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Identification of Orthoptera (grasshoppers, crickets, etc.)

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

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17.09.2011 23:27, Dichelima

Yes, this is not the same view at all! Wow! And all the time I thought that this picture shows exactly multituberculatus, I just thought that Callimenus oniscus is its outdated name. Ugh-you e! redface.gif

This post was edited by Dichelima - 17.09.2011 23: 30

18.09.2011 0:02, DanMar

Yes, by the way, links with photos are well located on it, you can look at it!




download file GetThumb.aspx.jpg

size: 68.92 k
number of downloads: 676






18.09.2011 1:54, John-ST

I found it here

Bradyporus (Callimenus) multituberculatus (Fischer von Waldheim, 1833)

male (Elbruz Mts, N of Teheran)
[attachmentid()=121833]

female (Elbruz Mts, N of Teheran)
[attachmentid()=121834]

female ovipositor (Elbruz Mts, N of Teheran)
[attachmentid()=121835]

Taken from here:
http://orthoptera.speciesfile.org/Common/b...axonNameID=1892
Likes: 1

18.09.2011 1:59, PVOzerski

For your information, at the Department of Entomology of St. Petersburg State University, Tolstun was in the Orthoptera reference collection-unless I have developed a false memory for almost a quarter of a centurysmile.gif, the impression is that what was there roughly corresponds to the picture from Jacobson. If only I could still remember the geographical label... - but alas.

18.09.2011 2:01, PVOzerski

But the fact that the same view drives(l)in the Eastern European steppes + Ciscaucasia and it is also in the vicinity of Tehran, and even taking into account the obviously small ability to migrate-something is doubtful...
Likes: 2

18.09.2011 10:00, Olearius

Again from KMV. Caught in the floodplain of the Podkumok River near Bald Mountain.
picture: DSCN8462.JPG
picture: DSCN8463.JPG

18.09.2011 11:37, PVOzerski

In my opinion, Eyprepocnemis plorans-only the color is very green.
Likes: 1

18.09.2011 12:04, Zlopastnyi Brandashmyg

For your information, at the Department of Entomology of St. Petersburg State University, Tolstun was in the Orthoptera reference collection-unless I have developed a false memory for almost a quarter of a centurysmile.gif, the impression is that what was there roughly corresponds to the picture from Jacobson. If only I could still remember the geographical label... "but alas.


I'm afraid that what was there during our studies is no longer intact. frown.gif

18.09.2011 12:05, Zlopastnyi Brandashmyg

If I can find a camera and time, I'll try to take pictures of the animals from our collection.
Likes: 2

18.09.2011 12:23, Dichelima

If I can find a camera and time, I'll try to take pictures of the animals from our collection.
Yes, please! mol.gif

18.09.2011 12:26, Dracus

But the fact that the same view drives(l)in the Eastern European steppes + Ciscaucasia and it is also in the vicinity of Tehran, and even taking into account the obviously small ability to migrate-something is doubtful...

Yes, and not only in the location of the matter-the ovipositors of females (at least in comparison with those females of multituberculatus that I saw) are noticeably different.

18.09.2011 13:43, Коллекционер

  user posted image

I had a few questions about this photo. It says "straight-winged birds of the Voronezh region".
1. Is this really a multi-humped fat man in the windmill?
2. This is probably not a steppe, but a saddle-bearing rack, which, as it were, is not found in the Voronezh Region.
3. That specimen is too big for a plastinopter, I can't even imagine who, I'd like to get a closer look, but it seems that both individuals of different species are.
4. Looking at such a large number of errors, we can say that the definition of a fat person is incorrect, but who is exposed then?

R. S. On the comments to the photo generally dumb to look at...

If necessary, I can go to the museum and try to take the right pictures from the right angle especially for you

I already have one, although it is made from a mobile picture: DSC00816.JPG
phone, but of course nothing is clear on it

This post was edited by Collector - 18.09.2011 13: 50

18.09.2011 14:11, Dichelima

So you're from the Voronezh Region? And not only that, but you also know this very local history museum and this very place with this exhibit? Oh, my God!

It would be very good to get at least some more photos of bradiporus online. Perhaps this is not a fat multi-humped one. But I think it would be very interesting for all of us here to see this insect. If you have the time and desire to visit your city museum, please do not forget to take a photo. Preferably from different angles and in high resolution. mol.gif mol.gif mol.gif

I think that even if it is a tropical species, you can still try to determine it at least to the genus. Interesting task!

