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Identification of Orthoptera (grasshoppers, crickets, etc.)

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

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19.10.2013 17:35, Dracus

Please help us identify this type of praying mantis

Kapchagai reservoir, July 2013 on the sand

Female Iris sp., most likely Iris polystictica F.-W. For reliable detection, you need a drawing of the rear fenders.
Likes: 1

26.10.2013 22:23, Раду Кибзий

Hello! Tell me, please, is this cricket closer to the field cricket or the brownie cricket? Thank you in advance! August 9, 2013, in the vicinity of Chisinau.

Pictures:
picture: Insecta_104.0__800_.jpg
Insecta_104.0__800_.jpg — (102.24к)

27.10.2013 11:46, PVOzerski

I don't know exactly. But I don't think it's a brownie, either. Probably a larva of some Modicogryllus.

Although actually there are field crickets in Moldova - I once caught them myself.
Likes: 2

08.11.2013 8:22, Irada

Can you tell me who it is? Photo taken in South Korea on November 7. Maybe the photo is not so hot, of course, against the background of a treadmill.

Pictures:
picture: P1110089.JPG
P1110089.JPG — (360.32к)

picture: P1110091.JPG
P1110091.JPG — (254.89к)

08.11.2013 12:25, DanMar

pyrgomorph of some sort

08.11.2013 20:30, PVOzerski

That the family Pyrgomorphidae is without a doubt. I'd be careful about Rod: there are several similar genera. It can easily turn out to be some Atractomorpha.
Likes: 1

08.11.2013 21:03, DanMar

That the family Pyrgomorphidae is without a doubt. I'd be careful about Rod: there are several similar genera. It can easily turn out to be some kind of Atractomorpha.

Oops, subfamily and meant, as far as I know in South Korea, the genus Pyrgomorpha is not present.
Likes: 1

12.11.2013 14:21, observer4

Good day, please help me identify it.

Pictures:
picture: DSC_9806_3.jpg
DSC_9806_3.jpg — (125.4 k)

12.11.2013 16:22, PVOzerski

Well, for example, as an option, Stauroderus scalaris... But in general, the geography is not specified, and the angle is not good.
Likes: 1

13.11.2013 10:46, observer4

I'm sorry, I completely forgot to specify the shooting location-Khakassia, on the outskirts of Abakan, taken in the second half of August this year.
Unfortunately, there is no other angle.

This post was edited by observer4-13.11.2013 10: 47

14.11.2013 22:49, PVOzerski

Then it is possible that I have defined correctly. But it is normal not to consider the elytra, so the definition remains tentative.

15.11.2013 19:51, phlomis

Can a grasshopper be identified? shuffle.gif
Austria, Tyrol. 30.07.2013.
picture: a1.jpg

18.11.2013 18:39, PVOzerski

The tribe is easily reached-Pholidopterini. You can try to show the photo on the forum of Austrian fans of straight-winged birds - orthoptera.xobor.de " but he's German-speaking.
Likes: 1

18.11.2013 20:22, phlomis

I typed Pholidopterini in Google -- a similar grasshopper fell out: Pholidoptera aptera. confused.gif Does this sound like the truth or not? I'm a nerd, I don't understand your animals. This one was very pretty, black, and had a fat yellow belly.

18.11.2013 20:34, Vlad Proklov

Ph. aptera is there!
Likes: 1

02.12.2013 0:39, Gansucha

The photo is not mine, with the author's permission.
Crimea, June 30.
user posted image

02.12.2013 2:59, DanMar

The photo is not mine, with the author's permission.
Crimea, June 30.
user posted image

Pholidoptera pontica
Likes: 1

02.12.2013 8:45, PVOzerski

DanMar, I have a question for you as a connoisseur of grasshoppers in Ukraine: what is the ratio between Ph. pontica and Ph. pustulipes? I once thought that these were synonyms - and I looked at Naskretsky - there they are like two different types...

02.12.2013 22:32, DanMar

DanMar, I have a question for you as a connoisseur of grasshoppers in Ukraine: what is the ratio between Ph. pontica and Ph. pustulipes? I once thought that these were synonyms - and I looked at Naskretsky - there they are like two different types...

In general, I went to the Crimea, collected them, I didn't know what the species was called, but I always came across the same bushy plants near Foros and Simeiz in Koktebel...
And I didn't see any specifically different individuals from the others, and I don't see any now. The size is slightly different, sometimes the color changes slightly, color appears on the back, but I did not see any morphological differences. So for me, it's the same view, named differently at different times.
I do not exclude that there may be another shrub that I did not come across, as well as Paradrymadusa galitzini. Somewhere here they wrote about Parapholidoptera noxia, they probably made a mistake and there is no Parapholidoptera in the Crimea...

Maybe your source just accidentally recorded two species because there are a lot of synonyms for this shrub, but I'm still not sure.

