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Identification of Orthoptera (grasshoppers, crickets, etc.)

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

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19.02.2013 20:18, chandb

Please define it. 15.08.11 smolensk region.

Pictures:
picture: 1.jpg
1.jpg — (67.78к)

19.02.2013 22:41, PVOzerski

Chrysochraon dispar, female, f. macroptera
Likes: 1

19.02.2013 23:23, Transilvania

The size is huge, 15 centimeters.


You can take anyone out of there, as long as you don't have a suitcase full of them.

What a stroke of luck. smile.gif
I've come across mostly small-sized erect wings in Thailand. Only Valanga nigricornis pleased with the size (if I correctly identified it).


But small unidentified ones:

Very cute tetrixes of unknown species
user posted image
2_TETRIX_TETRIGIDAE — Photos by evelinasokol on Rambler-Photo

user posted image
1 konek — Photos by evelinasokol on Rambler-Photo

07.03.2013 10:16, RZh-zoo

Help us identify the types. The first three insects (photo with the caption NPP) were photographed in September 2013 in the south of the Rivne region of Western Ukraine, the last two (photo with the caption RPZ) - in September in the north of the Rivne region (North-Western Ukraine, Polesie). Thank you in advance

Pictures:
picture: NPP_1.JPG
NPP_1.JPG — (113.01к)

picture: NPP_2.JPG
NPP_2.JPG — (86.24к)

picture: NPP_3.JPG
NPP_3.JPG — (192.93к)

picture: RPZ_1.JPG
RPZ_1.JPG — (94.88к)

picture: RPZ_2.JPG
RPZ_2.JPG — (111.96к)

07.03.2013 10:43, PVOzerski

NPP_1.JPG - Chorthippus parallelus
NPP_2.JPG - Conocephalus dorsalis
NPP_3.JPG - Metrioptera brachyptera
RPZ_2.JPG - Chorthippus montanus.

The most mysterious-snapshot - RPZ_1.JPG. I assume it is Chorthippus parallelus (or montanus) f. macroptera, but the coloration is very unusual.

This post was edited by PVOzerski - 07.03.2013 10: 43
Likes: 1

07.03.2013 12:07, RZh-zoo

  
The most mysterious-snapshot - RPZ_1.JPG. I assume it is Chorthippus parallelus (or montanus) f. macroptera, but the coloration is very unusual.

If necessary, I can throw off the originals of this image-it may help. Specify in private where to forward it.

07.03.2013 13:23, PVOzerski

If only the top view is visible. I can't be more precise from this angle. Intuitively, montanus is probably more likely - first, parallelus usually has a simpler drawing, and second, explicit montanus RPZ_2.JPG Apparently, it is caught in the neighborhood (montanus is noticeably more hygrophilous than parallelus, so they are practically not found together).

07.03.2013 13:25, PVOzerski

By the way, here I write about everyone in the masculine gender - and after all, males are only NPP_1.JPG and NPP_3.JPG, the rest are females smile.gif

07.03.2013 18:31, Дмитрий Соколов

Pseudophyllus titan-brought it from Thailand, what to feed - tell me! He ate a little watermelon and an orange, and drank water. Actually, I ate only 3 times in 2 weeks.

07.03.2013 18:53, NakaRB

Help, plz, with a strange grasshopper and Egyptian fillies...

1-D. New items-Begichevo, Moscow region, July 2011
2-5-Egypt, Sharm el-Sheikh, May 2012

1.
user posted image

2.
user posted image

3.
user posted image

4. - probably their larva
user posted image

5.
user posted image

07.03.2013 19:53, PVOzerski

1-Metrioptera brachyptera f. macroptera.
2-4-similar to our Eremippus - but who knows ...
5-larva of someone from Catantopinae s. l. - I can't be more precise.
Likes: 1

10.03.2013 14:40, Дмитрий Соколов

Duplicate again-Pseudophyllus titan-brought it from Thailand, what to feed-tell me! He ate a little watermelon and an orange, and drank water. Actually, I ate only 3 times in 2 weeks. Behaves calmly - mostly sits on domestic plants, at night moves to the curtains and sits. What should I feed him?
Likes: 1

10.03.2013 15:48, Zlopastnyi Brandashmyg

All Pseudophyllinae are herbivores. Titans were brought and kept in the Moscow Zoo, but, unfortunately, it was not possible to introduce them into the culture. The main problem is oviposition in living plants. I don't know what to feed specifically, but Titan is clearly not an expert. Try standard stickman plants.

