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Identification of beetles (Coleoptera)

Community and ForumInsects identificationIdentification of beetles (Coleoptera)

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20.08.2009 15:36, ezdok

Exhibit! )))

agreed...Only I haven't looked for them yet. Sorry, it's too crowded... But a little later I will definitely put it up...
In the meantime, a few more Namibian photos....

This post was edited by ezdok-08/20/2009 15: 38
Likes: 4

20.08.2009 15:39, Алексей Сажнев

on the perfect photo of zlatka, I think something from Julodis (for example, here is a list of the genus for South Africa: http://web.romascuola.net/bups/julodrsa.htm)
Likes: 1

20.08.2009 15:40, ezdok

+ Beetle from the West Coast ( i.e. from the Yellow Sea coast )
North Korea:

This post was edited by ezdok-08/20/2009 15: 41

20.08.2009 15:42, ezdok

on the perfect photo of zlatka, I think something from Julodis (for example, here is a list of the genus for South Africa: http://web.romascuola.net/bups/julodrsa.htm)

Thank you very much! I'll do some digging....

From the presented list, only Julodis humeralis Gory is similar, but it is difficult to determine by fees...:smile.gif)))

This post was edited by ezdok - 08/20/2009 15: 51

20.08.2009 15:46, Алексей Сажнев

on african beetles, here's another site http://www.beetlesofafrica.com/cat_select....rompage=catalog

in 3 photos Meloidae gen. sp. possibly Mylabris oculata, in the last photo a water lover (Hydrophilidae)

This post was edited by Alexey Sazhnev - 08/20/2009 16: 01
Likes: 1

20.08.2009 15:54, ezdok

on african beetles, here's another site http://www.beetlesofafrica.com/cat_select....rompage=catalog

in 3 photos, Meloidae gen. sp. may be the genus Mylabris


Very similar, but the color variation is too strong.

20.08.2009 15:57, Алексей Сажнев

If you really need a species, then you can contact Maurizio Gigli directly, he is just engaged in this group, I am sure that the genus is Julodis, but I don't know the species! ))

This post was edited by Alexey Sazhnev - 08/20/2009 16: 00
Likes: 1

20.08.2009 16:17, ezdok

If you really need a species, then you can contact Maurizio Gigli directly, he is just engaged in this group, I am sure that the genus is Julodis, but I don't know the species! ))

Thanks for the thought. I somehow didn't think....

20.08.2009 17:01, ezdok

A couple more photos...I really want to identify the first one, but they run so fast that I couldn't get a better picture... Photographed on the sand dunes of Sossuvlea, Namibia.

This post was edited by ezdok-08/20/2009 17: 05

20.08.2009 17:09, scarit

1-darkling (Tenebrionidae), 2-Meloidae, Mylabris sp.
Likes: 1

20.08.2009 17:11, Алексей Сажнев

Abscess I think Mylabris oculata is a very changeable animal, in Africa it seems to be common and ubiquitous ))
Likes: 1

20.08.2009 17:11, Victor Titov

+ Beetle from the West Coast ( i.e. from the Yellow Sea coast )
North Korea:

The last photo shows a water lover (Hydrophilidae)

I would say, not just a water lover, but from the genus Hydrophilus. Judging by the location of the discovery, the possible variants are Hydrophilus dauricus (Mannerheim, 1852) and Hydrophilus acuminatus (Motschulsky, 1853).
Likes: 1

20.08.2009 17:12, Алексей Сажнев

Yes, I agree Hydrophilus, just too lazy to add)) Thanks!
Likes: 1

20.08.2009 21:34, VSB

Perhaps this is some kind of leaf beetle?