18.09.2011 14:31, PVOzerski

I wonder if geographical labels are attached to their exhibits?

18.09.2011 15:16, Olearius

Here are two different copies. Platycleis sp. (from the CMS).
According to the determinant, it turns out that P. intermedia.
Please confirm or deny.
picture: DSCN8609_.jpg
picture: DSCN8610_.jpg

18.09.2011 21:14, Коллекционер

So you're from the Voronezh Region? And not only that, but you also know this very local history museum and this very place with this exhibit? Oh, my God!

It would be very good to get at least some more photos of bradiporus online. Perhaps this is not a fat multi-humped one. But I think it would be very interesting for all of us here to see this insect. If you have the time and desire to visit your city museum, please do not forget to take a photo. Preferably from different angles and in high resolution. mol.gif  mol.gif  mol.gif

I think that even if it is a tropical species, you can still try to determine it at least to the genus. Interesting task!

I don't promise high quality...but different angles - easy

18.09.2011 21:23, Коллекционер

june-July,Voronezh, Voronezh region, novousmansky district, Orlovo village
grey grasshopper?
picture: 11.jpgpicture: 12.jpgpicture: 13.jpg
when I caught the male, I thought it was a youngster of the above species,but when I caught the female, I realized that I was mistaken, so who is it
picture: 14.jpgpicture: 15.jpgpicture: 16.jpg
giant cricket
picture: 17.jpgpicture: 19.jpg
a blue-winged filly?picture: 21.jpg
italian prus?(is there an albino underneath?)picture: 23.jpg
This is my first time seeing itpicture: 22.jpg

June-July friend brought from somewhere on the Volgapicture: 20.jpg

This post was edited by Collector - 18.09.2011 21: 25

18.09.2011 21:27, Tukki

Good evening to all!
Here is such an animal was found on the coast of the Rybinsk reservoir (Yaroslavl region, Nekouzsky district, if necessary, I can provide exact coordinates). Could it be some stray locust?
picture: _____________________.jpg

18.09.2011 21:29, Tukki

Yes, I was met yesterday 18.09.2011 smile.gif

18.09.2011 22:14, Olearius

June-July, Voronezh,Voronezh region, novousmansky district, Orlovo village


I'll try to find out. If anything, I hope the specialists will correct it.

1. Gray grasshopper-D. verucivorus
2. Platycleis sp. see above in the topic image of mine from the CMS. It is determined by
the shape of the VII sternite of the abdomen. Mine like Platycleis intermedia turned out to be.
5. Yes, Oedipoda caerulescens
6. Oedaleus decorus

As for prus, it really looks like Calliptamus. I haven't seen my own (by the way, from the Voronezh Region)
before.

This post was edited by Olearius - 18.09.2011 22: 18
Likes: 1

18.09.2011 22:22, Olearius

Good evening to all!
Here is such an animal was found on the coast of the Rybinsk reservoir (Yaroslavl region, Nekouzsky district, if necessary, I can provide exact coordinates). Could it be some stray locust?


That's right, it's a stray locust. To be more precise, the migratory one is Locusta migratoria.
Likes: 1

18.09.2011 22:24, DanMar

Really locusts, by the way, like a herd phase...
Collector:
1. The first time I see such an ovipositor in verrucivorus, but this seems to be likely.
2. Platycleis interlude? The quality is lame.
3. The most famous cricket, field, G. Campestris. How can you not know that?
4. In general, it is not clear what, it seems to be like a cricket, too. According to this photo, not that I will not undertake to determine more precisely, I even doubt the subfamily.
5. Yes, it is the same.
6. Hermit can some kind of? XS
7. Like it is.

18.09.2011 22:28, Tukki

That's right, it's a stray locust. To be more precise, the migratory one is Locusta migratoria.

Thank you very much! Do they often fly to our latitudes?

18.09.2011 22:29, DanMar

I'll try to find out. If anything, I hope the specialists will correct it.

1. Gray grasshopper-D. verucivorus
2. Platycleis sp. see above in the topic image of mine from the CMS. It is determined by
the shape of the VII sternite of the abdomen. Mine like Platycleis intermedia turned out to be.
5. Yes, Oedipoda caerulescens
6. Oedaleus decorus

As for prus, it really looks like Calliptamus. I haven't seen my own (by the way, from the Voronezh Region)
before.


Oh, sorry, I wrote it at the same time as you. By the way, the first time I see a gray letuny (Oedaleus decorus), I thought it was an oedipod.

