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Identification of beetles (Coleoptera)

Community and ForumInsects identificationIdentification of beetles (Coleoptera)

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06.04.2010 14:58, akulich-sibiria

about 11 mm
. then who is it?...3-4 millimeters less
picture: Р9240240а.јрд
and here's a question about a couple of beetles.
2. Is this Tetratoma ancora ? formula 5-5-4
picture: Р9230216а.јрд
picture: Р9230217а.јрд
3. and this one
picture: Р9230219а.јрд
4. Is this Mycetophagus quadripustulatus?
picture: Р9170145а.јрд

06.04.2010 15:01, vasiliy-feoktistov

about 11 mm
. then who is it?...3-4 millimeters less

Well, this is Ostoma ferrugineum Linnaeus, 1758 and is. And here's the first one: confused.gif Peltis (=Zimioma) grossum Linnaeus, 1758 may also be present.

This post was edited by vasiliy-feoktistov - 06.04.2010 15: 06

06.04.2010 15:10, Evgenich

I caught this beetle once in the Caucasus (Sochi region). I straightened it out at home, but I can't determine the type. Can anyone help with the definition? The beetle's length is 2.8 mm.
user posted image

This post was edited by Evgenich - 06.04.2010 21: 48

06.04.2010 16:54, Алексей Сажнев

help with these beetles.
1. Staphylin was caught in a pine tree with an admixture of birch. About 5 mm. The suture groove is poorly marked, disappears at the base. The top is bare, with grooves on the sides of the abdomen on all tergites. Forelegs slightly extended. As an option, male Tachinus, can T. apterus


I'm not an expert on the group, even very far from staphylinids, but why apterus and with such wings wink.gif

06.04.2010 17:05, akulich-sibiria

Well, this is Ostoma ferrugineum Linnaeus, 1758 and is. And here's the first one: confused.gif Peltis (=Zimioma) grossum Linnaeus, 1758 may also be present.


So I was right in both cases. Thank You
Likes: 1

06.04.2010 17:07, akulich-sibiria

I'm not a specialist in the group, even very far from staphylinids, but why apterus and with such wings wink.gif

I'm probably even more adept at this... smile.gif
therefore, I can only assume, I try to determine by green. So far I'm trying to determine at least up to the genus

06.04.2010 17:08, Алексей Сажнев

well, my early post-can be considered as a joke, I wrote this purely because of Latin-apterus-wingless

06.04.2010 19:42, kut

Tell me the name. Moscow. Vorobyovy Gory. Crawling along the mossy trunk of a tree. 6.4.2010. Thanks!

picture: P4064253.JPG
picture: P4064254.JPG
picture: P4064255.JPG

06.04.2010 19:49, Алексей Сажнев

Halyzia sedecimguttata (Linnaeus, 1758)
Likes: 1

07.04.2010 11:36, Scolytus

Can you tell me what kind of beetle it is? Photos from the Internet. Indonesia. Cossoninae, similar to our own Cossonus.picture: 342_1.jpg

This post was edited by Scolytus - 07.04.2010 11: 55

07.04.2010 12:42, Fornax13

Kossonin from the photo, and even tropical... It's only shamanic...

www.ffpri.affrc.go.jp/labs/kanko/257-3.pdf

And here in the 1873 issue, I think, is Wollaston-On the Genera of the Cossonidae: http://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/bibliography/11516

By the method of scientific poke-the genus Oxydema - a few of them.
Likes: 1

07.04.2010 16:31, Scolytus

And here's another question, Pleurocleonus
picture: 1.jpg

07.04.2010 17:19, Fornax13

Where does the pleurocleon come from?
I would say that sollicYtus.
Likes: 1

07.04.2010 18:00, akulich-sibiria

on that page I showed the staff, do you have any thoughts on it?
Thank You

07.04.2010 20:22, Fornax13

Well, tachinus-yes, without options even. And here's what it is... I have not climbed in them yet, I can throw off the keys for Wed. Europe, if necessary.

08.04.2010 12:16, Scolytus

Where does the pleurocleon come from?
I'd say sollycYtus.

