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Identification of Orthoptera (grasshoppers, crickets, etc.)

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

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19.06.2018 11:13, Decticus

Storm22, this is probably an Egyptian filly Anacridium aegyptium.
Likes: 1

19.06.2018 11:47, Storm22

Decticus
Thank you! That's about what I thought earlier. Apparently it is not harmful

19.06.2018 18:26, Sokolkov2002

Can you tell me what kind of tetrixes??? 12.06.2018, Moscow, Losiny Ostrov
picture: IMG_2121.jpg
picture: IMG_2186.jpg

20.06.2018 11:07, NIKITA TIMOSHEV

Storm22, this is probably the Egyptian filly Anacridium aegyptium.

There is also Anacridium melanorhodon,and in females of this species, the body length without wings reaches 95 mm.If it is larger than 10 cm, then this is A. melanorhodon.
The Egyptian filly grows up to 70 mm,and with wings 8-9 cm.
Storm22,what color were the legs of the jumping paws?If blue, then it looks like A. aegyptium,if purple, then A. melanorhodon.

20.06.2018 11:09, NIKITA TIMOSHEV

Sokolkov2002, tetrixes are similar to Tetrix bipunctata.

20.06.2018 12:51, Decticus

There is also Anacridium melanorhodon,and in females of this species, the body length without wings reaches 95 mm.If it is larger than 10 cm, then this is A. melanorhodon.

I've never even heard of one. So you're a better judge of southern erect-winged species, especially locusts.)

20.06.2018 15:36, Storm22

 
Storm22,what color were the legs of the jumping paws?If blue, then it looks like A. aegyptium,if purple, then A. melanorhodon.

These are the details I don't remember exactly. I was just wondering if it was a pest or not

20.06.2018 16:31, NIKITA TIMOSHEV

I know a lot about our locusts.But I also know that truxalises are locusts that have spots on their hind wings.
In addition to the acridae, the locustae of the Cyrtacanthacridini tribe, and the Docytrusae, I can also identify the prusae well.
Storm22, the locust in your photo is not the main pest,but sometimes it eats grapes.

This post was edited by NIKITA TIMOSHEV - 20.06.2018 16: 32
Likes: 1

20.06.2018 17:07, Vlad Proklov

These are the details I don't remember exactly. I was just wondering if it was a pest or not

In Russia, only aegyptium is available.
Likes: 1

21.06.2018 19:52, Zum-Graat

And here, probably, is Metrioptera roeselii? Someone you can mix it up with (Moscow region)?
picture: ________.JPG

22.06.2018 9:42, Decticus

Zum-Graat, there is also Bicolorana bicolor. But you definitely have a Roselle jump.
picture: IMG_9348.jpg
picture: DSC_8838.jpg

This post was edited by Decticus - 22.06.2018 09: 43
Likes: 1

25.06.2018 17:13, Mahasss

Good afternoon.
Please help. What a day I've been trying to figure out with the kids. There is an old photo, not mine in 2012, near Moscow. It is included without a signature in almost all pseudo-scientific (copyright) and near-scientific Internet articles about grasshoppers. Is it really a gray grasshopper (oh, the photos are mixed up, it's in 4 photos)?
And then our catch for 24.06.18. Ukraine, Sumy region.
And also dispel my doubts, in the children's encyclopedia I read that grasshoppers hear with their hind legs and they also make a chirping sound. Am I so far behind the times, or are the compilers specifically "fucked up"?

Pictures:
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25.06.2018 19:19, Decticus

Mahasss, the fourth photo is really a gray grasshopper. On 2 and 6 - Roselle's jump (Metrioptera roselii), 3-Conocephalus fuscus (discolor).
Grasshoppers can hear with their forelegs and their wings. Locusts chirp with their hind legs.
Likes: 1

25.06.2018 22:24, NIKITA TIMOSHEV

1 and 5 - Chorthippus paralleus.

This post was edited by NIKITA TIMOSHEV - 25.06.2018 22: 24
Likes: 1

26.06.2018 10:45, Mahasss

Thank you very much!
I'll go write to the publisher, and then they even put these legs in the zoology textbook for the 7th grade((( I even completely doubted my znaniyah

01.07.2018 23:51, Vlad Proklov

Bradyporus dasypus (Illiger, 1800) ?

With such an ovipositor - no variants of it.

02.07.2018 0:50, Zum-Graat

Tver, June 27, a wasteland overgrown with tall grass.
The first photo was taken on a phone, the other-on a soap dish, as a result, the color and clarity of details turned out to be very different, but it seems to be the same view?
user posted image
user posted image

This post was edited by Zum-Graat - 02.07.2018 00: 51

04.07.2018 16:37, Decticus

Help me identify the filly and the horse. Crimea, Chernomorskoye settlement, early July 2017.
picture: _____2387.jpg
picture: _____2388.jpg

04.07.2018 21:23, NIKITA TIMOSHEV

1.-Someone from the tribe Epacromiini, most likely from the genus Aiolopus.
2.-Tesselana vittata.
Likes: 1

05.07.2018 21:07, Андреас

Hello. A week ago, near the salt lake at our KMV, I took these guys... - but, excuse me, are these two Leysby girls? ...
And 10 years ago, at the same time, I took a male (as I think) of a certain species here in a huge forest clearing. I'm interested in the specific name. With respect.

