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Identification of Diptera (flies, mosquitoes, etc.)

Community and ForumInsects identificationIdentification of Diptera (flies, mosquitoes, etc.)

Pages: 1 ...26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34... 98

27.10.2010 9:19, gumenuk

It seems to me that these are flies of different species and I hope that they will help me to install

27.10.2010 13:00, Pirx

I can only say this-see above. There are 14 species in Europe.
Likes: 1

27.10.2010 13:21, gumenuk

I can only say this-see above. There are 14 species in Europe.

Thanks! I'll put it on Diptera

27.10.2010 21:37, Ека

Duc, Nemestrinidae! Not Crimea?

It's the same one, near Yevpatoria, I forgot to make a notesmile.gif, thank you!

28.10.2010 0:46, Вишняков Алексей

Help us define the view. Moscow, Izmailovsky Forest Park, end of May.

Pictures:
picture: 66.JPG
66.JPG — (264.38к)

28.10.2010 6:14, Pirx

Thanks! I'll put it on Diptera


And the people there still identified takhin Vitaly:

http://diptera.info/forum/viewthread.php?t...727#post_151727
http://diptera.info/forum/viewthread.php?t...729#post_151729
Likes: 1

28.10.2010 10:51, gumenuk

per definition-1 confused.gif
Moscow region, Ramenskiy district, Khripan

Pictures:
picture: 05.05.2010___DSC03066.jpg
05.05.2010___DSC03066.jpg — (193к)

picture: 10.05.2010___DSC03242.jpg
10.05.2010___DSC03242.jpg — (142.48к)

28.10.2010 17:01, Arikain

Help us define the view. Moscow, Izmailovsky Forest Park, end of May.

Sarcophaga carnaria. confused.gif Probably wrong.

28.10.2010 23:22, Dr. Niko

Friends, look at what a situation it turns out. The topic of Defining diptera is slowly but surely decaying. Yes, yes, I understand, now they will say: "If you know how, then determine, if you don't know how, then there's nothing to stir up the water." No, I just want to save this topic from being littered with those photos that are defined here once every 100 years.

So, the greatest activity in the definition for this year:
- Qualified specialists: Pirx (Syrphidae) and Nosferatumyia (Pyrgotidae, Tephritidae, Ulidiidae);
- lovers: Alex 2611 (well, let him add his favorite families).

Low (including zero) activity for this year: Nikita V, vep, grottan, sid65.

That is, the bulk of families (especially long-whiskered ones) will not be determined. In this light, it seems a little funny behavior of some old forum members, who with inexhaustible persistence continue to post in this topic their photos, so to speak, "unpopular" or "non-core" families.

In short, dear comrades. Many people know and use this great resource, but for some reason it is I who am writing about it right now. WWW. DIPTERA.INFO - its name. There are quite a lot of specialists in different groups, and there are a lot of advanced amateurs.

God forbid, I do not urge you to avoid molbiol and not use its help. It's just how life shows you. I just ask those who want to take into account how likely they are to receive qualified help here, and make further decisions about where to post photos.

I ask everyone to comment here.

Thanks for attention.

This post was edited by Dr. Niko - 28.10.2010 23: 24
Likes: 3

29.10.2010 0:23, Pirx

Well, okay: the benefits of molbiol are

1) the only sane Russian - (and, I hope, Belarusian -, Ukrainian -) language resource on the topic;
2) for diptera.info it is worth having at least basic English, which is what we all want - although there are many posts there "... for ID", i.e. ~ " someone?" ™ Dr. Bykov
3) ми, що, не патріоти, чи що, хлопці?

It is necessary to loop the info from dipteryinfo to our forum, feedback is in our damn hands-a wider step, bandmates and sympathizers!
Likes: 2

29.10.2010 10:03, алекс 2611

In principle, I agree on the account of the long-moustaches - they are practically not defined here.
Korotkoustykh why not try it. It often seems to work out quite well.
About the advantages of the forum Pirx said quite well.

