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Identification of beetles (Coleoptera)

Community and ForumInsects identificationIdentification of beetles (Coleoptera)

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06.02.2009 22:51, Bad Den


And Calathus like melanocephalus, but it seems to me that you still have something from this pile should be.

Here, stierlyz sent it to me once.

user posted image
Likes: 1

06.02.2009 23:43, Liparus

typos noticed: Tajikistan (with j); Turkmenistan; North (h omitted)


Well, I wrote from memory, unwritten

06.02.2009 23:55, omar

Beautiful ground beetles are called Cymyndis ornata-Crimean endem. In foreign countries, it is found only in Turkey, it seems.
Likes: 3

07.02.2009 1:00, Fornax13

So I screwed up! smile.gif Yeah, tsimindis really is. I didn't think they were like this... shuffle.gif

07.02.2009 1:04, barry

(barry @ 31.01.2009 17:13)
Maybe someone has access to Curculio pellitus / venosus... I'd like to see the spike on the back thigh...
pellitus
venosus

Thank you very much! Looks like pellitus won. smile.gif

07.02.2009 1:31, RippeR

tsinidis are awesome!! I also thought dromius and it looks like smile.gif

07.02.2009 8:04, okoem

Cymyndis ornata is a Crimean endem. In foreign countries, it is found only in Turkey, it seems.
If it's also in Turkey, then it's not endemic.
Google for the query "Cymindis ornata" gives only two links, one of them is a guidebook from 1914. Why so little?! Is it a modern name?

07.02.2009 11:35, RippeR

much more links if you enter Glycia ornata

07.02.2009 12:57, Fornax13

Yes, quite modern. Cymindis ornata Fischer von Waldheim, 1823
Likes: 1

07.02.2009 18:49, Nikolaj Pichugin

Help identify the "beast of the overseas"
Croatia, Krk Island, trapped for beer, 27.08.08, leg. Pichugin N. Yu.

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07.02.2009 18:57, RippeR

Trichpferus sp. more precisely, it is difficult to say.. most likely spartii
Likes: 1

07.02.2009 22:57, okoem

I caught more beetles today. One beetle is probably Calathus sp, like yesterday's. I don't know the rest of them.. frown.gif

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07.02.2009 23:43, Liparus

Please help me once again identify the beetles that he posted. I apologize if you have already determined...just yesterday I picked up some of them,today I'm already sending them to the box...it remains to determine smile.gif

This post was edited by Liparus - 07.02.2009 23: 57

08.02.2009 0:42, Fornax13

2 okoem:
On the first 2 scorer-Brachinus, I don't know what species you may have.
Next to Calathus-Trechus of some sort.
On the 3rd - Gynandromorphus etruscus
Likes: 1

08.02.2009 0:48, RippeR

Onitis damoetas
222108-Copris lunaris
205056 - Geotrupes spinigera
154931 - Capnodis tenebricosa
132742, 132651, 115115 - weevils smile.gif
Likes: 1

08.02.2009 0:49, Fornax13

2 Liparus:
1-Onitis damoetas
2, 3-mangy Leucosomus pedestris sort of like
4-female Copris lunaris
5-Geotrupes'and I don't know
6-Larinus turbinatus
7-Capnodis tenebricosa
Likes: 1

08.02.2009 1:07, Stavropolec

And you can say something about them:
All Stavropol Territory.
8-11 like the same view, but some different... sexual dimorphism???
Staff no. 15-23 mm

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08.02.2009 1:31, Fornax13

1,2-Phosphuga atrata like
3-Silpha carinata
9-Nicrophorus vespillo, probably
10, 11 - N. interruptus rather too (according to the keys drive them-these are clearly different species)
12-N. humator
13-Ocypus type messor can be, and 15 - or pedator, or ophthalmicus (for what you call them so weep.gif) They need to look in the teeth to determine.
Likes: 1

08.02.2009 1:32, Victor Titov

And you can say something about them:
All Stavropol Territory.
8-11 like the same view, but some different... sexual dimorphism???
Staff no. 15-23 mm

1, 2-Phosphuga atrata
3-Silpha carinata
8, 10 and 11 - the same species Nicrophorus investigator, 8-female, 10 and 11-males;
9-Nicrophorus vespillo
12-Nicrophorus humator
14 and 15-Ocypus sp. (like, two different views).

This post was edited by Dmitrich-08.02.2009 01: 35
Likes: 1

08.02.2009 1:37, RippeR

Stavropolec
go to the dies frown.gif
Likes: 1

08.02.2009 1:41, Victor Titov

And you can say something about them:
All Stavropol Territory.