Thanks! Ukraine Luhansk region. there is a lot of confusion with them
On the site
http://www.zin.ru/animalia/coleoptera/imag...adrivittatu.jpg
similar to this quadrivittatus
on the site
http://www.beetleskorea.com/curculionidae/...ukhinjulbgm.htm
sollicitus which is similar to quadrivittatus is much stronger

Not definable

08.04.2010 12:26, Buzman

Then Evgenich: it seems to be something from the Trechinae. Epaphiopsis or che-ta type of tavo...
Likes: 1

08.04.2010 12:51, Fornax13

Unsuccessful keys-I agree. If there are both types, they are normally different.
Yes, in my opinion, all the same sollicitus. In the photo with ZINA (really quadrivittatus), the odd spaces of the NDC are strongly raised, convex, and the grooves, on the contrary, are strongly depressed. The beetle somehow looks "ribbed". My quadrivittatuses are the same. In the Korean and Your beetles, only the 3rd gap is slightly raised, the rest are flat and the grooves are practically not depressed.

This post was edited by Fornax13-08.04.2010 13: 07

Pictures:
picture: pleurocl.jpg
pleurocl.jpg — (190.91к)

Likes: 1

08.04.2010 18:33, akulich-sibiria

tell me is it samei Cryptocephalus cordiger?
on Prunus_padus___Novosib_June_2009
picture: Prunus_padus___Novosib_June_2009.jpg

09.04.2010 10:11, Alexandr Rusinov

Uh-huh, Cordiger looks like it...
Likes: 1

09.04.2010 10:16, vasiliy-feoktistov

He's the one: http://www.zin.ru/Animalia/Coleoptera/rus/crycoriz.htm

09.04.2010 11:13, Liparus

I caught this beetle once in the Caucasus (Sochi region). I straightened it out at home, but I can't determine the type. Can anyone help with the definition? The beetle's length is 2.8 mm.
user posted image

Maybe here is your Trechus
http://www.zin.ru/Animalia/Coleoptera/rus/trech.htm

09.04.2010 13:03, Evgenich

Buzman, Liparus
Indeed, it is very likely that you are right, and this is trehus jump.gif
Thank you very much! smile.gif

09.04.2010 13:50, Alexandr Rusinov

Trekhus is trekhus, but there are a lot of them in the Caucasus and endemics too... Wherever you spit in the endemic you will get... So there is no way to be more precise...
Likes: 1

09.04.2010 14:08, Liparus

Trekhus is trekhus, but there are a lot of them in the Caucasus and endemics too... Wherever you spit in the endemic you will get... So there is no way to be more precise...

Here I agree with you,but you never know, and something ordinary.
I remember Nikolay Yunakov coming in the winter and telling me that he had caught a new (third for the Crimea) type of trekhus on the yayl in Crimea.According to him, he caught the new species under large blocks of stones that were half buried in the ground, but under small blocks they were not,namely under large ones (like 70 cm in length).It would be fun to find them smile.gifyourself ,he caught a lot of them. smile.gif
Likes: 2

09.04.2010 17:12, Lixus

And here's another question, Pleurocleonus
picture: 1.jpg

in my opinion, too, sollicitus, by the way, it is somewhat larger in size.
Likes: 1

11.04.2010 1:27, DIMac

I'll probably post it here for everyone's information.

picture: x_c5abdbbb.jpg

This type of aphodia opens the beetle collection season in Kazan. It appears from year to year at the end of March, swarms in clouds and disappears in mid-May, but in nature it was never found anywhere. And in general, I spent a lot of time identifying it by "green", as soon as I didn't twist it. Until finally Fornax13 from the photo did not specify that it turns out to be "East Siberian" (Phae)Aphodius rectus smile.gif

picture: x_9ada4585.jpg
moreover 9 black beetles account for 1-2 brown aberrations
although here in the photo they look like completely different species

picture: x_4a7614d9.jpg
and this is actually Aphodius (Phaeaphodius) rectus ab. biformis
here the basal border of the prsp interrupted at the posterior corner is clearly visible.


I would like to know - has anyone ever seen it in nature? or on the European part, this species is so synanthropic...

