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Identification of beetles (Coleoptera)

Community and ForumInsects identificationIdentification of beetles (Coleoptera)

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31.05.2015 7:36, gstalker

female glandium, I'd say. Stacking?

Yes smile.gif

31.05.2015 12:12, lazardin

Good day, help, if possible, with elephants
north of Vologda region
end of June-July 2014
1 picture: DSC02459.JPG
2 picture: DSC02462.JPG
3 picture: DSC02465.JPG
4 picture: DSC02468.JPG
5 picture: DSC02471.JPG
6 picture: DSC02474.JPG

May 2015
7 picture: DSC02368.JPG
8 picture: DSC02489.JPG
9 picture: DSC02492.JPG
10picture: DSC02495.JPG
11picture: DSC02501.JPG
12picture: DSC02507.JPG
13 Platystomos albinus (Linnaeus, 1758)??
picture: Platystomos_albinus__Linnaeus__1758_.JPG

This post was edited by lazardin - 05/31/2015 12: 12
Likes: 1

31.05.2015 12:18, Tivanik

30.05.2015, Saint Petersburg
All three Cryptocephalus octopunctatus (Scopoli, 1763)???

picture: IMGP7458.jpg

picture: IMGP7429.jpg

picture: IMGP7365.jpg

This post was edited by Tivanik - 05/31/2015 14: 01

31.05.2015 12:43, Tivanik

30.05.2015, Saint Petersburg
Help me identify a bug

picture: IMGP7506_2.jpg

31.05.2015 13:20, gstalker

female glandium, I'd say. Stacking?

And this is probably a male ?

Pictures:
picture: 5.jpg
5.jpg — (283.64к)

picture: 6.jpg
6.jpg — (286.12 k)

31.05.2015 13:22, Mantispid

Good day, help, if possible, with elephants
north of the Vologda region
end of June-July 2014

1-Leucophyes pedestris (Poda, 1761) - x2
2-Tanymecus palliatus (Fabricius, 1787), male
3-Phyllobius sp., but something seems to be long for Ph.
pyri head tube 4-Otiorhynchus (Pendragon) ovatus (Linnaeus, 1758)
5 - Liophloeus tessulatus (Müller, 1776)
6-Otiorhynchus (Otiolehus) tristis (Scopoli, 1763)
7-Grypus equiseti (Fabricius, 1775) (this is not a weevil, but an Erirhinidae)
8-Polydrusus (s. str.) tereticollis (DeGeer, 1775)
9-Sitona sp., nothing is visible, but the most likely variant is S. striatellus
10-Apionidae gen. sp. (I pass)
11-Hypera (s. str.) sp., male
12-Notaris scirpi (Fabricius, 1792) (also Erirhinidae, for accuracy see http://coleop123.narod.ru/key/eririninae/Notaris.html)
13-yes

This post was edited by Mantispid - 05/31/2015 13: 23

31.05.2015 13:25, Mantispid

And this is probably a male ?

and this is Curculio venosus (Gravenhorst, 1807)
Likes: 1

31.05.2015 13:59, gstalker

and the last Curculio....
Curculio glandium (Marsham, 1802)♀ ?

Pictures:
picture: 2Curculio_glandium__Marsham__1802____.jpg
2Curculio_glandium__Marsham__1802____.jpg — (300.06к)

picture: 2_1Curculio_glandium__Marsham__1802____.jpg
2_1Curculio_glandium__Marsham__1802____.jpg — (267.32к)

31.05.2015 14:11, Mantispid

and the last Curculio....
Curculio glandium (Marsham, 1802)♀ ?

yes, right
Likes: 1

31.05.2015 15:56, gstalker

Germany 24.05.15 8mm
Phyllobius sp.?