Yes, 6 is Tanatophilus rugosus, and 7 is also Phosphuga atrata.
Likes: 1

08.02.2009 2:07, sapalex

I understand that this is also N. vespillo L. The leading edge of the prsp. with yellow hairs. Kyiv. into the light.5.07.07.

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08.02.2009 2:16, Victor Titov

I understand that this is also N. vespillo L. The leading edge of the prsp. with yellow hairs. Kyiv. into the light.5.07.07.

Yes, this is N. vespillo. They also have noticeably curved hind legs.

This post was edited by Dmitrich-08.02.2009 02: 17
Likes: 2

08.02.2009 2:29, sapalex

Tell me, why in the photo Stavropolec the beetle N. vespillo has no hairs on the prsp? Thanks!

08.02.2009 2:38, Fornax13

They are implied smile.gifMost likely, they are simply not visible
Likes: 2

08.02.2009 4:13, okoem

Please help me once again identify the beetles that he posted. I apologize if you have already determined...just yesterday I picked up some of them,today I'm already sending them to the box...it remains to determine smile.gif
All these beetles are already named here spread out.
Likes: 1

08.02.2009 11:59, Liparus

All these beetles are already named here spread out.


I ask for a sling, but the best of all Crimean ground beetles should be divided into subspecies, including racehorses...It wasn't very bad.

08.02.2009 12:34, okoem

Yes, how many of those ground beetles are there.... smile.gif

08.02.2009 20:21, Liparus

Yes, how many of those ground beetles are there.... smile.gif


Understood not in this topic:-)

09.02.2009 18:42, akulich-sibiria

good evening. Question about ontophagus. On Kabakov I do not quite succeed. Maybe someone will help. The female is closest to Onthophagus marginalis. The beetle is about 8 mm. The epipleura is black, the suture and edges of the elytra are darkened. Dots on the pronotum are not frequent, rasp-shaped. The anterior corners of the pronotum are not well-marked, rounded. Along the lateral edge of the pronotum. the hairs are dark. Two keels on the head. The frontal is almost straight, barely arched forward. The parietal is longer, slightly curved.
But there are signs that are not suitable for this species. There are no horns or bumps along the edges of the parietal keel, the edges are smoothed. trim with a clear notch. Anterior slope of the pronotum without a strong bump or protrusion. it is almost exactly smoothed out. Here it is similar to O. andalusicus, but it does not seem to fit the area..
Thank you in advance for your help.
picture: P7280030_.jpg
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09.02.2009 21:19, sapalex

Let me also ask you about this beetle. I identified it as Onthophagus nuchicornis L. I would like to find out from more experienced forum members, is this so? Thanks!! mol.gif Sorry for the quality of the photo.

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10.02.2009 21:42, rpanin

It is Phytoecia icterica (Schaller, 1783) ?9 mm.


Crimea, Simferopol, along the bypass road to Yalta.01.IV.2000
Leg.Shaporinsky V. V.

This post was edited by rpanin - 10.02.2009 21: 44

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11.02.2009 10:53, RippeR

most likely icteric, if there are no other similar species
Likes: 1

11.02.2009 13:19, Cerambyx

It is Phytoecia icterica (Schaller, 1783) ?9 mm.


Crimea, Simferopol, along the bypass road to Yalta.01.IV.2000
Leg.Shaporinsky V. V.

Is it just me, or is the last ventral segment of your phyth red?

11.02.2009 13:28, rpanin

Is it just me, or is the last ventral segment of your phyth red?

not red ,alas. Color distortion. :Yellow coating on the head - some kind of dust coating that could not be wiped off .I was afraid of breaking something.
And if it was red,what would it mean?

This post was edited by rpanin - 11.02.2009 13: 38

11.02.2009 13:39, Cerambyx

Then it would be Ph. rufipes smile.gifAnd so-yes, icterica.
Likes: 1

11.02.2009 13:41, Cerambyx

Or maybe it's not even a raid - Danilevsky won writes that Crimean ikteriki just happen to have a bright yellow pubescence of the body (if you don't rub them hard wink.gif).

This post was edited by Cerambyx - 02/11/2009 13: 43
Likes: 1

12.02.2009 7:56, KingSnake

Help Mike identify the bug. According to literature data, Meloe proscarabaeus and Meloe violaceus live here. But there is no doubt what kind it is. The beetle differs from Meloe violaceus in its short whiskers and elongated abdomen, and from proscarabaeus in the size and shape of the mid-thorax and plaques on the abdomen.

Who could it be? Taken on May 17, 2006. In the western part of Mordovia.

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12.02.2009 8:42, Fornax13

Meloe variegatus Donovan, 1793-Pleasant Beetle smile.gif
Likes: 4

12.02.2009 21:45, VBoris

Comrades, please comment on the following staphylins. If possible, name the genus / species.

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