Pictures:
picture: ____________________.jpg
____________________.jpg — (269.02к)

20.08.2009 22:52, Алексей Сажнев

probably Chrysolina marginata (Linnaeus, 1767)
Likes: 1

20.08.2009 23:55, Jacik

Hello!
Tell me, plz, what is this bug? 19.08.2009 Lviv, village. Bryukhovichi (Western Ukraine). 27 mm long, found in dry oak foliage, next to a rotten stump containing larvae. Are the larvae also his or is it something else?
ps: sorry for the primitive questions, this is new to me.
user posted image

user posted image

This post was edited by Jacik - 08/20/2009 23: 58

21.08.2009 0:09, RippeR

Carabus glabratus and Cerambycidae sp.
Likes: 1

21.08.2009 0:56, rpanin

Hello!
Tell me, plz, what is this bug? 19.08.2009 Lviv, village. Bryukhovichi (Western Ukraine). 27 mm long, found in dry oak foliage, next to a rotten stump containing larvae. Are the larvae also his or is it something else?
ps: sorry for the primitive questions, this is new to me.
user posted image

user posted image



Carabus (Pachystus) glabratus It is widespread in Bryukhovichi.
Cerambycidae-presumably Rhagium mordax.
If anything,I invite you.8-067-812-40-12 Before lunch, after lunch I go to the mountains.
Likes: 1

21.08.2009 1:35, Fornax13

probably Chrysolina marginata (Linnaeus, 1767)

Most likely Ch. sanguinolenta.
Likes: 2

21.08.2009 8:22, ezdok

1-darkling (Tenebrionidae), 2-Meloidae, Mylabris sp.

I would say, not just a water lover, but from the genus Hydrophilus. Judging by the location of the discovery, the possible variants are Hydrophilus dauricus (Mannerheim, 1852) and Hydrophilus acuminatus (Motschulsky, 1853).

Yes, I agree Hydrophilus, just too lazy to add)) Thanks!

Thank you so much for the definition!
Vodolyubov's discovery site is at the mouth of the Taedong River. Almost at the 38th parallel. They built a dam like our unfinished one in the Gulf of Finland. It protects the estuary from water changes during tides ( they are up to 6 m). Seawater no longer flows into the river, and most of the bay is desalinated...However, it is also somewhat silted up...There are a lot of beetles... Can you tell me where to stick the wasp?
Abscess I think Mylabris oculata is a very changeable animal, in Africa it seems to be common and ubiquitous ))

Thank you again! Is it okay that it is 4 times (or even 5 times ) larger than normal abscesses? Like the red-and-black ones I put up earlier....

This post was edited by ezdok - 08/21/2009 08: 39

21.08.2009 9:08, Алексей Сажнев

Hello!
... next to a rotten stump with maggots in it. Are the larvae also his or is it something else? ps: sorry for the primitive questions, this is new to me.


Yes, the pupae are very similar to Rhagium (Megarhagium) mordax De Geer, 1775, the species inhabits various hardwoods, including oak, and feeds on conifers. Pupae rest in a light cocoon made of wood particles, larvae develop under the bark, without making moves in the wood itself. For comparison purposes http://assazhnev.narod.ru/mordax_larva.jpg
Likes: 1

21.08.2009 12:50, scarit

To ezdok: you can attach a wasp to the topic "Definition of hymenoptera"
Likes: 1

21.08.2009 15:15, Kemist

[attachmentid ()=69288]Please help me identify the weevil. Caught in Uzbekistan, the length is about 2cm.

Pictures:
picture: Bok1.JPG
Bok1.JPG — (135.57к)

picture: Niz1.JPG
Niz1.JPG — (134.16к)

picture: Nos1.JPG
Nos1.JPG — (113.79к)

picture: Verh1.JPG
Verh1.JPG — (145.63к)

21.08.2009 15:30, Kemist

One more

Pictures:
picture: Verh2.JPG
Verh2.JPG — (130.69к)

picture: Niz2.JPG
Niz2.JPG — (95.69 k)

picture: Bok2.JPG
Bok2.JPG — (136.24 k)

21.08.2009 15:52, Kemist

And another one

Pictures:
picture: Niz3.JPG
Niz3.JPG — (143.73к)

picture: Bok3.JPG
Bok3.JPG — (106.19к)

picture: Polubok.JPG
Polubok.JPG — (127.83к)

picture: Verh3.JPG
Verh3.JPG — (128.14к)

21.08.2009 16:06, Kemist

Abscess from Uzbekistan

Pictures:
picture: Verh4.JPG
Verh4.JPG — (121.07к)

picture: Bok4.JPG
Bok4.JPG — (104.57к)

21.08.2009 16:27, bugslov

I am glad to welcome all participants of this forum! Help me decide on Carabus exaratus Quensel or still septemcarinatus ? Oak forest, Georgia, August.