Pictures:
picture: 1.jpg
1.jpg — (296.11к)

picture: 1_1.jpg
1_1.jpg — (286.07к)

picture: 1_2.jpg
1_2.jpg — (290.45 k)

picture: IMG_1522.JPG
IMG_1522.JPG — (287.16к)

31.05.2015 17:18, Mantispid

Germany 24.05.15 8mm
Phyllobius sp.?

Phyllobius arborator (Herbst, 1797) имхо
Likes: 1

31.05.2015 17:21, Dmitry Vlasov

1 - Leucophyes pedestris (Poda, 1761) - x2

Ilya? why does this" elephant " go so far north??? To the north of the Vologda region?

31.05.2015 17:33, Mantispid

Ilya? why does this" elephant " go so far north??? To the north of the Vologda region?

but I didn't pay attention, I read it as "Volgograd region". shuffle.gif

so it approximately reaches the Voronezh-Kazan line according to the data that I have

31.05.2015 17:49, Dmitry Vlasov

but I didn't pay attention, I read it as "Volgograd region". shuffle.gif

so it reaches approximately the Voronezh-Kazan line according to the data that I have

So it's definitely Leucophyes pedestris??? Take a closer look, otherwise you might end up with the discovery of the century, Mona lol.gif
True, Vologda residents have some kind of anomaly - they come across unusual bronzes: http://www.zin.ru/animalia/coleoptera/rus/vologcet.htm
Then this elephant...

This post was edited by Elizar - 05/31/2015 17: 49

31.05.2015 17:56, Mantispid

So it's definitely Leucophyes pedestris??? Take a closer look, otherwise you might end up with the discovery of the century, Mona lol.gif
True, Vologda residents have some kind of anomaly - they come across unusual bronzes: http://www.zin.ru/animalia/coleoptera/rus/vologcet.htm
Then this elephant...

of course it's 100% him:
http://www.zin.ru/animalia/coleoptera/rus/leupedms.htm
smile.gif

31.05.2015 17:56, Fornax13

this is Curculio venosus (Gravenhorst, 1807)

or pellitus, which I think is more likely

This post was edited by Fornax13-31.05.2015 17: 58
Likes: 1

31.05.2015 17:58, Mantispid

or pellitus

if it is available in Germany, then yes, more on pellitus like

31.05.2015 18:07, Fornax13

of course it's 100% him:
http://www.zin.ru/animalia/coleoptera/rus/leupedms.htm
smile.gif

but I wonder if anyone has opened copies with ETR? )
Likes: 1

31.05.2015 18:10, lazardin

but I didn't pay attention, I read it as "Volgograd region". shuffle.gif

so it reaches approximately the Voronezh-Kazan line according to the data that I have


I checked the label: assembled at Vozhega railway station, 15,07,2014, then skidding is possible ???

31.05.2015 18:18, Dmitry Vlasov

I checked the label: assembled at Vozhega railway station, 15,07,2014, then skidding is possible ???

Anything can happen yes.gif
But in order to confirm this, you need to at least find out where and on what the species develops (how and with what it got)
And what kind of trains pass through this station...
At least in YAO, through which trains run from the south - this view was not found...

This post was edited by Elizar - 05/31/2015 18: 22

31.05.2015 18:18, Mantispid

but I wonder if anyone has opened copies with ETR? )

And I'm interested too smile.gif
Arzanov says they are not only opened, they also need to be inflated

31.05.2015 18:19, Mantispid

Anything can happen yes.gif 
But in order to confirm this, you need to at least find out where and on what the species develops (how and with what it got)
And what kind of trains go through this station...
At least in YAO - this species was not found...

on the roots of some umbrella plants, it develops, even in our country it is local, so delivery is excluded

31.05.2015 18:30, Dmitry Vlasov

on the roots of some umbrella plants, it develops, even in our country it is local, so delivery is excluded

And with some kind of soil-like sand from the south? Although it seems that there is no need to carry sand from the south along the Railway!? If the find was on the river bank, it can be assumed that they brought like some elephant from the Cleonines (I don't remember, M. B. Cleonis pigra) to North America with ballast collected on European beaches. ..

