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Identification of beetles (Coleoptera)

Community and ForumInsects identificationIdentification of beetles (Coleoptera)

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03.09.2008 18:43, Victor Titov

Ahh, I see, I'm sorry, I didn't notice the message. The most interesting thing is that it also does not want to be defined according to the local determinants of B. V. Krasutsky ("Mycetophilic coleoptera of the Urals and Trans-Urals" 1996, 2004)...
Oh, well...

Isn't that Hydrophilus caraboides, by any chance?"
I'd really like to...

It is probably a swimmer from the genera Gaurodytes or Agabus.
Likes: 2

03.09.2008 18:45, Victor Titov

To Kut:
1. Old Oxythyrea funesta (Poda, 1761)
2. Geotrupes stercorosus (Scriba, 1791), I hope...

Only Geotrupes stercorosus has now become Anoplotrupes stercorosus (Hartmann in L. G. Scriba, 1791)
Likes: 2

03.09.2008 19:52, PG18

Only Geotrupes stercorosus has now become Anoplotrupes stercorosus (Hartmann in L. G. Scriba, 1791)

smile.gif Geotrupes (Anoplotrupes) stercorosus (Peter Emmanuel Hartmann in Ludwig Gottlieb Scriba, 1791)? umnik.gif
I'm in a bad mood today, but I'll get better...
Likes: 1

03.09.2008 19:55, Michail M

  
Isn't that Hydrophilus caraboides, by any chance?"
I'd really like to...


It's one of the Agabuses... And where is such a miracle caught? to determine, you will have to pick the genitals (if male) and be sure to take into account the type of reservoir...
Likes: 1

03.09.2008 20:32, PG18

Miracle-Moscow region, hardly caught frown.gifby Vladimir Anikeev's frame...
Thank you for Agabus, you and Dmitrich!
Likes: 1

04.09.2008 0:11, barry

Help me determine...
Crimea, 11.08.2008.
Found in the forest under a freshly cut oak log.

Pictures:
picture: IMG_67580.jpg
IMG_67580.jpg — (176.07к)

04.09.2008 0:34, пигидий

Help me determine

Morimus verecundus
Likes: 1

04.09.2008 9:37, PG18

Dear Dmytrych, isn't it possible to determine this phylontus before the species? It seems that all the bristles are visible.
I have nothing but a Green identifierfrown.gif
Thank you in advance.

Pictures:
picture: DSC_1844___.jpg
DSC_1844___.jpg — (93.18к)

Likes: 1

04.09.2008 13:09, Victor Titov

Dear Dmytrych, isn't it possible to determine this phylontus before the species? It seems that all the bristles are visible.
I have nothing but a Green identifierfrown.gif
Thank you in advance.

Unfortunately, I'm not at home right now, and I don't have a caller ID handy. I'll try to take a look at the photo over the weekend, it's a great one! If no one gets ahead of you earlier... wink.gif
Likes: 1

04.09.2008 17:42, Fornax13

Unfortunately, the abdomen of this philont is poorly visible. There you need to look at the basal groove of the first tergites. If it is bracketed, then it is like politus (politus, addendus, succicola), but they seem to have more transverse parts. Maybe some Ph. temporalis...
Likes: 1

04.09.2008 19:25, Sungaya

please help me identify these beetles.
Number 1-Egypt, Sharm El Sheikh, early July.
All the others are Vietnam, Vung Tao. there is no date.

Pictures:
picture: 1.jpg
1.jpg — (42.15к)

picture: 2.jpg
2.jpg — (48.68 k)

picture: 3.jpg
3.jpg — (42.89к)

picture: 4.jpg
4.jpg — (37.65 k)

04.09.2008 19:35, Fornax13

To Sungaya:
1. I think it belongs to the genus Temnorhynchus (Scarabaeidae)
2. Sternocera ? aequisignata Saunders, 1866 (Buprestidae)
3. Chrysochroa phylum buqueti (Gory, 1833) (Buprestidae)

This post was edited by Fornax13-04.09.2008 20: 33
Likes: 1

04.09.2008 20:51, RippeR

the last one is probably Neocerambyx sp.
and the first skrabeid is great!! class
Likes: 1

05.09.2008 0:23, Nimrod

Likes: 2

05.09.2008 11:47, KDG

Likes: 1

05.09.2008 12:22, PG18

Unfortunately, the abdomen of this philont is poorly visible. There you need to look at the basal groove of the first tergites. If it is bracketed, then it is like politus (politus, addendus, succicola), but they seem to have more transverse parts. Maybe Ph. temporalis of some kind...