02.12.2013 23:12, PVOzerski


Maybe your source just accidentally recorded two species because there are a lot of synonyms for this shrub, but I'm still not sure.

Oh, I don't know. The source, by the way , is a well-known electronic resource, http://orthoptera.speciesfile.org/Common/b...nNameID=1143069

04.12.2013 0:26, Dracus

It should be noted that in OSF, the ball is still ruled by Otti, a well-known crusher, and Naskretsky is "just" a Major contibutor there. That's just me, by the way.

04.12.2013 8:34, LeonaKali

Caught this one last night.
It seems to be similar to Spiny Lobster Katydid, but it's too small and the color is not very suitable. Maybe he just didn't have time to grow up?
(cigarette in the frame, of course, for scale)
South America, Ecuador, Baños De Agua Santa (1800 above sea level)

Pictures:
picture: 002_tn.jpg
002_tn.jpg — (155.06к)

04.12.2013 12:04, Evgeniy Ribalchenko

Caught this one last night.
It seems to be similar to Spiny Lobster Katydid, but it's too small and the color is not very suitable. Maybe he just didn't have time to grow up?
(cigarette in the frame, of course, for scale)
South America, Ecuador, Baños De Agua Santa (1800 above sea level)

If you're talking about Panoploscelis, I don't think so. pins would get you to ecuador

04.12.2013 12:06, Zlopastnyi Brandashmyg

the larva of a female, and even Ecuador. I doubt anyone will identify.

04.12.2013 12:43, LeonaKali

Thank you very much.
And I'll definitely get some pins. I just decided just today to do all this, and, of course, while I use what I have.

10.12.2013 3:34, DanMar

Oh, I don't know. The source, by the way , is a well-known electronic resource, http://orthoptera.speciesfile.org/Common/b...nNameID=1143069

I searched for information there, and somehow came to the conclusion that there is still one type with different names. Somewhere they also wrote about the openers and reusable opening of the Crimean kustolyubka...
Likes: 1

10.12.2013 10:22, PVOzerski

Then, apparently, the valid name is pustulipes?

22.12.2013 16:19, DanMar

Then, apparently, the valid name is pustulipes?

I don't know confused.gif

This post was edited by DanMar - 12/22/2013 16: 19

22.12.2013 17:43, PVOzerski

I remember that in the determinants of harmful and useful insects and mites (there was such a series in the 80s for different groups of agricultural crops; L. L. Mishchenko made straight-winged tables), it was listed as "Pontic bush lover-Pholidoptera pustulipes". But Mishchenko sometimes made mistakes with validity. For example, he considered the generic name of the Far Eastern wingless fillies Primnoa valid - but it turned out that this is a homonym of some gorgonari coral polyp.

29.12.2013 14:32, PVOzerski

Maritimo
The cricket is most likely Gryllus bimaculatus. In any case, it looks very similar.

29.12.2013 15:38, Maritimo

Good evening, I ask everyone who knows to help with the definition. We were in Taba (first half of October 2013), in Egypt, on vacation. Met some straight-winged creature:

Pictures:
picture: post_1085941_1388258268.jpg
post_1085941_1388258268.jpg — (728.97к)

30.12.2013 13:33, PVOzerski

I'm telling you, it's probably Gryllus bimaculatus. A species with a huge range-from South Africa to Dagestan and Japan.
Likes: 1

03.01.2014 10:16, gumenuk

Is it possible to identify this larva up to the species?
Moscow region, Ramenskiy district, 08.06.2013

Pictures:
picture: 2013.06.08__DSC08095.JPG
2013.06.08__DSC08095.JPG — (265.62к)

03.01.2014 16:22, PVOzerski

The genus is exactly Tettigonia. Think T. cantans.
Likes: 1

03.01.2014 19:37, gumenuk

And this is Decticus verrucivorus ?
Ramenskiy district, Moscow region, 17.08.2013

Pictures:
picture: 2013.08.17__DSC01900.jpg
2013.08.17__DSC01900.jpg — (383.09к)

03.01.2014 20:51, PVOzerski

No, male Tettigonia cantans.
Likes: 1

03.01.2014 21:41, gumenuk

What kind of fillies?
Moscow region, Ramenskiy district, date of shooting in the file name.

Pictures:
picture: 2013.07.03__DSC09403.jpg
2013.07.03__DSC09403.jpg — (245.54к)

picture: 2013.08.05__DSC01062.jpg
2013.08.05__DSC01062.jpg — (212.44к)

04.01.2014 13:43, PVOzerski

Females of Chorthippus parallelus
Likes: 1

05.01.2014 9:57, gumenuk

In May 2010, my grandson brought it from Southern Turkey (coast).

Pictures:
picture: Acrididae.jpg
Acrididae.jpg — (235.05к)

06.01.2014 15:45, Woodmen

Surroundings of Kirovo-Chepetsk, Kirov region. August 24.

user posted image user posted image

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