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Identification of beetles (Coleoptera)

Community and ForumInsects identificationIdentification of beetles (Coleoptera)

Pages: 1 ...105 106 107 108 109 110 111 112 113... 854

06.09.2008 8:26, brgadr

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


Make no mistake, all Molytinae.
2 - Ectatorhinus sp. (from the Ithyporini tribe)
5 - Aclees sp. most likely, from Hylobiini
about the rest only with my hands I will divorce. Probably also from Hylobiini
Likes: 3

06.09.2008 8:35, PG18

A cute fake from the Czech Republic, not defined by the author (Stanislav Krejcik-ksati, he probably has the best site with pictures of beetles, from those where I climbed - www.meloidae.com). It's interesting to know who she is...

Pictures:
picture: Ptinidae_20008.jpg
Ptinidae_20008.jpg — (122.63к)

06.09.2008 10:28, barry

Cute little fake from the Czech Republic...
I have here Ptinus rufipes (female):
http://barry.fotopage.ru/gallery/show_imag...=7599&catalog=0
Determined by Frank Kohler (koleopterologie.de).
Likes: 1

06.09.2008 11:07, PG18

It looks like her. Thanks!

06.09.2008 11:22, Fornax13

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

Here's what's in the web обнаружилось:www.mapress.com/zootaxa/2007f/zt01536p296.pdf

Maybe something will help... smile.gif
Likes: 1

06.09.2008 13:26, Victor Titov

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.

Number 1 from Egypt is most likely Temnorhynchus baal (Reiche et Saulcy, 1857).
Oh, I didn't notice that dear Nimrod has already defined it...

This post was edited by Dmitrich - 06.09.2008 13: 29

06.09.2008 14:32, 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.

Yeah, I'm really confused. No matter how good the picture is, you can't see all the details. I got Philonthus politus L. in general, but I'm absolutely not sure about the definition. confused.gif
Likes: 1

06.09.2008 18:18, brgadr

Here's what's in the web обнаружилось:www.mapress.com/zootaxa/2007f/zt01536p296.pdf

Maybe something will help... smile.gif


The list is familiar, alas, it is not a determinant - and the determinant would not help many. The Papuan fauna is still very different from the South Asian one.
But the Borneo fauna has a lot in common with the Japanese! At least at the level of tribes and partly genera.
So you can continue to guess:
3-clearly some kind of Niphades (or a close genus from the tribe Aminyopini)
4-very similar to the Japanese genus Kobuzo (unlikely to have been described from Borneo wink.gif)

The Japanese weevil database helped:
http://kogane.wem.sfc.keio.ac.jp:16080/jwdb/

This post was edited by brgadr - 06.09.2008 18: 21
Likes: 2

06.09.2008 18:26, Fornax13

Can you tell me if you can do something with Vietnamese anthribids based on the photo, or not at all-there's no point in posting it?

06.09.2008 18:31, brgadr

Can you tell me if you can do something with Vietnamese anthribids based on the photo, or not at all-there's no point in posting it?


Why, there is a point - at least to admire! smile.gif
In fact, it is possible to determine the Vietnamese false relatives before the genus. They are well processed for East Asia.
Likes: 1

06.09.2008 18:55, Fornax13

So far, only these. The photo, however , is not a fountain... The third one, I think, is Ozotomerus. Others - I can't even imagine who they are.

Pictures:
picture: PC3000301.jpg
PC3000301.jpg — (143.83 k)

picture: PC3000321.jpg
PC3000321.jpg — (132.67к)

picture: PC3000341.jpg
PC3000341.jpg — (125.43 k)

Likes: 7

07.09.2008 11:51, RippeR

dimocritus:
Trichoferus campestris

07.09.2008 14:02, Vitnaz

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

Phyllobius pomaceus has variations with spotted elytra. If the colored hairs on the elytra are lanceolate, exactly pomaceus.

The third one, I think, is Ozotomerus.

He is the same; but hardly japonicus smile.gif
Likes: 1

08.09.2008 13:41, Pleco

A selection of beetles - August, Crimea, Tarkhankut.
Relatively large ground beetle - mainly in the remains of the Karakurt meal, smaller ground beetles - in huge numbers under stones, especially in gullies, on the ground in comparison with hungarikus, very fast. There are also chernotelki, leaf beetles, weevils. Everyone is hiding under rocks from the heat. I will be grateful for the definition.

Pictures:
picture: 04.jpg
04.jpg — (137.64к)

picture: 03.jpg
03.jpg — (138.8к)

picture: 02.jpg
02.jpg — (143.29 k)

picture: 05.jpg
05.jpg — (133.65 k)

picture: 06.jpg
06.jpg — (137.05 k)

picture: 07.jpg
07.jpg — (134.71к)

picture: 08.jpg
08.jpg — (140.95 k)

picture: 092.jpg
092.jpg — (132.23к)

picture: 10.jpg
10.jpg — (138.83к)

picture: 11.jpg
11.jpg — (138.91к)

picture: 12.jpg
12.jpg — (143.24 k)

picture: 13.jpg
13.jpg — (134.22к)

08.09.2008 14:23, Bad Den

05.jpg — Calathus melanocephalus, I guess
Likes: 2

08.09.2008 14:29, omar

the first two photos are not available for identification confused.gif
05.jpg Calathus melanocephalus
092.jpg Pimelia subglobosa
11.jpg Chrysolina ? cerealis
12.jpg — (143.24к)
13.jpg — (134.22к Otiorrhynchus ? rugosostriatus

This post was edited by omar - 09/08/2008 14: 31
Likes: 1

08.09.2008 14:34, Alexandr Rusinov

05.jpg: Calatus-that's for sure, but at the expense of melanocephalus-another question, in the Crimea there may be other species of this group, I would like to look at the genitals...