By the way, it's not always possible to thank everyone, I want to tell all the participants of the topic.
Thank you to everyone who posted photos. On a rainy October day, good photos of beautiful flies warm your heart.
Thanks to everyone who identifies flies. Your definitions have already helped me and I hope they will help me again.
Likes: 1

29.10.2010 10:35, Pirx

.. On a rainy October day, good pictures of beautiful flies warm your heart ...


beer.gif beer.gif beer.gif
Likes: 1

30.10.2010 9:13, gumenuk

Photos for connoisseurs and those who enjoy looking at beautiful and rare flies on a dreary November day tongue.gif

Pictures:
picture: 11.06.2010___DSC06048.jpg
11.06.2010___DSC06048.jpg — (273.93к)

Likes: 2

31.10.2010 3:16, VBoris

I'll also throw my own at the definitionsmile.gif

Pictures:
picture: muha45.jpg
muha45.jpg — (93.75к)

picture: muha46.jpg
muha46.jpg — (93.24к)

picture: muha47.jpg
muha47.jpg — (96.24к)

picture: muha48.jpg
muha48.jpg — (96.43к)

picture: muha49.jpg
muha49.jpg — (184.32к)

picture: muha50.jpg
muha50.jpg — (72.56к)

picture: muha51.jpg
muha51.jpg — (63.78к)

31.10.2010 12:28, Arikain

I'll also throw my own at the definitionsmile.gif

3. - Probably female babbler Eristalis tenax
4. - Lucilia caesar? I doubt it, with bristles on the back, so Lucilia sp.
7. - Drosophila any
other I will not define.
Likes: 1

31.10.2010 19:38, Pirx

I'll also throw my own at the definitionsmile.gif


muha46, muha50-synanthropus Syritta pipiens, female and male
muha47-sinatrop Eristalis tenax, female (she, she smile.gif)
muha49 - isn't it a stilt? Very cool!
muha51 - in my opinion, some kind of chloropid

31.10.2010 22:52, алекс 2611

I'll also throw my own at the definitionsmile.gif

muha 45-tahina.
Not Gastrolepta anthracina by any chance?
Likes: 1

31.10.2010 23:11, VBoris

Here's some more.
Thanks!

Pictures:
picture: muha52.jpg
muha52.jpg — (85.9к)

picture: muha54.jpg
muha54.jpg — (101.55к)

picture: muha53.jpg
muha53.jpg — (120.24к)

01.11.2010 1:07, Pirx

Here's some more.
Thanks!


on the first one, it looks like a Medetera, on the second - the same "stilt" ...
Likes: 1

01.11.2010 11:01, Daria1445

Hello! Please help me determine what kind of creature it is. It looks like a mosquito, but we were struck by the wings - they are just like feathers! Found this summer in the Kaluga region (already inanimate, sorry) and took it to your children's collection. The photo was taken just now, one hind leg and the tendril broke off.

user posted image

01.11.2010 11:14, vasiliy-feoktistov

Hello! Please help me determine what kind of creature it is. It looks like a mosquito, but we were struck by the wings - they are just like feathers! Found this summer in the Kaluga region (already inanimate, sorry) and took it to your children's collection. The photo was taken just now, one hind leg and the tendril broke off.


I think that this is not a mosquito, but a butterfly from the family Pterophoridae (Fingerflies)
Take a look here: http://sungaya.narod.ru/micro/pter/pter.htm

This post was edited by vasiliy-feoktistov - 01.11.2010 11: 14

01.11.2010 18:38, VBoris

And also...
The same instance.

Pictures:
picture: komar12.jpg
komar12.jpg — (145.22к)

picture: komar13.jpg
komar13.jpg — (71.05к)

01.11.2010 19:17, Daria1445

I think that this is not a mosquito, but a butterfly from the family Pterophoridae (Fingerflies)
Take a look here: http://sungaya.narod.ru/micro/pter/pter.htm

Thank you very much!!! Really very similar

01.11.2010 21:17, Dr. Niko

And also...
The same instance.

Sylvicola sp. (Anisopodidae).
Likes: 1

07.11.2010 2:55, Jackkerch1988

A murmur?

May 26, Crimea

Pictures:
picture: P5260375_.jpg
P5260375_.jpg — (181.58к)

07.11.2010 9:56, Pirx

A murmur?

May 26, Crimea


Yes, a male Volucella zonaria Poda. In the Crimea, as a rule, the usual, sometimes massive view, for example, on the flowers of the Alley of David. But this is in the Mountainous Crimea. In the Steppe, it is less common.

07.11.2010 17:56, Jackkerch1988

Yes, a male Volucella zonaria Poda. In the Crimea, as a rule, the usual, sometimes massive view, for example, on the flowers of the Alley of David. But this is in the Mountainous Crimea. In the Steppe, it is less common.


Thank you, this is an overgrown park in Kerch

Volucella zonaria, from the genus of bumblebees, means mimicry under bumblebees.

