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Identification of beetles (Coleoptera)

Community and ForumInsects identificationIdentification of beetles (Coleoptera)

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16.03.2008 8:54, RippeR

Indeed, there are similarities with Aguirtes.
I add more photos, maybe they will help..
PS Through a magnifying glass, the legs could not be particularly seen.. frown.gif

This post was edited by RippeR - 16.03.2008 08: 55

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16.03.2008 9:23, amara

And if the right one? smile.gif

I also thought that 5 looking at that picture.

16.03.2008 14:16, Mylabris

The image of castaneus is in the book of Nikolaev and Kozmin on dead eaters. It is posted on the Zinovsky website.

16.03.2008 15:33, omar

Agyrtes castaneus it is
Likes: 1

16.03.2008 17:12, RippeR

what can you say about it??

16.03.2008 20:12, Victor Titov

Indeed, there are similarities with Aguirtes.
I add more photos, maybe they will help..
PS Through a magnifying glass, the legs could not be particularly seen.. frown.gif

Now you can see that this is it - Agyrtes castaneus. And in the new photos, even the aphodioid shape (as indicated in "green") is clearly visible. I wonder who can tell you more about this bug?

16.03.2008 20:39, RippeR

and then there is nothing on the Internet, except for 1 pdf file, in which you do not know what kind of info..

17.03.2008 1:46, Fornax13

and then there is nothing on the Internet, except for 1 pdf file, in which you do not know what kind of info..

Here's what I managed to dig out (there are pictures there, by the way wink.gif
Although in the Nearctic region, the genus is the same, and the label data are no different in terms of ecology.
http://psyche.entclub.org/81/81-501.html

And there is generally a lot of beetles there. pdf is freely available! Fly in - freebie! smile.gif)))
Likes: 4

17.03.2008 9:36, treator

jump.gif opened the season beer.gif

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17.03.2008 9:49, omar

Mesosa myops
Bolitophagus reticulatus
Diaperis boleti
Likes: 1

17.03.2008 10:24, Victor Titov

Likes: 1

17.03.2008 10:54, omar

And me too. beer.gif It's still too dirty and cold in the Moscow region. I won't climb.

17.03.2008 10:55, Victor Titov

And I'm waiting like a raven for bloodmad.gif!
Likes: 2

17.03.2008 11:12, KDG

Help me figure out - is this Mallosia interrupta or Mallosia scovitzi tristis ?
(Azerbaijan: Talish, Zuvand, Gosmalyan; 15-20. V. 2001)

tristis finitely
Likes: 1

17.03.2008 11:14, treator

Thank smile.gifyou and we are happy New Year's Eve wall.gif

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17.03.2008 11:17, Guest

Trichius fasciatus

17.03.2008 11:18, Alexandr Rusinov

It was me
Likes: 1

17.03.2008 11:55, Cerambyx

PG18:
[quote=PG18,15.03.2008 14:44]
4. June, east of the Orenburg region

Calosoma denticolle

picture: DSC_0545_______0.jpg
5. May, upper reaches of the Ural River

Trox cadaverinus

This post was edited by Cerambyx - 03/17/2008 11: 57

17.03.2008 13:15, Трофим

Are you sure, Trofim, that the first darkling is only 5 mm long? I think it's Stenomax aeneus, but if it's only 5 mm, I don't know what it is. frown.gif 
Second Darkling Platydema violacea
Leaf beetle Yes, Timarcha
On Mycetophagus
On Choleva

You are quite right about the black-calf first. googled it the most. And so everything is correct, I signed from the bottom - look at the photo not in order, but by writing from the bottom. So it's at number 4 as you can see. 15 mm.

This post was edited by Trofim - 03/17/2008 13: 17

17.03.2008 13:55, rpanin

9-10 mm? Are you sure this is Europhilus? Can't be Platynus livens?
And where does Pterostichus come from?

Thank you all !
3) and 7) Platynus livens (Gyllenhal, 1810). Most likely it is.

17.03.2008 14:40, treator

confused.gif confused.gif

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17.03.2008 17:40, RippeR

1,2-Serica brunnea
3-Hoplia sp, more precisely-Nimrod in the hands smile.gifof
Likes: 1

18.03.2008 1:50, Fornax13

what can you say about it??

It may well be that these animals from the Palearctic are just as showy as nearcts, and their rarity is related to the timing - there are somehow few pickers in winter...

P.S. Dear RippeR, still look at this "melandroid" euknemida-I think from the Hebrew ch. ex. The USSR of this kind did not exist. In my opinion, this is a female Isorhipis, about them in the "green" wrote that they are only possible in the South-West.

