E-mail: Password: Create an Account Recover password

About Authors Contacts Get involved Русская версия

show

Identification of beetles (Coleoptera)

Community and ForumInsects identificationIdentification of beetles (Coleoptera)

Pages: 1 ...139 140 141 142 143 144 145 146 147... 854

12.02.2009 22:04, VBoris

... lamellar whiskers.

This post was edited by VBoris - 12.02.2009 22: 08

Pictures:
picture: plastinchatousie1.jpg
plastinchatousie1.jpg — (42.17к)

picture: bronzovka1.jpg
bronzovka1.jpg — (60.38к)

picture: pestrjak1.jpg
pestrjak1.jpg — (83.86к)

12.02.2009 23:33, VBoris

the horse...

Pictures:
picture: skakun2.jpg
skakun2.jpg — (42.09к)

12.02.2009 23:37, VBoris

myagkotelka...

Pictures:
picture: zhuk1.jpg
zhuk1.jpg — (53.52к)

12.02.2009 23:39, VBoris

and who does this apply to?

Pictures:
picture: zhestkokriloe1.jpg
zhestkokriloe1.jpg — (81.57к)

12.02.2009 23:48, VBoris

False satellite...

Pictures:
picture: lozhnoslonik1.jpg
lozhnoslonik1.jpg — (54.28к)

13.02.2009 1:13, Fornax13

Staphylins:
1. Staphylinus dimidiaticornis
2. Ontholestes tesselatus
3. Oxyporus rufus
Plates:
1. Hoplia - parvula
2. Oxythyrea funesta
3. Trichius fasciatus
Racehorse-Cicindela hybrida, I think
I don't remember the Soft-bodied offhand.
Then The leaf-eater-Galeruca tanaceti
And the false elephant-muzhyk Platystomos albinus.
Likes: 1

13.02.2009 11:25, barry

Help me determine...
Kharkiv region, Berminvody
12.02.2009
under the bark (? acacia), oak forest
picture: IMG_28230.JPG

under the bark
picture: IMG_28970.JPG

This post was edited by barry - 02/13/2009 11: 36

13.02.2009 11:43, Buzman

Hololepta plana (Sulzer, 1776)
Likes: 1

13.02.2009 18:41, stierlyz

Staphylinus is more likely erythropterus - only it has golden hairs on the scutellum. I'll take a look at the black one, but I'd like a picture with a muzzle.
Likes: 1

13.02.2009 19:38, Fornax13

Yes, erythropterus, of course. For some reason, I remember exactly the oppositeshuffle.gif-I completely glitched.
And black is similar to Ocypus brunnipes (Fabricius, 1781)

This post was edited by Fornax13-13.02.2009 19: 44
Likes: 2

14.02.2009 10:52, stierlyz

Yes, it is similar, but nothing more.

14.02.2009 13:02, Liparus

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


№4 Silpha obscura (Linnaeus, 1758)
№6 Silpha olivieri (Bedel, 1887)
Likes: 1

14.02.2009 13:53, Necrocephalus

№4 Silpha obscura (Linnaeus, 1758)
№6 Silpha olivieri (Bedel, 1887)

Arthur, can you tell us anything about this sylph olivieri? Is there any information that it occurs in Russia or Ukraine? In the book of Nikolaev and the Kozmins on the sylphs of Russia and neighboring countries, there is not a word about it...
A beetle #6 - still Thanatophilus...
Likes: 1

14.02.2009 13:55, Musson max

Dear colleagues, please help me with this leaf beetle, otherwise it has already tormented me so much smile.gif confused.gif cool.gif
There is an assumption that Chrysolina variants or menthastry, I don't know what you think?

21.07.2008
Crimea, Alushta, on mixed grasses
picture: 1.jpg

Thank you all in advance smile.gif

This post was edited by Musson_max - 02/14/2009 13: 56

15.02.2009 20:19, Dr. Niko

Dear beetle experts, this is probably something banal, but since I don't understand anything about beetles (well, I only know bronze), I ask you not to hit it painfully shuffle.gif
Bug from the cover of a notebook smile.gif
Well, preferably male / female and a Latin name. Thank you.

This post was edited by Dr. Niko - 15.02.2009 20: 21

Pictures:
picture: P1090084.JPG
P1090084.JPG — (138.22к)

16.02.2009 0:56, Bad Den

Dear beetle experts, this is probably something banal, but since I don't understand anything about beetles (well, I only know bronze), I ask you not to hit it painfully shuffle.gif
Bug from the cover of a notebook smile.gif
Well, preferably male / female and a Latin name. Thank you.