It looks more like exaratus, there are small ribs between the ribs, and septemcarinatus has everything smooth between the ribs.

21.08.2009 16:35, evk

help with another animal from Kharkiv, on the chalk.
http://barry.fotopage.ru/gallery/show_imag...14885&catalog=1

As far as I understand, there should be nothing but Ptochus porcellus Boheman, 1834 in your area. True, the group is not quite mine, maybe I missed something.
Likes: 3

21.08.2009 16:41, evk

I am glad to welcome all participants of this forum! Help me decide on Carabus exaratus Quensel or still septemcarinatus ? Oak forest, Georgia, August.

Georgia where? These two species intersect here and there in Georgia. More like septemcarinatus.

21.08.2009 16:49, Алексей Сажнев

It looks more like exaratus, there are small ribs between the ribs, and septemcarinatus has everything smooth between the ribs.


I can't agree, because septemcarinatus also has these ribs - http://www.flickr.com/photos/coleoptera-us...57609832491744/
http://www.zin.ru/ANIMALIA/COLEOPTERA/rus/carsepkg.htm in addition, as far as I know, septemcarinatus was described as a subspecies of exaratus, now it is a separate species-it differs in larger dimensions, long antennae, and this specimen is more similar in color to septemcarinatus, while exaratus is more brightly colored.

21.08.2009 17:17, evk

I can't agree, because septemcarinatus also has these ribs - http://www.flickr.com/photos/coleoptera-us...57609832491744/
http://www.zin.ru/ANIMALIA/COLEOPTERA/rus/carsepkg.htm in addition, as far as I know, septemcarinatus was described as a subspecies of exaratus, now it is a separate species-it is distinguished by its larger size, long antennae, and this specimen is more similar in color to septemcarinatus, while exaratus is more brightly colored.

That's what I'm talking about, Alexey! 90% septemcarinatus! It's about the same thing ... Well it happens wink.gif

21.08.2009 18:49, Fornax13

To Kemist:
1 - Xanthochelus nomas
2 - ???Nastus sp.
3-Menecleonus (? signaticollis) is so mangy or something...
Likes: 2

21.08.2009 18:54, Kemist

Many thanks to Fornax13! The third beetle is fresh, there is a series, I can take a picture of another copy.

21.08.2009 19:02, Fornax13

Are they all like that? О_о

21.08.2009 19:09, Kemist

Some have more white spots, but most have almost no white spots. As a rule, the beetles are large, about 2 cm. And all fresh in appearance.

21.08.2009 19:12, Fornax13

Looks like it?
http://www.zin.ru/Animalia/Coleoptera/imag...atu_0376aog.jpg

21.08.2009 19:16, Kemist

Probably

21.08.2009 19:50, bugslov

I can't agree, because septemcarinatus also has these ribs - http://www.flickr.com/photos/coleoptera-us...57609832491744/
http://www.zin.ru/ANIMALIA/COLEOPTERA/rus/carsepkg.htm in addition, as far as I know, septemcarinatus was described as a subspecies of exaratus, now it is a separate species-it is distinguished by its larger size, long antennae, and this specimen is more similar in color to septemcarinatus, while exaratus is more brightly colored.

Perhaps it is so. My septemcarinatus from Abkhazia have no small ribs between their ribs confused.gif

This post was edited by bugslov - 08/21/2009 19: 50

21.08.2009 19:58, evk

Perhaps it is so. My septemcarinatus from Abkhazia have no small ribs between their ribs confused.gif

Such a small morphology does not work there - you need to tear the endophallus and look, but the habitus is almost certainly septemcarinatus, especially since this particular species dominates in Transcaucasia, and exaratus on the northern slopes of the GKH!

21.08.2009 20:09, bugslov

, especially since this particular species dominates in Transcaucasia, and exaratus on the northern slopes of the GCC!

I agree with this, only septemcarinatus

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