This post was edited by Fornax13-18.03.2008 01: 59
Likes: 3

18.03.2008 13:18, treator

resil resit all old problems rolleyes.gif shuffle.gif

18.03.2008 20:50, bials

Help in identifying the bug!
picture: ____21.2.jpg
picture: ____21.1.jpg
Taken in Moscow

18.03.2008 21:03, RippeR

It may well be that these animals from the Palearctic are just as showy as nearcts, and their rarity is related to the timing - there are somehow few pickers in winter...

P.S. Dear RippeR, still look at this "melandroid" euknemida-I think from the Hebrew ch. ex. The USSR of this kind did not exist. In my opinion, this is a female Isorhipis, about them in the "green" wrote that they are only possible in the South-West.


A very strange place where I found castaneus - a far-stretching steppe, all the grass is trampled by cows, as there is a farm nearby, the rest of the arable land, everything is quite dirty and shows no signs of life.. There are a few dusty poplars on one side of the road and a dirty tree stump on the other, where you wipe your feet and there is nothing under the bark at all.. Passed in one direction-nothing, passed in the other-a beetle sat down on a stump, well, I caught it, I saw that I had never even seen such things.. A strange find, belongs to the category of those "random", because I did not stay at the stump for a long time at all.

PS In the sense of watching melandroid euknemida? Should I try running it on green? By the way, what is melandroid eucnemide??? smile.gif rolleyes.gif

This post was edited by RippeR - 03/18/2008 21: 20
Likes: 1

18.03.2008 21:03, RippeR

Xylotrechus rusticus
Likes: 1

18.03.2008 21:21, bials

And this bug was sitting on an anemone in the Moscow region
picture: ____17.1.jpg
picture: ____17.2.jpg
Does anyone know him?

18.03.2008 21:23, Bad Den

And this bug was sitting on an anemone in the Moscow
region Does anyone know it?

Anthrenus scrophulariae (Dermestidae)
Likes: 1

18.03.2008 22:21, bials

And finally,another Muscovite citizen
picture: ____16.1.jpg
picture: ____16.2.jpg
Some toddler?

19.03.2008 0:21, Fornax13

Yes, baby-Margarinotus purpurascens (Schrnk.)
Likes: 4

19.03.2008 0:32, Nimrod

For Mr. treator.
3.jpg - a very interesting specimen of Hoplia (as Mr. RippeR has already correctly stated), most likely from the ungarica group.
It is impossible to determine the appearance from the photo - you need at least clear pictures of the claw segments and claws on top and bottom of all the legs, even the antennae, pronotum (separate edges), bottom, scales, head from the side....
In general, everything is needed.
It looks like you have a male.
Storage conditions. In any case, you can not so straighten these crunches legs! If you lose the claw segments, then the beetle itself will be useless and can be discarded.
Sincerely,.....
Likes: 3

19.03.2008 0:39, Fornax13

A strange find, belongs to the category of those "random", because I did not stay at the stump for a long time at all.

PS In the sense of watching melandroid euknemida? Should I try running it on green? By the way, what is melandroid eucnemide??? smile.gif  rolleyes.gif

And" specially " these animals, apparently, did not collect at all smile.gif

You can also use green. And eucnemis is this one.
If it goes into this genus, there are 2 possible species-Isorhipis melasoides (Laporte de Castelnau 1835) and I. marmottani (Bonvouloir 1871). The first pobol will be - 7.8-11 mm and dotted prsp. simple and shallow, the second one is thick and granular, and it is smaller - 5-7 mm. I think it's melasoides.

Similar to these?

http://www.koleopterologie.de/gallery/FHL0...oto-koehler.jpg

http://www.koleopterologie.de/gallery/FHL0...s-foto-rose.jpg

This post was edited by Fornax13-19.03.2008 01: 10

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19.03.2008 9:48, RippeR

on 1 view is quite similar. I'll try to skip the green card when I get to the institute. I hope something interesting will come out.

19.03.2008 10:32, KDG

on 1 view is quite similar.

It's good. when similar to 4 views-worse smile.gif
Likes: 4

19.03.2008 11:08, treator

mol.gif

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19.03.2008 11:14, Victor Titov

Silpha carinata Hbst.
Likes: 1

19.03.2008 12:01, stierlyz

Very similar to Agyrtes castaneus - I collected them repeatedly
Likes: 1

19.03.2008 12:20, Necrocephalus

Very similar to Agyrtes castaneus - I have collected them many times

If you don't mind, can you tell us where and how? smile.gif
Likes: 2

19.03.2008 12:39, Victor Titov

Very similar to Agyrtes castaneus - I have collected them many times

Duc, the Ripper beetle is only very similar to Agyrtes castaneus, or is it safe to say that this is it? And if there are doubts, and it may not be Agyrtes, then what other options are possible?
Likes: 1

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