I think it's one of the tropical antlers, like Odontolabis or Prosopocoilus

16.02.2009 7:57, Mylabris

Arthur, can you tell us anything about this sylph olivieri? Is there any information that it occurs in Russia or Ukraine? In the book of Nikolaev and the Kozmins on the sylphs of Russia and neighboring countries, there is not a word about it...
A beetle #6 is still Thanatophilus...

olivieri is a typical Mediterranean view. According to the Palearctic catalog, it is known from the North. africa, Spain, France, Italy, Greece, Croatia and Bulgaria.
Likes: 2

16.02.2009 10:10, Alexandr Rusinov

№4 Silpha obscura (Linnaeus, 1758)
№6 Silpha olivieri (Bedel, 1887)

Well, for 4 I will not say, but 5-Ablattaria laevigata F.

18.02.2009 16:23, Necrocephalus

olivieri is a typical Mediterranean view. According to the Palearctic catalog, it is known from the North. africa, Spain, France, Italy, Greece, Croatia and Bulgaria.

Yeah, thanks, I've already asked, too... smile.gif
I just wonder where Liparus could have come up with such an unusual version...

This post was edited by Necrocephalus - 02/18/2009 16: 24

19.02.2009 21:30, Liparus

Dear colleagues, please help me with this leaf beetle, otherwise it has already tormented me so much smile.gif  confused.gif  cool.gif
There is an assumption that Chrysolina variants or menthastry, I don't know what you think?

21.07.2008
Crimea, Alushta, on mixed grasses
picture: 1.jpg

Thank you all in advance smile.gif


in my collection, it is defined as Chrysolina herbacea ssp. herbacea
is also from Kryma
Likes: 1

19.02.2009 21:43, Musson max

in my collection, it is defined as Chrysolina herbacea ssp. herbacea
is also from the Crimea


Thank you so much. beer.gif So be it, for lack of anything else. Really thank you, and then I'm already so tired smile.gifof it

19.02.2009 22:02, Musson max

Tell me, dear colleagues, more on this Crimean elephant, if possible.
I assume it's Lixus iridis, is it?
Crimea, Bakhchisarai, on the territory of the Bakhchisarai Palace, 30.04.2008
picture: 30.04.2008___UA____________.___________.jpg

19.02.2009 22:03, Liparus

Thank you so much. beer.gif So be it, for lack of anything else. Really thank you, because I'm already so tired of him smile.gif


I even when sibe razspravlyalas with a dozen such listoedov vspomenal, that ktoto similar earlier laid out in this subject...
I still four days ago as prytyvalsya determine, but alas the Internet earned only today.
Cool beetles

19.02.2009 22:12, Liparus

Tell me, dear colleagues, more on this Crimean elephant, if possible.
I assume it's Lixus iridis, is it?
Crimea, Bakhchisarai, on the territory of the Bakhchisarai Palace, 30.04.2008
picture: 30.04.2008___UA____________.___________.jpg


very similar to the banal Lixus iridis
Likes: 1

20.02.2009 22:02, akulich-sibiria

hello. Here are some softlings. Please confirm it.
1. Cantharis oculata
picture: P8110076_.jpg
picture: P8110077_.jpg
2. C.pellucida
picture: P8110078_.jpg
3. C. rufa (11 mm)
picture: P8110079_.jpg
4. C. pallida (6.5 mm)
picture: P8110082_.jpg
5. C. fusca (but the size is not the same at all, about 8-9 mm)
picture: P8110083_.jpg
picture: P8110084_.jpg
6. C. obscura (the 2nd and 3rd segments are almost identical)
picture: P8110085_.jpg
picture: P8110086_.jpg

20.02.2009 22:16, Fornax13

Oh, I wouldn't risk chasing Asian softlings through European keys.... shuffle.gif
1-Cantharis oculata-probably
3, 4-see more on DV. There are a lot of yellows there... wink.gif
5-probably not C. fusca (and cantharis li...)

20.02.2009 22:24, Fornax13

Lixus-yes, iridis. Chrysolina herbacea = Ch. menthastri. Sitting on mint. But this is still the Crimea, I think there may be something else of its own.
Likes: 1

20.02.2009 23:19, Musson max

Lixus-yes, iridis. Chrysolina herbacea = Ch. menthastri. Sitting on mint. But this is still the Crimea, I think there may be something else of its own.