08.09.2008 14:57, Pleco

05.jpg: Calatus-that's for sure, but at the expense of melanocephalus-another question, in the Crimea there may be other species of this group, I would like to look at the genitals...


For this area Calathus ambiguus

08.09.2008 15:03, omar

But it is quite other

08.09.2008 15:04, omar

The group is at least that, so there is no big error in this definition.
Likes: 2

08.09.2008 15:48, Pleco

About 03, maybe some spare parts to show closer...

08.09.2008 18:02, Mylabris

10. Cassidinae (Cassida most likely).
Likes: 1

08.09.2008 20:07, Fornax13

04, 07 (near carabus) - just like Calathus ambiguus. But not the fact.
03, 02-these mortal remains - ? Acinopus ammophilus. Similar? I don't remember anything like it anymore."
08-scientific poke method-Dendarus punctatus smile.gif
10-the strange shape of this shield carrier... Maybe not Cassida... confused.gif
Likes: 3

08.09.2008 20:38, omar

Dendarus punctatus is excellent! and I have already turned over all my memory - who he reminds me of, he is, of course.
Likes: 1

08.09.2008 21:09, пигидий

10-Maybe not Cassida... confused.gif

Hypocassida subferruginea -- how about that?
Likes: 1

08.09.2008 21:23, Fornax13

Maybe... Cassidin beetles are funny, but I don't know them... I won't risk identifying the Crimean ones at all.
Likes: 1

09.09.2008 14:20, Necrocephalus

  Hypocassida subferruginea -- how about that?

I agree. At least, it's VERY much like her.
Although, of course, for full confidence it is better to look at the underside of the pronotum smile.gif

10.09.2008 20:57, пигидий

  

I'm talking about the old one, about that old dapsoo. I found the Strohecker Endomychidae Collection website -- did you know it? http://www.fsca-dpi.org/Coleoptera/ColeopteraFrame.htm
there, click on the name of the genus and immediately a page with photos of all the necessary daps
Likes: 2

10.09.2008 21:32, Fornax13

Thank you for the interesting link! smile.gif The shape of the pronotum is really more like horvathi. It seems that the Volga specimens should belong to this species. In any case, so far smile.gifit is horvathi that is given for Udmurtia.
However, the distribution of horvathi listed on the Zinovsky site and the absence of this species in Fauna Europaea are confusing.

File/s:



download file 88593118.pdf

size: 274.83 k
number of downloads: 1207






Likes: 1

10.09.2008 21:40, пигидий

It's embarrassing... absence... at Fauna Europaea

that's why, forgive the misplaced philosophizing, Live, to confuse us and educate us in the spirit of meekness and humility umnik.gif
Likes: 2

11.09.2008 6:30, Sergey Didenko

Here is such a (approximately 2.5 cm long torso) arrives at the light of the last month.
(Roman, are you going to shoot traps or what?)

Pictures:
picture: 07092008154.jpg
07092008154.jpg — (18.44к)

11.09.2008 7:51, Fornax13

Here is such a (approximately 2.5 cm long torso) arrives at the light of the last month.
(Roman, are you going to shoot traps or what?)

Trichoferus campestris
Likes: 1

11.09.2008 19:38, barry

Help me determine...
Kharkiv, 13.05.2008.

Pictures:
picture: IMG_35291.jpg
IMG_35291.jpg — (81.99к)

11.09.2008 19:38, akulich-sibiria

help us identify elephants from Khakassia, steppe by the lake, late May
picture: IMG_5151_.jpg

presumably Stephanocleonus
[attachmentid ()=47474

maybe Pseudocleonus..?
picture: IMG_5157_.jpg

Pictures:
picture: IMG_5154_.jpg
IMG_5154_.jpg — (138.36к)

11.09.2008 20:04, barry

Once abandoned, identified as Phyllobius sp., but there is a suspicion that it is not Phyllobius at all...
Kharkiv, 11.04.2008, on a maple or ash tree...

Pictures:
picture: CRW_0663.jpg
CRW_0663.jpg — (150.95к)

11.09.2008 20:17, omar

IMG_35291.jpg — (81.99k)

Sitona crinitus like or it is now called differently?
Likes: 1

11.09.2008 21:00, Fornax13

help us identify elephants from Khakassia, steppe by the lake, late May

To akulich-sibiria:
1-Stephanocleonus exactly.
2-not very clear, but it is possible that it is also of this kind.
3 - maybe Coniocleonus.
These guys - to put it mildly, not the easiest to identify (especially from those places).
Likes: 1

11.09.2008 22:23, Fornax13

Once abandoned, identified as Phyllobius sp., but there is a suspicion that it is not Phyllobius at all...
Kharkiv, 11.04.2008, on a maple or ash tree...

What a bug... No, not Phyllobius. The only thing that comes to mind is Sciaphobus (Neosciaphobus) squalidus (Gyllenhal, 1834). But I can hardly imagine it.
Likes: 2

11.09.2008 22:29, brgadr

Likes: 2

11.09.2008 22:32, brgadr

Likes: 4

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