From the first option, addendus should be normal, but it seems to have black hairs, and in the picture it is clearly бурые...
Рһ. temporalis-pts. similar, but only in the "southwest" by the Green determinant... ??? wall.gif

05.09.2008 13:04, Alexander Zarodov

Help identify phyllobiuses before the species. All-MO, May month.

1. Were plentiful in the grass in the meadow

picture: curc05041.jpg

2. On nettles, also in the mass

picture: curc05311.jpg
picture: curc05312.jpg
picture: curc05313.jpg

3. On the oak tree

picture: curc05314.jpg

Thank you in advance!

05.09.2008 13:32, PG18

  I later admitted that I had overreacted with this definition:

Stopped at Lordithon trinotatus Erichson, 1839. Correct me if I'm wrong

05.09.2008 13:49, Fornax13

Stopped at Lordithon trinotatus Erichson, 1839. Please correct me if I'm wrong

Aren't there any more photos? His head looks a little too long in this one. Maybe the neck stretched smile.gif

05.09.2008 13:53, Fornax13

Help identify phyllobiuses before the species. All-MO, May month.

1, 3 - Phyllobius pyri (Linnaeus, 1758)
2-Ph.? pomaceus Gyllenhal, 1834 (green - very similar, and brown-some strange).
Likes: 2

05.09.2008 14:09, omar

Oh, people are lucky, they have qualifiers at hand rolleyes.gifAnd you sit here all day, and you doubt your memory-how would you not screw smile.gifup

05.09.2008 14:12, Alexander Zarodov

1, 3 - Phyllobius pyri (Linnaeus, 1758)
2-Ph.? pomaceus Gyllenhal, 1834 (green - very similar, and brown-some strange).


Well, brown ones are females, as far as I understand smile.gifLast year I was lucky (in the same place and at the same time) how urticae was defined. Here is one of them:

picture: dolgonos031.jpg

and more

picture: dolgonos033.jpg

This post was edited by Double A-09/05/2008 14: 14
Likes: 1

05.09.2008 14:28, Alexander Zarodov

I'll take a little more attention away from the weevils.

These are from Nizhny Arkhyz( KCR), July, in a meadow.

1. Skosar

picture: curc07181.jpg

picture: curc07182.jpg

2. Larin on burdock.

picture: curc07184.jpg

Thank you in advance!

05.09.2008 14:53, PG18

Is this exactly Glischrochilus quadripunctatus? And the floor?

Pictures:
картинка: Glischrochilus_quadripunctatus_DSC0991_copy.jpg
Glischrochilus_quadripunctatus_DSC0991_copy.jpg — (43.61к)

05.09.2008 14:55, PG18

Aren't there any more photos? His head looks a little too long in this one. Maybe he stretched his neck out smile.gif

If you pulledsmile.gif it out, it's the same in all the pictures...
Likes: 1

05.09.2008 15:07, PG18

And this one? Boshka is healthy, sames, probably.
I don't understand why the shape of the elytra seems different than here http://www.zin.ru/Animalia/Coleoptera/rus/gliquakm.htm

Pictures:
picture: P8140146.jpg
P8140146.jpg — (31.91к)

Likes: 1

05.09.2008 15:24, PG18

Oh, people are lucky, they have qualifiers at handrolleyes.gif, and here you sit all day, and you doubt your memory-how not to screw up smile.gif

Duc they are in the network there. Green, Far Eastern...

05.09.2008 15:36, Fornax13

I'll take a little more attention away from the weevils.