This post was edited by DIMac - 11.04.2010 01: 37
Likes: 1

11.04.2010 7:35, akulich-sibiria

I'll probably post it here for everyone's information.

picture: x_c5abdbbb.jpg

This type of aphodia opens the beetle collection season in Kazan. It appears from year to year at the end of March, swarms in clouds and disappears in mid-May, but in nature it was never found anywhere. And in general, I spent a lot of time identifying it by "green", as soon as I didn't twist it. Until finally Fornax13 from the photo did not specify that it turns out to be "East Siberian" (Phae)Aphodius rectus smile.gif

picture: x_9ada4585.jpg
moreover 9 black beetles account for 1-2 brown aberrations
although here in the photo they look like completely different species

picture: x_4a7614d9.jpg
and this is actually Aphodius (Phaeaphodius) rectus ab. biformis
here the basal border of the prsp interrupted at the posterior corner is clearly visible.
I would like to know - has anyone ever seen it in nature? or on the European part, this species is so synanthropic...

one of the most common species we have in Siberia, while catching beetles both in May and at the end of August. We also catch beetles with completely yellow-brown wings. It seems the form is semicolor Rtt.
Likes: 2

11.04.2010 8:04, evk

I caught this beetle once in the Caucasus (Sochi region). I straightened it out at home, but I can't determine the type. Can anyone help with the definition? The beetle's length is 2.8 mm.
user posted image

Given that the Sochi district and the appearance of the beetle, as seen in the enlarged photo, I can poshamanit-Trechus gravidus Putz., 1870. But this is exactly "shamanism" shuffle.gif
Likes: 1

11.04.2010 11:43, DNN

What kind of bug? Can I identify you?"

user posted image
10.04.2010. МО

11.04.2010 11:55, Bad Den

What kind of bug? Can I identify you?"
10.04.2010. MO

Phosphuga atrata
Likes: 1

11.04.2010 20:46, Andrey Ponomarev

mol.gif Help me identify these beetles. All m. O g Zhukovsky river Moscow 11.04.2010 picture: IMG_0208.jpg picture: IMG_0204.jpgsmall weevils size approximately 3-4mm.

The post was edited by Gennadich - 11.04.2010 21: 55

11.04.2010 21:01, evk

  mol.gif Help me identify these beetles. All m. O g Zhukovsky river Moscow 11.04.2010 small weevils size approximately 3-4mm. this floater is about 20-22 mm.

Well, according to weevils to the genus-Dorytomus sp. I can't be more precise. And your "plavunets" in bedbugs please-plavt is.

This post was edited by evk - 11.04.2010 21: 02
Likes: 1

11.04.2010 21:47, Fornax13

Check baby elephants for D. taeniatus if on willow.
Likes: 1

11.04.2010 21:52, Andrey Ponomarev

Check baby elephants for D. taeniatus if on a willow tree.
On the willow tree on her birthmark.

11.04.2010 21:53, Andrey Ponomarev

Well, according to weevils to the genus-Dorytomus sp. I can't be more precise. And your "plavunets" in bedbugs please-plavt is.
Moving urgently, thank you.

11.04.2010 22:09, Fornax13

On the willow tree on her birthmark.

There was something else close, also willow, so it's better to check... I don't remember now ... rolleyes.gif

12.04.2010 13:56, Андреас

Hello. I ask for help in determining. Caught on April 1 on the southern treeless slope of travertine Mountain Goryachaya.
#3 I see for the first time. Everything ran on duty on a sunny day.

Pictures:
picture: _1__7mm.JPG
_1__7mm.JPG — (83.77к)

picture: _2__9mm.JPG
_2__9mm.JPG — (96.57к)

picture size: _3__7mm..JPG
_3__7mm..JPG — (134.58к)

12.04.2010 14:00, Андреас

Now the following ones, which I compare with previously defined forum members, are very similar to these new ones.
4-?
5-?

Pictures:
picture size: _4__9mm..JPG
_4__9mm..JPG — (95.06к)

Image: Harpalus_distinguendus_18. 10. 08_PYATIGORSK.jpg
Harpalus_distinguendus_18.10.08_Пятигорск.jpg — (90.61к)

picture: _5__4mm.JPG
_5__4mm.JPG — (89.29к)

picture: Melaphodius_caspius_18.10.08__6mm_Ессентуки.jpg
Melaphodius_caspius_18.10.08__6mm_Ессентуки.jpg — (86.11к)

12.04.2010 15:04, Дзанат

1 Opatrum
Likes: 1

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