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Identification of beetles (Coleoptera)

Community and ForumInsects identificationIdentification of beetles (Coleoptera)

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08.07.2008 21:55, пигидий

duc I think in the SEVAM catalog of the genus is listed, but this is not a georissi for you, I apologize, semeysto: Martykhin's work is to search for every image on the web, and there is no other way, and most of the erysipelas do not appear anywhere in the Internet. believe me, even d / hozvazhnyh groups like Sphenophorus (there are a number of avid "pests" amer. culture of golf business) intelligible materyalov for opred-I let 3-4 of the most banal-razbanalov is not present though cry. I was looking today. that is why I fall at the feet of those who, like you, are active in the field and keep up with the times and constantly mess with beetles and literature. I tried to find Korotyaev's email address-the person was also lost somewhere. You don't know, do you?" or brgadr, who so wonderfully deciphered lemosaccus for me? well done.

08.07.2008 22:15, Fornax13

Well, yes, the family is rather big, to put it mildly... Korotyaev, as I understand it, is not easy to find - there are some addresses on the Zinovsky site, I don't know how working they are... I don't think he had any other ones, I don't remember... And somewhere in the web there is at least a list of SevAm elephants-otherwise it has become quite interesting.

08.07.2008 22:35, пигидий

Here is a simple list for everyday references http://www.nearctica.com/nomina/beetle/coleops.htm. For the lower-right corner of that country, I usually take a fairly intelligible Florida catalog http://www.fsca-dpi.org/Coleoptera/Mike/families.htm, for our temperate regions – a relatively frivolous list of Canadian beetles http://www.canacoll.org/Coleo/Checklist/checklist.htm from stupid PDF's (and then you can remove the fake fael in the same place). A mass-collected animal must be, I believe, even in Canada. Maybe there is something more solid , but I don't go deep - it will suck, boyus
Likes: 1

09.07.2008 14:49, brgadr

duc I think in the SEVAM catalog of the genus is listed, but this is not a georissi for you, I apologize, semeysto: Martykhin's work is to search for every image on the web, and there is no other way, and most of the erysipelas do not appear anywhere in the Internet. believe me, even d / hozvazhnyh groups like Sphenophorus (there are a number of avid "pests" amer. culture of golf business) intelligible materyalov for opred-I let 3-4 of the most banal-razbanalov is not present though cry. I was looking today. that is why I fall at the feet of those who, like you, are active in the field and keep up with the times and constantly mess with beetles and literature. I tried to find Korotyaev's email address-the person was also lost somewhere. You don't know, do you?" or brgadr, who so wonderfully deciphered lemosaccus for me? well done.

Thank you, don't overdo it. Korotyaev is not in St. Petersburg now, he went to his homeland in Krasnodar (he has a misfortune in his family - his mother died). It should appear after July 13. Write to him by e-mail (there should be one on Zina's website). But I'm not sure that he will willingly take up a picture of your beetle-he is busy, and it would be better for him to provide the material in kind.
And as for Sphenophorus - so there is a monograph on American languages by Patricia Vaurie, even on the web:
http://digitallibrary.amnh.org/dspace/handle/2246/974
Likes: 1

09.07.2008 15:36, Alexander Zarodov

1. On malashka, probably, to a kind of no chance? Moscow, June. Size 5-7 mm.

Clanoptilus sp.?

picture: bug15.jpg

2. Here is still chernotelka any? MO, June. Size < 10 mm

picture: bug16.jpg

This post was edited by Double A-09.07.2008 16: 43

09.07.2008 16:12, akulich-sibiria

Hello. Can you help me? today I climbed into the country attic, and was upset - some animals started up in the boards of the roof crate (the board is uncut and as it turned out, the builders once cheated, did not completely remove the bark from the edges) You can hear a clear "crunch-crunch" and on the floor, under the foci of damage, piles of wood dust. They seem to be eating the last of the bark for now, but what will happen when it ends?! Will they disappear or start chewing on the rest?
Here are photos of the suspects, I would like to accurately identify the cohabitants smile.gif.

such, I found several times in the house, I think that this is their "handiwork". (~15mm long)
http://img-fotki.yandex.ru/get/25/chibisov...5b4589_orig.jpg

but I got this larva just by picking up the bark in the place where it crunched. (same 15 mm long)
http://img-fotki.yandex.ru/get/55/chibisov...a9f744_orig.jpg


beetle I also think khrushchak flour Tenebrio molitor...it can often be seen under rotten boards and in damp places...not related to the storage of food (and grain, too)
and then the larva, as it seems to me, still belongs to some barbel..Can I find out what the breed is?? I guess pine or larch...clearly visible signs of larvae living under bark and in wood

09.07.2008 16:57, пигидий

1. By Malashka

Cordylepherus viridis is similar; and the leaf beetle Bromius obscurus

This post was edited by pygidiy - 09.07.2008 16: 59
Likes: 1

09.07.2008 17:00, Victor Titov

  
2. Here is still chernotelka any? MO, June. Size < 10 mm

This is not a darkling, but a leaf beetle Adoxus (aka Bromius) obscurus.