Phyllobius pomaceus Gyllenhal, 1834 = Ph. urticae (Degeer, 1775 nec Scopoli, 1763)
Larinus is most likely a male sturnus (Schaller, 1783). He usually sits on burdocks. What size is it?
With Caucasian mowers - I apologize... smile.gif
Likes: 2

05.09.2008 15:43, Alexander Zarodov

05.09.2008 15:44, Fornax13

Is this exactly Glischrochilus quadripunctatus? And the floor?

No, it's from convex (what Librodor was called). Local-hortensis and quadriguttatus + imported quadrisignatus. Maybe there's more... The second one (with pale spots) is similar to quadrisignatus. I don't know the first one.
Likes: 1

05.09.2008 15:52, Fornax13

  
Approximately c turbinatus in size, definitely smaller than sturnus.

Well, then I give smile.gifup This genus-in general, in itself, not a gift, and even sturnus-especially smile.giffrom the Caucasus. The larinas there don't look like themselves at all. And who else can there be from such "Larinodontes"? confused.gif

This post was edited by Fornax13-05.09.2008 22: 10
Likes: 1

05.09.2008 18:08, PG18

No, it's from convex (what Librodor was called). Local-hortensis and quadriguttatus + imported quadrisignatus. Maybe there's more... The second one (with pale spots) is similar to quadrisignatus. I don't know the first one.

Oh, it's not easy. It turns out that neither one nor the other is not in the Middle Uralsfrown.gif
The first one, which is from Yaroslavl, is probably also a nearctic quadrisignatus, judging by [url=http://www.zin.ru/Animalia/Coleoptera/eng/gliquadg.htm]. There, ticks travel on it. Don't think of anything...
http://www.zin.ru/Animalia/Coleoptera/eng/gliquadg.htm[/url]

This post was edited by PG18-05.09.2008 18: 17
Likes: 1

05.09.2008 18:27, Fornax13

Oh, it's not easy. It turns out that neither one nor the other is not in the Middle Uralsfrown.gif

Yes, there are, they are everywhere. In the spring, fermented birch sap is not bad to come across.
Likes: 1

05.09.2008 18:30, алекс 2611

From the first option, addendus should be normal, but it seems to have black hairs, and in the picture it is clearly бурые...
Рһ. temporalis - pts. similar, but with a Green identifier only in the "southwest"... ??? wall.gif


It hardly makes sense to navigate the distribution of species based on the Green Determinant. I don't know about you buggers, but I've caught them in Flax more than once.areas (i.e. in the north-west) bee species that are indicated in Green as occurring in the south-west or in the center.

05.09.2008 18:34, алекс 2611

Oh, people are lucky, they have qualifiers at handrolleyes.gif, and here you sit all day, and you doubt your memory-how not to screw up smile.gif


It is not clear at what price these determinants were given. You used to go to the public library, make a photocopy of a couple of hundred pages, and then sit for a couple of days without lunch. Because it's expensive...
Likes: 1

05.09.2008 21:07, Nilson

Several unnamed elephants from Borneo.
All beetles are not particularly large from 10 to 15 mm.

Pictures:
picture: DSCN6140_1.JPG
DSCN6140_1.JPG — (139.88к)

picture: DSCN6142_1.JPG
DSCN6142_1.JPG — (136.41к)

picture: DSCN6144_1.JPG
DSCN6144_1.JPG — (136.22к)

picture: DSCN6148_1.JPG
DSCN6148_1.JPG — (147.43к)

picture: DSCN6150_1.JPG
DSCN6150_1.JPG — (136.84к)

Likes: 9

05.09.2008 22:02, Fornax13

Several unnamed elephants from Borneo.
All beetles are not particularly large from 10 to 15 mm.

What beasts! smile.gif Are these pearls so gorgeous? smile.gif Or I'm wrong.

05.09.2008 23:09, Tigran Oganesov

Hefty good!

06.09.2008 1:11, dimocritus

found in a Kiev apartment
user posted image
user posted image
user posted image

06.09.2008 2:07, Fornax13

found in a Kiev apartment

smile.gif) To me, such an animal also flew into the apartment not so long ago. If I understand correctly, this is Trichoferus.

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