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Identification of Orthoptera (grasshoppers, crickets, etc.)

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

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13.07.2012 21:36, Anatoliy Kuzmin

Please specify 2 copies. 13.07.12 Rostov region

Pictures:
picture: IMG_8933_11.jpg
IMG_8933_11.jpg — (284.3к)

picture: IMG_8973_11.jpg
IMG_8973_11.jpg — (313.12к)

13.07.2012 23:11, PVOzerski

Calliptamus sp. (almost certainly italicus).
Likes: 1

15.07.2012 10:29, Tivanik

I visited Montenegro at the end of June, clicked grasshoppers. Please help me identify it.

1.
picture: IMGP4796_1200.jpg


2.
picture: IMGP5312_1200.jpg


3.
picture: IMGP6145_1200.jpg


4.
picture: IMGP5932_1200.jpg


5.
picture: IMGP6119_1200.jpg
picture: IMGP6141_1200.jpg
Likes: 1

15.07.2012 11:35, PVOzerski

Before giving birth, I'll take a chance.
1. Platycleis sp.
2, 3 - Anacridium aegyptium
4-Pholidoptera or a related genus
5, 6-Ephippiger sp.
Likes: 1

15.07.2012 12:34, PVOzerski

So... And with No. 1, I think I made a mistake... Decticus albifrons
Likes: 3

15.07.2012 14:59, nechet5

help identify, please
photo taken in Cambodia, October 2009, size more than 10 cm

Pictures:
picture: DSC03182.JPG
DSC03182.JPG — (235.64к)

picture: DSC03183.jpg
DSC03183.jpg — (223.58к)

15.07.2012 20:33, DanMar

Tivanik: I would venture to suggest, but most likely in photo 4-Eupholidoptera chabrieri.
Likes: 1

15.07.2012 20:49, Tivanik

Tivanik: I would venture to suggest, but most likely in photo 4 - Eupholidoptera chabrieri.


Yeah, thanks, very similar. I still have a picture of the male is the same:
picture: IMGP5923_1200.jpg

15.07.2012 21:02, DanMar

I think that correctly identified. If not , then some kind of related species can still be. In general, this shrub is considered quite common.

15.07.2012 21:39, entos

people, tell me-fedtschenkoi Sauss as the name we have (I'm from Kazakhstan, there are some, I can't find any info anywhere)

15.07.2012 21:42, entos

people, tell me-fedtschenkoi Sauss as the name we have (I'm from Kazakhstan, there are some, I can't find any info anywhere)

15.07.2012 22:03, entos

people, tell me-fedtschenkoi Sauss as the name we have (I'm from Kazakhstan, there are some, I can't find any info anywhere)

15.07.2012 22:04, entos

people, tell me-fedtschenkoi Sauss as the name we have (I'm from Kazakhstan, there are some, I can't find any info anywhere)

Pictures:
picture: insecta2.jpg
insecta2.jpg — (259.07к)

15.07.2012 22:44, PVOzerski

Oedipoda fedtschenki
Likes: 1

16.07.2012 18:13, entos

and in Russian, as it is called, for example, there is a blue-winged filly, an Atbasar filly, and this one is some kind of nameless in the vernacular, solid Latin, although it is often found here. And what is its difference from germanics, crackling fire..... just me datoshny such...)))

16.07.2012 20:48, PVOzerski

Being meticulous is a good thing smile.gif

With the Russian name here: you can probably call some "filly Fedchenko"-but there will be confusion with Bienkoa fedtshenkoi from a completely different group. As for the differences...
Well, from the" fire " (that, by the way, is what the Russian names are bad for: go understand, it's about a filly or a butterfly), the oedipods are all very different. At least the shape of the median keel of the pronotum. And with the blue-winged filly and "Germanica" (Oe. germanica), this species (Oe. fedtschenki) is closely related. In general, the most characteristic feature of the genus Oedipoda is a "step" on the upper keel of the hind thigh.


Especially for the meticulous: http://ashipunov.info/shipunov/school/book...anchevye_2.djvu
Well, and to the heap for other orthopters:
http://ashipunov.info/shipunov/school/book...anchevye_1.djvu
http://ashipunov.info/shipunov/school/book...tantopinae.djvu
http://ashipunov.info/shipunov/school/book...ropterinae.djvu
Likes: 3

17.07.2012 13:45, Hierophis

Here is a picture of a swordsman I found on a fishing smile.giftrip
Likes: 2

17.07.2012 14:07, Decticus

Ruspolia nitidula.
Likes: 2

17.07.2012 18:57, Hierophis

Well, we have quite a lot of them, it turns out that the females of these swordsmen chirp, and quite noticeably, but not often.
Likes: 1

17.07.2012 19:14, Dracus

This is the first time I've heard about these birds - in general, the chirping of females in grasshoppers is not very common. And how do they chirp?

17.07.2012 19:27, Hierophis

Hmm, I don't even know how to describe it, my female chirps quite loudly and sonorously, but rather screams. And I found an excerpt of the song, as I understand it, a male, in principle, we have a lot of such a background, they probably sing, but there the singing is rougher and less sonorous, I think.

I just brought her home and now she lives in a terrarium, and the terrarium is right under my ear, I didn't even immediately understand who it was that was chirping at night, as I thought by default that the female would not do smile.gifthis

17.07.2012 21:48, ДанМар

Can I see her sound machine?

