Tigran Oganesov

I haven't heard of it doing any noticeable damage. As for the size - so imago, an adult, apparently, yes, overwintered.

Uh-huh, they hibernate in the adult state. In Sochi, I have seen many wintering birds. Harm is not particularly harmful yet, although it is worth noting that their number has increased significantly in recent years 5.

01.03.2011 19:40, Zlopastnyi Brandashmyg

Dear Pros, please help with the definition of cricket. 27mm., Indonesia. My amateur guess is Gryllus assimilis or Gryllus bimaculatus. Thank you in advance.


Today I showed a photo to Gorokhov: subfamily Gryllinae, it is impossible to tell more precisely from these photos. If the front part of the head was visible, then it would be possible to try to determine more precisely.

Definitely not assimilis or bimaculatus.
Likes: 1

01.03.2011 19:41, Zlopastnyi Brandashmyg

Can anyone guess what kind of cricket it is? Found in a pot of exotic plants (yucca, I think), about one and a half centimeters long. We don't even know where it came from.
http://imageshost.ru/photo/348974/id478729.html


I asked Gorokhov: larva, not exactly identified, possibly Achaeta domesticus.
Likes: 1

20.03.2011 22:07, DanMar

Dear experts, Please identify a larva of the first stage, about 2-3 mm in size, which hatched from the Crimean soil confused.gif(Koktebel) today (most likely from an egg that the female laid already in Kiev). I suspect that this is the larva of a white-fronted grasshopper, but I can't say for sure, because I only saw the imago. I hope that there will be more grasshoppers...

This post was edited by DanMar - 20.03.2011 22: 12

Pictures:
picture: otpr.JPG
otpr.JPG — (194.36к)

picture: otpr__1_.JPG
otpr__1_.JPG — (164.02к)

picture: IMG_0132.JPG
IMG_0132.JPG — (182.59к)

21.03.2011 0:27, PVOzerski

Yeah... I'm afraid no one will be able to tell the species from such a small larva. I can assume that it may be him, but it is also quite likely some Pholidoptera.
Likes: 1

21.03.2011 21:54, Zlopastnyi Brandashmyg

Thank you, I'll ask Gorokhov.
Likes: 1

23.03.2011 0:23, Evgenich

Help me determine it. smile.gif
Central China. Height about 2300 m, forest. Crawled (crawled)into the tent late at night

This post was edited by Evgenich - 23.03.2011 00: 24

Pictures:
picture: ______1.jpg
______1.jpg — (179.97к)

26.03.2011 13:30, VSB

A couple of fillies, I think. I would like to know more precisely. If anyone knows please tell me.

Pictures:
picture: кобылка_п_страя_возможно_.јрд
fill_n_stray_mozhno_.jpg — (361.49к)

picture: какая_то_кобылка.јрд
some message.jpg — (305.76к)

27.03.2011 23:15, Dracus

Evgenich

Likes: 2

28.03.2011 0:34, PVOzerski

>The second is a herb from the genus Stenobothrus (I won't get to the species).

Not Stenobothrus, but Omocestus-possibly haemorrhoidalis. Some kind of strange pose-dying from the mushroom Empusa grylli, or what? In general, it is better to specify geographical points - otherwise the risk of making a mistake increases.

By the way, clarification: now this mushroom is called Entomophaga grylli (Fres.) Batko . Sometimes it causes mass death of locusts, when the grass is literally hung with their corpses (before death, fillies climb on blades of grass and remain in approximately the same poses as in the photo-apparently, this helps the spores to settle). I saw such "plague cemeteries" a couple of times in my childhood in the Pskov region.

This post was edited by PVOzerski - 01.04.2011 12: 56
Likes: 1

10.04.2011 20:25, phlomis

This animal was blown out by the wind on the drying lake Tsagan-Hag, east of the Rostov region
picture: a1.jpgpicture: a2.jpg.

10.04.2011 20:44, Vlad Proklov

This animal was blown out by the wind on the drying lake Tsagan-Hag, east of the Rostov region.