This post was edited by Jackkerch1988 - 07.11.2010 18: 06

07.11.2010 18:42, Jackkerch1988

1-2 Long-legged mosquito, May Crimea

3-5 fly-nemukha? april

Pictures:
picture: P5050091_.jpg
P5050091_.jpg — (226.91к)

picture: P5050092_.jpg
P5050092_.jpg — (171.05к)

picture: P4210136_.jpg
P4210136_.jpg — (121.5к)

picture: P4210137_.jpg
P4210137_.jpg — (109.62к)

picture: P4210139_.jpg
P4210139_.jpg — (114.82к)

08.11.2010 13:22, Pirx

Thank you, this is an overgrown park in Kerch
Volucella zonaria, from the genus of Bumblebees, which means mimicry under bumblebees.


Well, in Kerch it is quite common, and it is in parks smile.gif. And so, in the Steppe Crimea, it is known to me only from the ROC. Jankoy on 1 male and from the Sac on one female 1904 year of release smile.gif. The genus is unsuccessfully named in Russian "bumblebees" - this can be seen from the habitus of V. zonaria. It looks like a hornet, in the nests of which its larva lives.

08.11.2010 13:30, Pirx

1-2 Long-legged mosquito, May Crimea

3-5 fly-nemukha? april


Tipulids, unfortunately, are beyond my controlfrown.gif, you can try to bubble on diptera.info. But with the fly, everything is clear - this is a female Sphaerophoria sp. (Syrphidae). But females of this genus have an ultra-low kosher content to determine. And, unfortunately, in spherophoria, in most cases it is necessary to tear the assholes of males. I can only assume that 99.99% of this is the most common species in the Crimea-Sph. scripta L.

08.11.2010 18:59, Jackkerch1988

Tipulids, unfortunately, are beyond my controlfrown.gif, you can try to bubble on diptera.info. But with the fly, everything is clear - this is a female Sphaerophoria sp. (Syrphidae). But females of this genus have an ultra-low kosher content to determine. And, unfortunately, in spherophoria, in most cases it is necessary to tear the assholes of males. I can only assume that by 99.99% this is the most common species in the Crimea-Sph. scripta L.


Thank you,
and this sharonoska-babbler!!!

08.11.2010 20:08, Pirx

Thank you,
and this sharonoska-babbler!!!


A strange and, from my point of view, unfortunate name "sharonoska" I once saw for the first time in some school determinant. Tracing paper from Latin-describes the tip of the abdomen in males-they have such extensive, so to speak, genitals...

08.11.2010 22:45, Jackkerch1988

A strange and, from my point of view, unfortunate name "sharonoska" I once saw for the first time in some school determinant. Tracing paper from Latin-describes the tip of the abdomen in males-they have such extensive, so to speak, genitals...


so the ball is in another shuffle.gif

13.11.2010 16:13, Arikain

Is it possible to identify this mosquito? Karelia. Now there are a lot of them flying, they are "late" somehow. I read something about winter mosquitoes in a book. He's not one of them, by any chance?"
picture: SANY4263.JPG

14.11.2010 15:52, Arikain

picture: SANY4708.JPG

22.11.2010 22:17, phlomis

Rostov region, Don, near the station Kazanskaya. 26.06.2009 shuffle.gif
picture: d1.jpg

23.11.2010 17:48, Arikain

Rostov region, Don, near the station Kazanskaya. 26.06.2009 shuffle.gif
picture: d1.jpg

The lower one is similar to the Chrysops horsefly (Chrysops sp.?

23.11.2010 21:49, phlomis

shuffle.gif The fact that ktyr caught a horsefly for lunch is already clear to me (the botanist). I wanted to show off. And it would be more precise... smile.gif

24.11.2010 14:12, алекс 2611

  shuffle.gif The fact that ktyr caught a horsefly for lunch is already clear to me (the botanist). I wanted to show off. And it would be more precise... smile.gif



I'd like to see this horsefly from above....From this angle, the view is a bit complicated.

24.11.2010 15:16, Arikain

  shuffle.gif The fact that ktyr caught a horsefly for lunch is already clear to me (the botanist). I wanted to show off. And it would be more precise... smile.gif

Well, more precisely, they already said it's difficult from this angle. Me and a couple of these horseflies, the view from above, no one has identifiedfrown.gif.

Does anyone know the mosquito? I'm already getting lost in the next suborder...

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