31.05.2015 18:32, Mantispid

And with some kind of soil-like sand from the south? Although it seems that there is no need to carry sand from the south along the Railway!? If the find was on the river bank, it can be assumed that they brought like some elephant from the Cleonines (I don't remember, M. B. Cleonis pigra) to North America with ballast collected on European beaches. ..

maybe this is what scientists and research are needed
for, maybe this is really a delivery, or maybe there is some northern local relict population?

p. s. and it is desirable to open it, but what if it really is L. occidentalis Dieckmann 1982

This post was edited by Mantispid - 05/31/2015 18: 33

31.05.2015 19:27, vasiliy-feoktistov

Just decided to check it out.
This multicolored pair (female on the right) appears to be Lixus (Dilixellus) bardanae (Fabricius, 1787) ?
Collected today by copulating on horse sorrel. M. O., Zheleznodorozhny.
picture: bardanae.jpg

31.05.2015 19:28, Fornax13

Just decided to check it out.
This multicolored pair (female on the right) appears to be Lixus (Dilixellus) bardanae (Fabricius, 1787) ?
Collected today by copulating on horse sorrel. M. O., Zheleznodorozhny.

yes, it is bardanae
Likes: 1

31.05.2015 19:29, Woodmen

Surroundings of Kirovo-Chepetsk, Kirov region. May.

user posted image

31.05.2015 19:34, lazardin

anything can happen,
p. s. and it is desirable to open it, but what if it really is L. occidentalis Dieckmann 1982


I don't know how to open it, otherwise I would have done ((

31.05.2015 19:41, vasiliy-feoktistov

Surroundings of Kirovo-Chepetsk, Kirov region. May.

Carabus (Oreocarabus) glabratus Paykull, 1790
Likes: 1

31.05.2015 21:31, аруд

What kind of firefly and bug with a bronze-gold sheen???7 Bryansk province. May. thanks

Pictures:
picture: 21____________.jpg
21____________.jpg — (312.28к)

picture: 22______.jpg
22______.jpg — (289.27к)

31.05.2015 22:06, Seneka

It is not possible to determine before the genus what kind of animal it is?

Turkey, Mersin province, April 15, 1100-1200 m, under the rocks.

Male, 7.5 mm long.

For example, a run on "Green", for other determinants is similar.

22) Lower legs on the inner edge with a pre-apical notch.
36) Epimers of the middle gr. are separated from the middle pelvic cavities by protruding lateral parts of the srgr and hrr.
37) Br. with 6 sternites
79) External groove of the mandibles without a bristle-bearing pore
81) Forehead at the inner. edges of each eye with 2 bristle-bearing pores
87) Mandibles with a simple pointed tip
88) Penultimate member of labial palps with only 2 long setae
(Actually, he doesn't have quite two of them. There is another very short one, at the point of attachment of the last segment, almost on the opposite side... If you count this micro-bristle, you get Amara, similar in habit, although this sign is clearer in Amara. Then, what kind of view is it?)

Next, a mixed set of attributes

The legs are glabrous above, the antennae are pubescent from the 4th segment, the elytra on the 3rd prom. with a bristle-bearing pore. (As in Pterostichus, but the prong is not two-pronged)

The chin prong is not two-pronged , but rather absent, or it is not obvious (As in Adontonyx, but the habit is not the same at all).

The prothorax process seems to be keeled and edged, the last part of the labial palps is not expanded (as in Calathus, the habitus is similar, but the claws are absolutely smooth, without ridges and teeth).

106) The definition agrees on Platyderus in all features, but I could not find any photos of this genus with a similar habit, all are not at all similar.

picture: DSC_2391.JPG
picture: DSC_2400.JPG

This post was edited by Seneka - 31.05.2015 22: 23

31.05.2015 23:59, Fornax13

It is not possible to determine before the genus what kind of animal it is?
Turkey, Mersin province, April 15, 1100-1200 m, under the rocks.