17.03.2013 16:49, AGG

IT fell into a glass in Abkhazia, Bzybsky hr., Otkhary district at an altitude of approx. 800 m, at the beginning of May
it is possible to determine? if someone needs it (only one ex-there is simply no more), I will change it to a leaf-eater, if you need it, I will give it to you smile.gif
if you need any external spare parts to determine this, please contact us, сфоткаю
[attachmentid()=167918]
[attachmentid()=167919]
[attachmentid()=167920]
[attachmentid()=167921]

17.03.2013 16:59, Vlad Proklov

IT fell into a glass in Abkhazia, Bzybsky hr., Otkhary district at an altitude of approx. 800 m, at the beginning of May
it is possible to determine? if someone needs it (only one ex-there is simply no more), I will change it to a leaf-eater, if you need it, I will give it to you smile.gif
if you need some external spare parts to determine this, please write and take a picture

Probably Pseudomogoplistes byzantius.
Likes: 1

18.03.2013 14:13, PVOzerski

I can only say that it is a cricket larva with rudiments of wings. Probably the genus Modicogryllus - but I can't guarantee it.
Likes: 1

19.03.2013 18:45, Penzyak

And where is the northern border of Dociostaurus maroccanus currently located in the European part of the Russian Federation ?

09.04.2013 9:46, А. Лебедев

Tell me, please, what kind of insect is this? Photographed on February 22 on the island of Borneo, in the province of Sabah in the village of Sinua, in the valley of the Labau River.

Pictures:
picture: DSC_0421_1_2.JPG
DSC_0421_1_2.JPG — (152.38 k)

picture: DSC_0424_1_2.JPG
DSC_0424_1_2.JPG — (216.73к)

09.04.2013 18:44, Zlopastnyi Brandashmyg

Phaneropterinae gen. sp. More precisely, from the photos from those places, hardly anyone will say. Although I will try to ask A.V. Gorokhov.
Likes: 1

20.04.2013 22:27, VolgoNevr

user posted image

Volgograd region.

There is a suspicion that this is a fat steppe...it would be nice)

21.04.2013 0:27, DanMar

  user posted image

Volgograd region.

There is a suspicion that this is a fat steppe...it would be nice)


sevchuk zhe

21.04.2013 11:30, VolgoNevr

sevchuk is the same

can I go into more detail?)
Likes: 1

21.04.2013 11:36, VolgoNevr

can I go into more detail?)

And yet, I looked at the images of both sevchukas and they can see the rudiments of wings, but this one doesn't...

21.04.2013 13:24, DanMar

can I go into more detail?)

Apparently, as far as I can make out, this
is Onconotus laxmanni (Pallas, 1771) by Sevchuk Laxmann.

Perhaps the wings are not marked, either because they are hidden and they are simply not visible, which is unlikely, or it is just a predimago larva, but the ovipositor is large, apparently the adult ovipositor is even larger. Thus, there are small rudiments of wings that do not look out for the pronotum, when molting on the imago, they will accordingly turn into wings. Where can I find such a handsome man (beauty)?
I read that they spend the day in the holes of voles, and at night they climb on plants. Very interesting daily routine for a grasshopper!

21.04.2013 20:28, VolgoNevr

Apparently, as far as I can make out, this
is Onconotus laxmanni (Pallas, 1771) by Sevchuk Laxmann.

Perhaps the wings are not marked, either because they are hidden and they are simply not visible, which is unlikely, or it is just a predimago larva, but the ovipositor is large, apparently the adult ovipositor is even larger. Thus, there are small rudiments of wings that do not look out for the pronotum, when molting on the imago, they will accordingly turn into wings. Where can I find such a handsome man (beauty)?
I read that they spend the day in the holes of voles, and at night they climb on plants. Very interesting daily routine for a grasshopper!

Thanks! I searched for information on this type on the Internet, but found nothing...I found it on the bank of the Karpovsky reservoir (Volgograd region). Just crawled across the road, it was late afternoon. The terrain there is basically quite wild, the field is not plowed probably because there is a military training ground nearby...a promising place for erect-winged birds.

