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Identification of beetles (Coleoptera)

Community and ForumInsects identificationIdentification of beetles (Coleoptera)

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03.06.2008 10:10, Fluegel

BO: Aphodius (Bodilus) lugens Cr. (very similar) Definitely not A. fossor (L.)
Adoretus nigrifrons (Stev.)

03.06.2008 10:38, Fluegel

Transilvania: Akis sp.

03.06.2008 13:42, Nimrod

My deepest respect to you ladies and gentlemen!
Good time of day.

For Mr PG18.
In the photo you signed as This one? and Or these? possibly Glaphyrus oxypterusPall.. Unfortunately, I can't say more precisely from this photo. If you have collected it (I would like to believe), and you need a definition, please take separate pictures of the general view from above, the aedeagus (front and side) of the top of the elytra and the rear tibia (with a visible spur).

Mr. barry.
If a copy (in photo# 6) is collected by you, then it is easiest for you to take it to the definition of D. V. Vovka, so as not to torment the camera once again and wash the existing copy of Onthophagussp.

Likes: 2

03.06.2008 14:05, Fornax13


While zlatki, small (about 5 mm):

Goldfish blue and bronze in scales from the tribe Acmaeoderini. Then, probably, only to Mark Gabrielevich. You can try multi-colored ones by using the keys (which I posted in " scans...") - the genus Anthaxia.
Likes: 1

03.06.2008 15:18, Mylabris

However, Mr. Ripper - you gave me a headache...
This is the first time I've seen this...
I can assume that this is some kind of Lytta, for the Crimea only vesicatoria is indicated.
Maybe an imported exotic?
I will think-so far only so.

In general, I consulted with one Italian specialist (perhaps the most authoritative in this group), he also thinks that this is litta, and what...
Similar litts are found in central and central Asia - but they are slightly longer, their antennae are not sawn, and the shape of the pronotum is different. For comparison - litta tristis (from black).
In general, I advise you to describe a new type of abscess, Mr. Ripper.

Pictures:
picture: lytta.jpg
lytta.jpg — (126.34к)

Likes: 8

04.06.2008 0:35, RippeR

Yeah.. I got it smile.gif
I think I know where I'm going to spend next spring smile.gif
I accept suggestions on how to name the view smile.gif

Mylabris:
Litta is the closest genus, but it looks like a different genus???? If you analyze (of course, this is my subjective opinion) - then you can immediately see that everything is different-antennae, boshka, pronotum, elytra, the beetle itself is matte, wider, the head is generally like that of meloe uralensis, not like litt.., the legs are shorter and even, the beetle itself is shorter.. I discarded the Litta variant when I looked through the green list for this family a couple of weeks ago, because the Litta I saw were completely different - and I didn't even mark the other genera for myself, since I almost didn't see their representatives.

In general, on this occasion, I accept all sorts of advice and teachings, since in this case I am a lamer smile.gif(preferably in a personal account)

This post was edited by RippeR-04.06.2008 00: 36
Likes: 1

04.06.2008 1:26, Fornax13

Then RippeR:
And you try it honestly (in the sense: not "discarding") use the keys to run it (sometimes it helps).

04.06.2008 10:30, barry

Mr. barry.
If a copy (in photo# 6) is collected by you, then it is easiest for you to take it to the definition of D. V. Vovka, so as not to torment the camera once again and wash the existing copy of Onthophagussp.
Thanks! I don't collect, I just shoot. But in principle, if specialists are interested in this, I can also collect it, although I would also need to know how to do it correctly. smile.gif And Comrade D. V. Vovk - is it somewhere in Kharkiv? Can't you give me some contact information? You can write to your personal account...

04.06.2008 10:40, RippeR

Fornax13:
there is no microscope smile.gifSo in such cases I trust professionals in this regionsmile.gif.

04.06.2008 13:04, Nimrod

Good day to you, ladies and gentlemen!

04.06.2008 15:19, barry

Definitely so, Mr. barry. Here, please see.
You need to collect everything and everywhere!

Thank you, I'll try to contact him! As for the beetles-they run around, what to do with them? smile.gif

04.06.2008 22:09, americanecz

Gentlemen,
Tell me what kind of sawyere???!!!
Moscow Region, Dmitrovsky district, 01.0.08

Pictures:
image: ___. jpg
___.jpg — (137.43к)

04.06.2008 22:12, Victor Titov

Gentlemen,
Tell me what kind of sawyere???!!!
Moscow Region, Dmitrovsky district, 01.0.08

Callidium violaceum L.

05.06.2008 18:24, americanecz

A male by the looks of it???

05.06.2008 22:43, guest: rpanin

A male by the looks of it???

Estimated mustache - like samka

05.06.2008 23:21, RippeR

he's quite thin.. and the sawyere seems long enough for a violaceum..

07.06.2008 17:12, nelegal

Please tell me dear forumtsy, someone laid eggs in the basal part of the strawberry stem. Thank you in advance!