Not your pet?
http://gallica.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/bpt6k6344...age.r=amaroides
Here is another description - it is like Pterostichus namrun there (Namrun, I understand, in prov. Mersin is just right):
http://www.landesmuseum.at/pdf_frei_remote...3_0016-0022.pdf

This post was edited by Fornax13-01.06.2015 00: 21
Likes: 1

01.06.2015 0:25, Fornax13

1-Leucophyes pedestris (Poda, 1761) - x2
2-Tanymecus palliatus (Fabricius, 1787), male
3-Phyllobius sp., but something seems to be long for Ph.
pyri head tube 4-Otiorhynchus (Pendragon) ovatus (Linnaeus, 1758)
5 - Liophloeus tessulatus (Müller, 1776)
6-Otiorhynchus (Otiolehus) tristis (Scopoli, 1763)
7-Grypus equiseti (Fabricius, 1775) (this is not a weevil, but an Erirhinidae)
8-Polydrusus (s. str.) tereticollis (DeGeer, 1775)
9-Sitona sp., nothing is visible, but the most likely variant is S. striatellus
10-Apionidae gen. sp. (I pass)
11-Hypera (s. str.) sp., male
12-Notaris scirpi (Fabricius, 1792) (also Erirhinidae, for accuracy see http://coleop123.narod.ru/key/eririninae/Notaris.html)
13-yes

10-Apionidae gen. sp. - I want to say Betulapion simile

01.06.2015 0:52, Seneka

Not your pet?
http://gallica.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/bpt6k6344...age.r=amaroides
Here is another description - it is like Pterostichus namrun there (Namrun, I understand, in prov. Mersin is just right):
http://www.landesmuseum.at/pdf_frei_remote...3_0016-0022.pdf

I don't know, I was only able to translate the text from the second link. There's still no photo.
If this is a pterostichus, then what about the lack of a double prong on the chin?

01.06.2015 1:04, Fornax13

This is not a pterostichus, but a monotypic genus from Sphodrini, type platiderus - "Mentum dente medio perspicuo, simplici"

This post was edited by Fornax13-01.06.2015 01: 16
Likes: 1

01.06.2015 1:17, алекс 2611

30.05.2015, Saint Petersburg
All three Cryptocephalus octopunctatus (Scopoli, 1763)???


Like everything on
Likes: 1

01.06.2015 1:31, Shamil Murtazin

Southern Urals, 31.05.2015
1.
picture: JPG_00001.jpg

picture: JPG_00003.jpg

picture: JPG_00006.jpg

This post was edited by rumpelstiltskin - 01.06.2015 01: 34

01.06.2015 1:37, Fornax13

Southern Urals, 31.05.2015

Selatosomus cruciatus
Likes: 1

01.06.2015 9:24, Василий Л.

What kind of firefly and bug with a bronze-gold sheen???7 Bryansk province. May. thanks

21.jpg -Leaf BEETLE Chrysolina fastuosa (Scopoli, 1763) .
Likes: 1

01.06.2015 12:52, Ютта

Please help me identify it. Coniferous wood products, Belarus. Very strange beast, of course pokotsany strongly, but this only worsens everything. No legs (looked very good)It's a mess instead of pop. But there are spikes and not even one but a whole group. And very strange thorns on the tergites

Pictures:
picture: DSC_1233.JPG
DSC_1233.JPG — (274.42к)

picture: DSC_1236.JPG
DSC_1236.JPG — (322.76к)

picture: DSC_1242.JPG
DSC_1242.JPG — (292.53к)

picture: DSC_1246.JPG
DSC_1246.JPG — (274.6к)

picture: DSC_1247.JPG
DSC_1247.JPG — (263.48к)

picture: DSC_1238.JPG
DSC_1238.JPG — (296.37к)

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