Pictures:
picture: Leptophyes_albovittata.JPG
Leptophyes_albovittata.JPG — (888.61к)

picture: _2_.JPG
_2_.JPG — (1mb)

06.07.2018 16:18, Dantist

Hello!

Stepnaya Balka, Luhansk region, 4.07.2018.
The length is approximately 4cm, can be up to 5cm.
At night on the road.

This post was edited by Dantist-06.07.2018 16: 21

Pictures:
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picture: IMG_20180704_213758.jpg
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Likes: 2

06.07.2018 18:53, Андреас

It looks like a female stout steppe (Bradyporus multituberculatus). The rarest extinct insect, as they say.
But I'm not sure if this is it.

06.07.2018 19:34, Dantist

The pictures are not very good, I photographed them at night. Maybe they can be more accurately determined? I ran between the screens, looked at butterflies and saw them on the road . I should have put them in a cage and photographed them at home.

06.07.2018 20:00, Vlad Proklov

Hello!

Stepnaya Balka, Luhansk region, 4.07.2018.
The length is approximately 4cm, can be up to 5cm.
At night on the road.

This is sevchuk (Onconotus laxmanni / servillei) [it is believed that this is one variable species!]
Likes: 2

10.07.2018 9:22, Vlad Proklov

Hello, dear experts. Please tell me the name of the grasshopper. I shot it in early July in the Samara region.

Bicolorana roeselii
Likes: 1

10.07.2018 17:30, Dracus

Hello. A week ago, near the salt lake at our KMV, I took these guys... - but, excuse me, are these two Leysby girls? ...
And 10 years ago, at the same time, I took a male (as I think) of a certain species here in a huge forest clearing. I'm interested in the specific name. With respect.


Leptophyes albovittata.
Bottom mating, male from below, passes spermatophore.
Likes: 1

11.07.2018 14:48, Zum-Graat

Is this Chorthippus biguttulus? Tver, July 11.
picture: __________.JPG

This post was edited by Zum-Graat - 11.07.2018 14: 48

13.07.2018 9:29, Андреас

Leptophyes albovittata.
Mating from below, the male from below, transmits the spermatophore.

Thanks)
I was almost sure that this was exactly the case, but I stupidly posted, hoping to find out something more specific about this strange procedure) redface.gif teapot.gif smile.gif
In this wingless species, even the way males make sounds is also strange cool.gif.
(Sorry for the rant. Simple, - I've never captured this before). And I've already seen the singing of such males in the doc. the movie.

14.07.2018 3:54, Slavinator

Hello. Are my grasshoppers completely undetectable? Even roughly?
Post URL #3832 and URL #3864, help pozhta.
And here's more:
Saratov region, Engelsky district, June

Pictures:
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14.07.2018 12:47, Sklyar

Hello! Please help me with the definition. I would be grateful for names of taxa of any rank.
Kursk region.

Pictures:
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picture: IMG_0038.JPG
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15.07.2018 10:21, Decticus

Sklyar, 1, 2 - Metrioptera bicolor. 3 - Euthystira brachyptera.
Likes: 1

15.07.2018 22:36, Sklyar

Thank you very much!

16.07.2018 15:06, Penzyak

Take a look at the Madagascar page. Photos are divided into a strange "grasshopper" eating kiwi leaves...

17.07.2018 11:09, Decticus

Yesterday I saw two house crickets near a sewer manhole on the outskirts of Gatchina. I didn't catch them, so they ran off through the crack.
Interestingly, there were several other crickets chirping in the grass and bushes nearby. I heard them there for the first time about 5-6 years ago, it turns out that they constantly live near the sewer, reproduce and spend the winter somewhere there? There is still a heating main nearby. Here is such an unusual find.

19.07.2018 8:48, iburyl

Probably something very simple, but I don't want to call everyone just green grasshoppers...

Nizhny Novgorod, end of July
user posted image

Nizhny Novgorod region, early August
user posted image

Thank You

19.07.2018 11:26, Decticus

iburyl, in your photos of Decticus verrucivorus and Phaneroptera falcata.

19.07.2018 11:51, Guest

Thanks!

20.07.2018 0:10, Victor Gazanchidis

I met this guy in Northern Greece in July. Does anyone know who this is?

This post was edited by vicgrr - 20.07.2018 00: 10

Pictures:
картинка: 96ABAD1D_021B_43F1_9711_F13DA7269298.jpeg
96ABAD1D_021B_43F1_9711_F13DA7269298.jpeg — (295.72к)

20.07.2018 0:18, Vlad Proklov

I met this guy in Northern Greece in July. Does anyone know who this is?

Male Saga sp. but the photo does not show any diagnostic signs, and there are at least 4 types.

20.07.2018 0:28, Victor Gazanchidis

Thank you Vlad. Unfortunately there is no other photo

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