?Decticus albifrons. I do not know if there is a Ceraeocercus fuscipennis , but it has dark hindwings.
Likes: 1

11.04.2011 4:57, Dracus

No, this is not Ceraeocercus fuscipennis - the ovipositor is bent in the other direction, and there is a dark stripe on the eyes and behind the eyes. I think it's a common Decticus verrucivorus
Likes: 2

11.04.2011 10:53, PVOzerski

I also think it's D. verrucivorus - not even albifrons. Although who knows these verrucivorus'ov-the species is considered so "banal" that it can easily turn out to be a complex of "twins" smile.gif

13.04.2011 21:29, Alex KNZ

Compare the color of both species. This is 100 % not D. albifrons, but D. verrucivorus. We have a lot of such long-winged verucivorus in the south, they are smaller in size than albifrons, but in some photos they are very similar. It gives out only the color of the wings, pronotum and even the ovipositor has a slightly different shape.

This post was edited by Alex KNZ - 13.04.2011 21: 35

13.04.2011 21:40, Alex KNZ

Here in the summer of 2009 grasshopper d. albifrons

But in the summer of 2010.verrucivorus

Both views are from the south. As you can see, the color is very different. It is worth noting that the Moscow region d.verrucivorus is even smaller in size than its southern counterparts and chirps much quieter, as it seemed to me.

This post was edited by Alex KNZ - 13.04.2011 22: 17

Pictures:
picture: 150820092308.jpg
150820092308.jpg — (223.53к)

picture: IMG_0081.JPG
IMG_0081.JPG — (131.96к)

Likes: 1

15.04.2011 21:48, DanMar

Still no one will undertake to identify the larva of the third stage??picture: IMG_0398.jpg

15.04.2011 23:06, Dracus

I would venture to assume that this is also Decticus sp.
Likes: 1

19.04.2011 14:20, Penzyak

Penza region, July, meadow steppe in a gully.

Pictures:
picture: __________16_7_8_P7164284.jpg
__________16_7_8_P7164284.jpg — (247.88к)

19.04.2011 14:42, Mantispid

Penza region, July, meadow steppe in a gully.

Yes, this is a common sawtail grasshopper. It seems to be from the genus of Leptophyes, experts will say more precisely smile.gif

19.04.2011 16:03, Penzyak

this is understandable and so-you need a specific name. And how many species of sawtails can there be in the Middle Zone???

19.04.2011 17:07, PVOzerski

This, of course, is not Leptophyes - in Leptophyes, the ovipositor is not sawtooth. I vote for Poecilimon, the species is almost certainly P. intermedius.

22.04.2011 21:44, DanMar

Please determine the catch. Turkey, Kemer city (near Antalya). The time of year is spring (now).
All the larvae.
1. It looks like a fat or large shrub.
picture: __________057.JPG
picture: __________053.JPG
picture: __________059.JPG
2. Dyba larva? which one?
picture: __________034.JPG
3. The bush-loving nymph?
picture: __________025.JPG
4. The plate wing nymph? Or sawtail?
picture: __________041.JPG

PS I also came across an incomprehensible Gampsokleis on the Internet, does anyone know what kind of species?
picture: 5835839_a_kind_of_orthoptera_insects.jpg
picture: 5835849_a_kind_of_orthoptera_insects.jpg
picture: 5835829_a_kind_of_orthoptera_insects.jpg

22.04.2011 22:08, PVOzerski

I can only say about No. 1 that it is a larva from the tribe Drymadusini.

23.04.2011 14:16, Dracus

No. 4 may be a larva of Acrometopa sp.

This post was edited by Dracus - 04/23/2011 14: 36

23.04.2011 18:18, DanMar

All I can say about No. 1 is that it is a larva from the tribe Drymadusini.


I don't know much about these tribes, so please tell me which subfamily they belong to.
No one knows who (what) it is necessary to feed small dybchats? Small fillies will do? confused.gif

23.04.2011 19:29, Hierophis

DanMar, do you have all these larvae alive? smile.gif As far as I understand, if it doesn't have an ovipositor, then it's a male, which means it's probably not a prairie chicken, but what size is this larva?
You can feed them all the larvae of straight-winged birds that they eat, flies, marbles..

24.04.2011 9:48, PVOzerski

I don't know much about these tribes, so please tell me which subfamily they belong to.

Well, the subfamily Tettigoniinae, but it also includes such tribes as Decticini, Gampsocleidini, Pholidopterini, Platycleidini - so, IMHO, the tribe here is much more informative.

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