This post was edited by Dmitrich-09.07.2008 17: 06
Likes: 1

09.07.2008 17:19, PG18

Tell me, pzh., who it could be. Maybe Mycterus curculionoides? It is about 9 mm long... Southern taiga of the Middle Urals.

Pictures:
picture: DSC_0442.jpg
DSC_0442.jpg — (125.49к)

09.07.2008 17:29, пигидий

who could it be?..

Dascillus cervinus; but if desired, you can choose an angle that really looks like a micter
Likes: 1

09.07.2008 17:29, PG18

And a couple of leaf-eaters, pzh.: the first (mm 7) - on logs, the second (mm 4) - on willow.

Pictures:
picture: DSC_0121.jpg
DSC_0121.jpg — (49.24к)

picture: DSC_0905.jpg
DSC_0905.jpg — (91.58к)

09.07.2008 17:36, Guest

 
and the second larva, it seems to me, still belongs to some barbel..Can I find out what the breed is?? I guess pine or larch...clearly visible signs of larvae living under bark and in wood

Yes, really pine.. This is what I have in the attic of a country house in the suburbs wound frown.gifup what to do with them now? Here the builders of the house hurried up - they did not remove the obzol from the boards.

09.07.2008 17:39, PG18

Dascillus cervinus; but if desired, you can choose an angle that really looks like a micter

Thanks! Dascilide is very cool!.. But these Mycterus tibialis? Southern Urals, steppe.

Pictures:
picture: Mycterus_DSCN0036.jpg
Mycterus_DSCN0036.jpg — (107.42к)

09.07.2008 18:18, пигидий

Korotyaev is currently not in St. Petersburg... e-mail on the site Zina must be

as my dormant instincts began to awaken (3-4 years ago), I discovered a ZINsite, began to look at who was breathing what, and it immediately seemed to me that something was wrong with B. K., the list of jobs, etc., had not been updated since 2000 - against the background of the general bubbling of the site, it looked strange, it the same hard worker and I was waiting for the elephant section of the site to be thoroughly cut up. The email there was also some kind of washout specified, I think I tried it. That's why the forum people asked. Slip him a picture if you can, eh? If he doesn't immediately understand and doesn't show any enthusiasm, then that's fine.

09.07.2008 18:20, пигидий

Likes: 1

09.07.2008 18:39, akulich-sibiria

Yes, really pine.. This is what I have in the attic of a country house in the suburbs wound frown.gifup what to do with them now? Here the builders of the house hurried up - they did not remove the obzol from the boards.


I think it's okay, it's just that your house may have a maximum of a couple of new holes in the boardssmile.gif , in the future it will all pupate and fly out...most likely, these will be small purple barbels...we had a case when the log house was made of fresh wood, and in winter, when the stoves were strenuously heated, monohamuses came out of all the holes...we caught about 20 beetles..that's where it's unpleasant to sleep at night, and a grumpy sawyere can run over you, making a creaking sound.. smile.gif

09.07.2008 19:36, Fornax13

And a couple of leaf-eaters, pzh.: the first (mm 7) - on logs, the second (mm 4) - on willow.

1-Chrysomela one of 3: populi Linnaeus, 1758, tremulae Fabricius, 1787 or saliceti Weise, 1884.
2-Chrysomela (Pachylina) collare Linnaeus, 1758
Likes: 1

09.07.2008 22:17, KDG

he really has a" litter "look - like an akalles without a pencil case for the nose, and at first I was reminded of some small thing that was once listed among the "hylobiins", but then I noticed a scar from a pince-nez above the nose and sneakers of a characteristic design. it's so sweet.

Ask V. Savitsky ("soap" is available on the Zinsite)"he deals with similar animals. True, he is now in Turkey, but by the end of the month he should be there.
Likes: 1

10.07.2008 0:23, Bad Den

Two beetles (3 to be exact)
The first one was caught in the warehouse of a company that produces all kinds of products under the brand name "Galina Blanca "(Nizhny Novgorod region, Borsky district (for some reason we came to the conclusion that this is someone from Chrysomeloidae):
user posted image

The second two Mylabris's - Nizhny Novgorod region, Pochinkovsky district, Madaevo district; 11.06.2007
user posted image

user posted image

10.07.2008 0:34, Fornax13

To Bad Den:
I can't vouch for milabrisov, but in my opinion it's pusilla.
Yes, it is quite possible - "Galina Blanca" - a good plant detritus smile.gifIs Psammoecus bipunctatus (Fabricius, 1792), such a silvanid.