Thank you so much for your confirmation beer.gif
Chrysolina herbacea = Ch. menthastri, but what is still more correct for today, or are these synonyms and both the first and second names are used?

21.02.2009 1:07, Fornax13

Chrysolina (Synerga) herbacea (Duftschmid, 1825)
Likes: 1

21.02.2009 8:39, akulich-sibiria

Oh, I wouldn't risk chasing Asian softlings through European keys.... shuffle.gif
1-Cantharis oculata-probably
3, 4-see more on DV. There are a lot of yellows there... wink.gif
5-probably not C. fusca (and cantharis li...)


Thanks for the tip, but I've already run it through the DV...There are species with a range far from us. confused.gif Of course, you can find something from those places, such as for example Polygraphus proximus we have appeared, but this is not very likely. I will try to find something decent for our places, but for now only green and Jacobson.... and about 5 I will double-check again. wink.gif

22.02.2009 15:59, Liparus

Lixus-yes, iridis. Chrysolina herbacea = Ch. menthastri. Sitting on mint. But this is still the Crimea, I think there may be something else of its own.

I did not catch this leaf beetle on clover and small grass that has not yet grown(reeds (it has a panicle inflorescence)) .

23.02.2009 13:25, hissarian7

Most likely it is a ground beetle of the genus Amara sp. You don't need to look at the mandibles!

23.02.2009 15:36, Buzman

Who is Amara? Chrysolina, which Musson_max asked about? eek.gif

23.02.2009 17:44, barry

Help with the definition...
06.2006.
Irkutsk region V. Sayany, h=500m. Nizhneudinsky district
Trichodes irkutensis & Thanasimus formicarius?

1.
picture: IMG_3313.JPG

2.
picture: IMG_3312.JPG

3.
picture: IMG_3311.JPG

4.
picture: IMG_3304.JPG

5.
picture: IMG_3303.JPG

6.
picture: IMG_3302.JPG

7.
picture: IMG_3323.JPG

8.
picture: IMG_3314.JPG

9.
picture: IMG_3324.JPG

23.02.2009 17:50, RippeR

cool ones!

23.02.2009 17:58, barry

cool ones!

Collected by Yura Skrylnik, from his collection...

23.02.2009 21:26, RippeR

unfortunately that doesn't mean anything to me frown.gif

I can only assume that 1,2,7,9 is one view
8 is another view

you can also look at the bottom, if some have krasnopopye-1 type, if chernopopye, then another type smile.gif

still the 5th looks a bit different than the 4th and 3.
Likes: 1

24.02.2009 10:58, Alexandr Rusinov

Muraviezhukov should be viewed from below, if the bottom is completely red - formicarius, if the middle and back chest are blackened-rufipes (or whatever it is now...), although there is something else in Eastern Siberia. .. Well, blue ones-yes, irkutensis.
P.S. Yes, I looked, antezhukov in the Irkutsk region is 3-4 species, so the determinant of beetles will fall into your hands...

This post was edited by Anthrenus - 02/24/2009 11: 03
Likes: 1

24.02.2009 12:41, okoem

Is it Trichodes apiarius, or Trichodes favarius, or different species? Which ones?

Pictures:
picture: 20070605_122200.jpg
20070605_122200.jpg — (139.72к)

picture: 20080616_094100.jpg
20080616_094100.jpg — (138.36к)

Likes: 3

24.02.2009 13:37, Buzman

The upper one is favarius, and the lower one is apiarius
Likes: 4

Pages: 1 ...139 140 141 142 143 144 145 146 147... 854

New comment

Note: you should have a Insecta.pro account to upload new topics and comments. Please, create an account or log in to add comments.

* Our website is multilingual. Some comments have been translated from other languages.

Random species of the website catalog

Insecta.pro: international entomological community. Terms of use and publishing policy.

Project editor in chief and administrator: Peter Khramov.

Curators: Konstantin Efetov, Vasiliy Feoktistov, Svyatoslav Knyazev, Evgeny Komarov, Stan Korb, Alexander Zhakov.

Moderators: Vasiliy Feoktistov, Evgeny Komarov, Dmitriy Pozhogin, Alexandr Zhakov.

Thanks to all authors, who publish materials on the website.

© Insects catalog Insecta.pro, 2007—2024.

Species catalog enables to sort by characteristics such as expansion, flight time, etc..

Photos of representatives Insecta.

Detailed insects classification with references list.

Few themed publications and a living blog.