Pictures:
picture: Capture10.JPG
Capture10.JPG — (143.64к)

picture: Capture7.JPG
Capture7.JPG — (129.32к)

09.06.2008 9:41, PG18

Please help me recognize the little ones. 4-5 mm. Plenty in the garden. Middle Urals, okr. Yekaterinburg [southern taiga subzone]

Pictures:
picture: DSC_0108a.jpg
DSC_0108a.jpg — (28.7к)

picture: DSC_0116a.jpg
DSC_0116a.jpg — (34.75 k)

09.06.2008 9:52, bials

Help with the beetles mol.gif. All M. O. Odintsovo district, Petelino station
The weevil was sitting on a hawthorn
tree 1. picture: _____________________________001.jpg
2. picture: _____________________________002.jpg
3. picture: _____________________________003.jpg
4. picture: ________________________001.jpg
This one is 3-4 mm in size. Shot in the house, on oilcloth.
5a. picture: ________________________002.2.jpg
5b. picture: ________________________002.3.jpg
And some leaf eater:
6. picture: __________________________001.1.jpg

This post was edited by bials - 09.06.2008 09: 52
Likes: 1

09.06.2008 10:13, алекс 2611

Please help me recognize the little ones. 4-5 mm. Plenty in the garden. Middle Urals, okr. Yekaterinburg [southern taiga subzone]


Pyrrhalta (Neogalerucella) tenella (Linnaeus, 1761) ???
Likes: 1

09.06.2008 10:15, алекс 2611

Likes: 1

09.06.2008 10:25, Alexandr Rusinov

1-й - Pselaphorrhynchites aequatus (Attelabidae)
2-й - Otiorrhynchus ligustici (Curculionidae)
3-й - Larinus sp.
4-й - Gastroidea poligoni (Chrysomelidae)
5-й - Anobium pertinax (Anobiidae)
I apologize if I made a mistake in spelling somewhere, I write from memory.

This post was edited by Anthrenus - 09.06.2008 10: 29
Likes: 1

09.06.2008 11:45, omar

Larinus with high probability sturnus
Gonioctena like viminalis
Likes: 1

09.06.2008 13:36, Fornax13

To bials:
P. aequatus (Linnaeus, 1767) is now considered to be Tatianaerhynchites, and A. pertinax (Linnaeus, 1758) is Hadrobregmus.
polygoni (Linnaeus, 1758), and now Gastrophysa.

This post was edited by Fornax13-09.06.2008 13: 37
Likes: 2

09.06.2008 15:37, PG18

Pyrrhalta (Neogalerucella) tenella (Linnaeus, 1761) ???

Thanks! Looks like a point. It was especially abundant in wet meadows with a cuff.

09.06.2008 17:37, алекс 2611

Thanks! Looks like a point. It was especially abundant in wet meadows with a cuff.


And we often have this look on the cuffs.

10.06.2008 19:22, bials

mol.gif Help me identify the bug. The size is approximately 8-10 mm. Moscow, Izmailovsky Park, today.
1a. picture: ______________________001.1.jpg
1b. picture: ______________________001.2.jpg

This post was edited by bials - 10.06.2008 19: 23

10.06.2008 19:56, Buzman

To bials: While presumably Plateumaris sericea (L, 1761)
Likes: 1

10.06.2008 20:04, Buzman

To bials: Most likely it is he who looks like SAMEC smile.gif
Likes: 1

11.06.2008 14:00, Buzman

Please tell me what kind of sawyere is in the center. Never seen it before.
S. England, Richmond, 7.06.2008.

This post was edited by Buzman - 11.06.2008 14: 04

Pictures:
picture: IMG_7403.jpg
IMG_7403.jpg — (139.09к)

11.06.2008 14:01, Buzman

And I can't figure out what kind of Chrysolina is this? In large numbers on some umbrella.
S. England, Surrey, Balham, 8.06.2008.
Bottom left is Chrysolina americana (L.), which I wrote about in reports.

Pictures:
picture: IMG_7394.jpg
IMG_7394.jpg — (149.28к)

11.06.2008 14:16, Alexandr Rusinov

Barbel is a genus of Stenocorus, and S. meridianus is the fastest.

This post was edited by Anthrenus - 11.06.2008 14: 18
Likes: 1

11.06.2008 14:55, Fornax13

Chrysolina-try as Ch. oricalcia (O. F. Muller, 1776).

In any case, there is not much to choose from here:

www.ynu.org.uk/beetlechecklist2008.pdf
Likes: 1

11.06.2008 15:25, Buzman

To Fornax13: Great link, thank you so much! mol.gif
And it looks like that's what Ch. oricalcia is.

This post was edited by Buzman - 11.06.2008 15: 29

11.06.2008 15:40, Fornax13

Yes, the view is quite characteristic after all... But, by the way, I didn't know that umbrella chrysolines are eaten smile.gif

11.06.2008 17:00, Vabrus

Help me identify a karabus smile.gif
user posted image
Tyumen Region, June, 2008. Lipnyak.

11.06.2008 17:10, Buzman

To Fornax13: I made some inquiries: Ch. oricalcia feed specifically on umbellifera, specifically on Anthriscus silvestris, Chaeropyllum aureum and Aegopodium podagraria

This post was edited by Buzman - 11.06.2008 17: 22
Likes: 1

11.06.2008 22:22, Ilia Ustiantcev

A couple of beetles. Moscow Region, Solnechnogorsk district.
picture: IMG_1831.jpg
picture: IMG_1877.jpg

12.06.2008 11:55, PG18

There are a dozen and a half species of remarkable small ground beetles from the salty spring in the Ustyurt West (South-West Kazakhstan). Can anyone help with the definition (before view, preferably)? I know that the region is difficult. I wouldn't want to do a re-shoot for nothing( in coll.), but in nature most of them couldn't be shot frown.gif

Pictures:
picture: 05_14_Fontan__50_0047.jpg
05_14_Fontan__50_0047.jpg — (135.82к)

picture: 05_14_Fontan__50_m.jpg
05_14_Fontan__50_m.jpg — (130.96к)

Likes: 2

12.06.2008 11:59, PG18

Perhaps the most numerous Ustyurt ground beetle. Daptus vittatus?

Pictures:
картинка: Daptus_vittatus_05_20_sands_at_Akkuduk_0067.jpg
Daptus_vittatus_05_20_sands_at_Akkuduk_0067.jpg — (148.39к)

Likes: 2

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