This post was edited by Fornax13-10.07.2008 01: 04
Likes: 2

10.07.2008 5:16, PG18

1-Chrysomela one of 3: populi Linnaeus, 1758, tremulae Fabricius, 1787 or saliceti Weise, 1884.

Probably more like tremulae? Considering the size (less than cm) and the shape of the pronotum...

Pictures:
picture: DSC_0125.jpg
DSC_0125.jpg — (98.55к)

10.07.2008 9:06, Fornax13

Probably more like tremulae? Considering the size (less than cm) and the shape of the pronotum...

Quite likely..
Likes: 1

10.07.2008 10:15, пигидий

in the company's warehouse...

Psammoecus bipunctatus -- ah, you've already been informed... Well, that's nice.

This post was edited by pygidiy - 10.07.2008 10: 20

10.07.2008 14:48, Alexander Zarodov

Help with the ground beetle, a lot of similar ones-confused. MO, June, in the forest on the edge, size 15 mm.

Maybe Poecilus of some sort, lepidus for example?

picture: carabid01.jpg

This post was edited by Double A-10.07.2008 15: 12

10.07.2008 15:39, Victor Titov

Help with the ground beetle, a lot of similar ones-confused. MO, June, in the forest on the edge, size 15 mm.
Maybe Poecilus of some sort, lepidus for example?

It seems that he is.
Likes: 1

10.07.2008 15:54, akulich-sibiria

I can't get a better photo yet..but still, can someone thread will help at this stage, or everything is running here...I can't get to the view in any way...I'm going out to Amphimallon altaicus Munh...do you have anyone to compare...?
picture: IMG_3872_.jpg

10.07.2008 16:01, Nimrod

Good day, ladies and gentlemen!
Tell me, Mr. akulich-sibiria, does this specimen have antennae of 9 or 10 segments? Still need to look at the claws - it is quite possible that it can be Lasiexis (Brahmina). And more. Where was the beetle collected?

10.07.2008 16:09, Alexander Zarodov

But this dirty one is Broscus cephalotes? MO, last Sunday in the garden.

picture: carabid02.jpg

10.07.2008 20:38, Papilion

But this dirty one is Broscus cephalotes? MO, last Sunday in the garden.

Yes. Sort of similar to cephalotes
Likes: 1

10.07.2008 20:40, Victor Titov

Broscus cephalotes, make no mistake!
Likes: 1

10.07.2008 23:31, Alexander Zarodov

Is this Uleiota planata? MO, May, under the bark of a rotten birch tree.

picture: bug21.jpg

10.07.2008 23:42, Zhuk

Yes
Likes: 1

11.07.2008 0:14, barry

Help me determine...
Kharkiv, July.
Small, about the size of an Oulema. On something like umbrella plants, there were about a dozen Phytoecia icterica nearby.

Pictures:
picture: IMG_91510.jpg
IMG_91510.jpg — (119.09к)

picture: IMG_91590.jpg
IMG_91590.jpg — (99.51к)

Likes: 2

11.07.2008 0:24, Fornax13

Help me determine...
Kharkiv, July.
Small, about the size of an Oulema. On something like umbrella plants, there were about a dozen Phytoecia icterica nearby.

Nemonyx lepturoides (Fabricius, 1801) sort of.
Likes: 2

11.07.2008 12:24, Necrocephalus

Gentlemen, please help me with the definition of staff, if possible.
Caught 06.07.08, Belgorod region, Belgorod region, d. Pulyaevka, during soil excavations, right in the thickness of crumbling soil.

Pictures:
picture: verh.jpg
verh.jpg — (132.39к)

picture: niz.jpg
niz.jpg — (143.81 k)

11.07.2008 12:59, Alexander Zarodov

Help apion determine if it is possible? MO, June, came running into the light smile.gif

picture: bug22.jpg

11.07.2008 13:05, Victor Titov

In my opinion, apionid from photography is hopeless eek.gif.

This post was edited by Dmitrich - 11.07.2008 13: 06

11.07.2008 13:09, Fornax13

Gentlemen, please help me with the definition of staff, if possible.
Caught 06.07.08, Belgorod region, Belgorod region, d. Pulyaevka, during soil excavations, right in the thickness of crumbling soil.

Something very good, I would say. What size is it? What of Paederinae-definitely, but then... Maybe something Medon-like.

This post was edited by Fornax13-11.07.2008 13: 11
Likes: 1

11.07.2008 13:14, Alexander Zarodov

In my opinion, apionid from photography is hopeless eek.gif.


Sorry weep.gifthough, I thought so...

11.07.2008 13:15, Fornax13

Help apion determine if it is possible? MO, June, came running into the light smile.gif

It looks like some kind of Ceratapion. Possibly C. (Acanephodus) onopordi Kirby.
Likes: 1

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