This post was edited by DanMar - 18.09.2011 22: 29

18.09.2011 22:31, Olearius

Really locusts, by the way, like a herd phase...
Collector:
1. The first time I see such an ovipositor in verrucivorus, but this seems to be likely.


Verrucivores are a bit strange, but I do not know any other options.
In Gampsocleis glabra, the ovipositor is straight.

18.09.2011 22:38, Olearius

Thank you very much! Do they often fly to our latitudes?

You've had a lot of things flying in from the Middle Volga in recent years.
Melanargia russiae-Suvorovka (Lepidoptera), you know ?
Yaroslavl region is still in the east, although not very southern, and the east ...
as they say-it's a delicate matter.

18.09.2011 22:43, DanMar

Gampsocleis glabra should not be found there(in the Voronezh Region).

18.09.2011 22:44, Olearius

Gampsocleis glabra should not be found there(in the Voronezh Region).

This year I caught it in Divnogorye, in the Liskinsky district
of the Voronezh Region.

18.09.2011 22:53, DanMar

Wow is he going that far? If you look at the parallel then this location is located north of Kiev where it doesn't exist. It turns out that it goes to the east and north, which means where there is a more continental climate, and the forests in the east have a border with the steppe to the north.

18.09.2011 22:54, DanMar

I wonder if he meets in Kharkiv? Did someone find it there?

18.09.2011 22:59, Olearius

To the east and to the north there are a huge number of insect species in the steppe zone.
The most well - known examples are for lepidoptera, when the range stretches in a chain: Crimea NW Caucasus-Lower Don region -!!!Middle Volga region-South and North. The Urals.
As for glabra, I only met it on the chalk hills in the Voronezh region.

18.09.2011 23:09, Tukki

You've had a lot of things flying in from the Middle Volga in recent years.
Melanargia russiae-Suvorovka (Lepidoptera), you know ?
Yaroslavl region is still in the east, although not very southern, and the east ...
as they say-it's a delicate matter.

I've heard about Suvorovka, but I haven't seen it this year.

19.09.2011 0:54, Dichelima

The most famous cricket, the field cricket, is G. Campestris. How can you not know that?
Allow me to post a photo of the most famous cricket (Gryllus (Gryllus) campestris Linnaeus, 1758). Still, the morphology can be quite well considered. Ukraine, Kiev, May 2010. At the edge of the road, they were hiding in shallow holes in the ground. The burrows of the male and female were located quite close to each other.
user posted image
The female.
user posted image
Male.
More photos of the female: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14. Photo of a male and female together: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5. More photos of the male: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17. I spoymal these two large gryllus in Kiev, and their minks were at a distance of 20 centimeters from each other. The male creeps out of the hole to the surface every evening and sings his song, attracting the female. The female can crawl out of her burrow to him, they always lived nearby. Their burrows are quite shallow and I had no trouble chasing them out with a straw. Don't judge me harshly-science (whatever it is) still requires sacrifices!
Likes: 2

19.09.2011 14:28, Коллекционер

DanMar
"By the way, this is the first time I've seen an Oedaleus decorus in gray, so I thought it was an oedipod." I've only seen 5 of them this year(3 females,2 males),and they were all gray


Dichelima
"The burrows of the male and female were located quite close to each other"
how many males have I met this year..and not a single female..I've never seen her at all

19.09.2011 16:26, DanMar

I caught a bunch of these imagos in Pirogovo this spring, brought out a small change, and now there are only 8 larvae left, they eat each other.

19.09.2011 17:24, Decticus

DanMar, so that crickets do not eat each other, you need to give them gammarus ,you can just put them separately.
Can you tell me who it is?1picture: ____________080.jpg
2picture: ____________149.jpg

19.09.2011 17:45, Dracus

Conocephalus dorsalis and Metrioptera brachyptera
Likes: 1

19.09.2011 18:01, PVOzerski

And where does Conocephalus come from-is it really from Gatchina?

19.09.2011 18:16, Decticus

No, Conocephalus was caught in the village of Marmot, Rep. Mari-El.

19.09.2011 18:25, PVOzerski

It's a pity smile.gifthat Podgornaya found it on the Birch Islands in the Gulf of Finland, and I found it in the middle of Pskov region. Well, the Metrioptera brachyptera species in the Northwest is not so rare, only it chooses stations that are not the most common (where there is a rare herbage: even in a swampy meadow, even on the edge of a pine forest in the heather).
Likes: 2

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