22.04.2013 17:22, DanMar

Thanks! I searched for information on this type on the Internet, but found nothing...I found it on the bank of the Karpovsky reservoir (Volgograd region). Just crawled across the road, it was late afternoon. The terrain there is basically quite wild, the field is not plowed probably because there is a military training ground nearby...a promising place for erect-winged birds.

Here is a little more information, but on a related species.
http://oopt.aari.ru/rbdata/2406/bio/66422
In principle, I think everything described is also typical for Sevchuk Laxmann. A very interesting find, I would immediately take it for myself.
***
In your photo, by the way, an adult female. Males have visible wings, while females ' wings are so short that they are hidden under the pronotum outgrowth that they cannot be seen.

This post was edited by DanMar - 22.04.2013 17: 24
Likes: 1

04.05.2013 1:07, John-ST

Is it Tettigonia cantans? It is clear that these comrades are not identified by larvae, but I did not come across others in the adult state
25.06.2012
MO, Railway
[attachmentid()=171524]

05.05.2013 17:42, PVOzerski

It looks quite similar.
Likes: 1

11.05.2013 22:26, Achmedo

Who did I meet in the Carpathians in mid-August?
picture: post_1.jpg

12.05.2013 15:30, PVOzerski

Field cricket (Gryllus campestris), female.

19.05.2013 18:43, Hierophis

PVOzerski, can you please tell me if this larva is equidistant or straight - winged?
Well, who else has kaike versions? smile.gif
user posted image

19.05.2013 22:11, DanMar

It's like a cricket myrmecophyllus, the one who lives among the ants smile.gifNothing else came to mind. Think straight WINGED smile.gif

20.05.2013 6:46, PVOzerski

Cerci seem to be absent (which is typical for Paraneoptera, not for Polyneoptera), the eyes, unlike Myrmecophilus, are large (and in general, the head, at least at this angle, looks like in Cicadinea). Strictly speaking, nothing but the hind legs here hints at Orthoptera. The angle, however, is extremely unfortunate. I vote for Homoptera smile.gif

This post was edited by PVOzerski - 05/20/2013 06: 47
Likes: 1

21.05.2013 0:11, DanMar

Cerci seem to be absent (which is typical for Paraneoptera, not for Polyneoptera), the eyes, unlike Myrmecophilus, are large (and in general, the head, at least at this angle, looks like in Cicadinea). Strictly speaking, nothing but the hind legs here hints at Orthoptera. The angle, however, is extremely unfortunate. I vote for Homoptera smile.gif

Thanks! And I didn't take that red behind my back.

21.05.2013 8:59, Dracus

Cicada of COURSE smile.gif

21.05.2013 9:42, Woodmen

It seems to be a jumper (Tetrigidae). Is it possible to be more precise?
Surroundings of Kirovo-Chepetsk, Kirov region. May 17.

user posted image

24.05.2013 22:47, DanMar

Then I came across a grasshopper in Israel, I think where to take it. In this place, in the suburbs of Jerusalem, the white-fronted also lived quietly.
My first suspicions were about a very large representative of the platycleidini tribe, but now I refer to dectini. If dectini, then potentially the genus medecticus, since only two or three species of the genus decticus are known, and this is clearly not an exceptional specimen, but a representative of a separate species. Only one female was caught, fertilized and I hope will give offspring. It is masterfully camouflaged and almost does not jump, I have never noticed this when I caught it, it merges so much with the environment, and decticus albifrons jump there just as imperceptibly.
#Decticus
#Medecticus assimilis

My suspicions fall on Medecticus assimilis, I hope correctly.
I use it but I can't translate it:
PDF
I checked the subgenital plate, I'm sure that it is.

This post was edited by DanMar - 25.05.2013 00: 43

Pictures:
picture: DSC00126.JPG
DSC00126.JPG — (157.39к)

picture: DSC00127.JPG
DSC00127.JPG — (183.65к)

picture: DSC00133.JPG
DSC00133.JPG — (177.95к)

picture: DSC00135.JPG
DSC00135.JPG — (88.39к)

picture: DSC00137.JPG
DSC00137.JPG — (106.1 k)

Likes: 2

25.05.2013 13:13, PVOzerski

Is there a median keel on the pronotum?

25.05.2013 13:45, Decticus

Beautiful blacksmith! Did you bring him home?"

25.05.2013 16:12, PVOzerski

So that the photo of Tetrix from Woodmen does not hang restlessly, I will tell you my opinion. Antennae - like Tetrix bipunctata. I think it is.
Likes: 1

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