17.07.2012 23:00, Hierophis

I just caught it and looked it up...And she has it to put it mildly - not expressed =0 smile.gifMaybe it's not she chirps but gampsokleis who survived there, because the terr is big, 130X55X55, with all sorts of plants, but, after all, gampsolkleis lived there a long time ago and floated who where. Except for this ruspolia, there is no one to suspect, so gampsokleis also screams, but.. and where is the list of grasshoppers where females can stridulate?
Likes: 2

18.07.2012 18:40, Smert113

Is it possible to determine the name of an insect from a photo? I'm not sure if it's straight-winged, but I think it is. Irkutsk region, Olkhinskoe plateau. Photo taken yesterday.

user posted image

This post was edited by Smert113 - 18.07.2012 18: 44

18.07.2012 19:33, Tivanik

I'm a complete amateur, maybe I'll smorozu nonsense, but this insect looks like a barbel beetle agapantia: Agapanthia villosoviridescens (De Geer, 1775) или Agapanthia dahli (Richter, 1821)
http://macroid.ru/showgallery.php?cat=1567
http://macroid.ru/showgallery.php?cat=1566
Likes: 1

18.07.2012 22:36, DanMar

I just caught it and looked it up...And she has it to put it mildly - not expressed =0 smile.gifMaybe it's not she chirps but gampsokleis who survived there, because the terr is big, 130X55X55, with all sorts of plants, but, after all, gampsolkleis lived there a long time ago and floated who where. Except for this ruspolia, there is no one to suspect, so gampsokleis also screams, but.. and where is the list of grasshoppers where females can stridulate?

In ball-headed grasshoppers, females CAN stridulate, but I don't remember anyone else who could.. Ruspoliya hardly, konetsefalusy in general as it seems to me to tettigoninaev are very close, as it seems to me listroskleidiny. females of none of the species of the southern subfamilies seem to sing. And in general, if a female of a certain species of grasshopper sings, then all species of this subfamily should do the same.

18.07.2012 22:38, Fornax13

Is it possible to determine the name of an insect from a photo? I'm not sure if it's straight-winged, but I think it is. Irkutsk region, Olkhinskoe plateau. Photo taken yesterday.

This is indeed a barbel, but from a different subfamily-Lepturobosca virens

19.07.2012 1:03, Bad Den

This is indeed a barbel, but from a different subfamily-Lepturobosca virens

Lesh, although you are right, but the topic about grasshoppers-fillies smile.gif

19.07.2012 7:03, Smert113

Fornax13, thank you very much.
Bad Den, sorry, I didn't know it was a beetle, thought it was a grasshopper

21.07.2012 16:55, vasiliy-feoktistov

Good evening. As far as I understand it is Calliptamus italicus?
Caught once yesterday on a sandy forest road among a mass of blue-winged filly.
Here: M. O. Lukhovitsky district, ROC. Beloomut village.
Something other than Prus does not come to mind, although I have never seen him in M. O. confused.gif

Pictures:
picture: _____017.jpg
_____017.jpg — (192.37к)

22.07.2012 0:39, DanMar

So far, I'm not too sure how well I know the southern horse races. Caught everything in Koktebel.
Did I identify them correctly?
1 female Tesselana tesselata
picture: IMG_4700.JPG
picture: IMG_4694.JPG
picture: IMG_4698.JPG

2 Male Tesselana tesselata
picture: IMG_4703.JPG
picture: IMG_4702.JPG

3 Female Platycleis affinis
picture: IMG_4707.JPG
picture: IMG_4705.JPG
picture: IMG_4706.JPG

4 Male Platycleis affinis
picture: IMG_4717.JPG
picture: IMG_4718.JPG

Males and females mated-So #1 and #2 are of the same species, and #3 and #4 are also of the same species.

23.07.2012 16:31, Семаргл

Found in early July in the south of the Amur region, in a field. Because of its large size, I decided to search the Internet for information, found similar photos of Giant Whales that live in New Zealand, or do they also live here? or is it not Hueta?

user posted image
Likes: 2

23.07.2012 16:53, Dracus

No, this is not hueta, this is a much closer relative of our grasshoppers - Pallas's fat one Deracantha onos, a female.
Likes: 1

29.07.2012 1:35, Nataflake

Please help me determine who flew to me-a grasshopper or a locust?
http://fotki.yandex.ru/users/business-lett.../453542/?page=0
http://fotki.yandex.ru/users/business-lett.../453543/?page=0

Moscow, slipped through the window on the 13th floor.

This post was edited by Nataflake - 07/29/2012 01: 36

29.07.2012 10:43, vasiliy-feoktistov

Please help me determine who flew to me-a grasshopper or a locust?
http://fotki.yandex.ru/users/business-lett.../453542/?page=0
http://fotki.yandex.ru/users/business-lett.../453543/?page=0

Moscow, slipped through the window on the 13th floor.

Definitely not a grasshopper, but some kind of filly (maybe locusts, but you need a high-quality photo and specify the size). There are a lot of locusts (fillies), and it is impossible to determine the exact type from such a photo and description.

29.07.2012 17:41, DanMar

it's not my photo. they racked their brains for a long time. this little thing was found in a terrarium. tell me what kind of animal it is.
user posted image

user posted image

user posted image

29.07.2012 17:42, DanMar

The antennae are misleading - maybe just a cricket larva?

29.07.2012 23:14, Dracus

Please help me determine who flew to me-a grasshopper or a locust?
http://fotki.yandex.ru/users/business-lett.../453542/?page=0
http://fotki.yandex.ru/users/business-lett.../453543/?page=0

Moscow, slipped through the window on the 13th floor.

It seems to me that this is a female Chorthippus parallelus f. macroptera (this is a filly, a non-greedy locust)

30.07.2012 8:45, Helen0210

Here, help me determine. Found 2 days ago, for breeding, caught 4 individuals-3 females and 1 male. Far East, hiding between the boards.
user posted image
user posted image

30.07.2012 9:48, Anax chernobila

Try taking a photo from above of an adult. What size are they?

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