E-mail: Password: Create an Account Recover password

About Authors Contacts Get involved Русская версия

show

Cerambycidae, Necydalini

Community and ForumInsects imagesCerambycidae, Necydalini

Anthicus, 27.07.2007 21:56

Necydalis major is a common species that is not easy to catch.
Caught last Saturday...

Comments

Pages: 1 2

27.07.2007 21:59, omar

Where is the usual one?

28.07.2007 1:30, RippeR

Vo vo..

And how difficult is it to catch this reptile?? I've been chasing him for half my life smile.gif

28.07.2007 3:47, Dinusik

From me last season, a similar one escaped right out of the net !!!

28.07.2007 9:04, Zhuk

Is it rare? I have it in the Ruzsky district. there is a point where they are every year well, 5 pieces can be seen. Current they fly sucks, in the bushes between the branches. Figs podbereshsya.
Likes: 1

28.07.2007 11:11, Anthicus

It is very common in Latvia. Wet forests, mostly black-holst forests. It is very easy to determine the species by biotope and by the "outputs" of the imago. But the imagos themselves are not very easy to detect.
Likes: 1

28.07.2007 12:54, RippeR

Zhuk:
only 1 place, only 5 pieces in a year? Is that a lot? smile.gif

Dina:
you have similar views, but something cooler will be!!

28.07.2007 13:26, Dinusik

Zhuk:
only 1 place, only 5 pieces in a year? Is that a lot? smile.gif

Dina:
you have similar views, but something cooler will be!!


The major is also mentioned here, but what happened there remains a mystery! Sorry weep.gif

28.07.2007 13:47, KDG

I caught this guy in a wet gully with a ghost forest featuring old willows and poplars. if the tree where the beetle lives is calculated, then catching the imago is not a problem.
Likes: 3

28.07.2007 14:04, omar

In the Moscow region, the species is truly rare. KDG, please share how to calculate the habitat? I would especially appreciate a photo with traces of typical crimes.

28.07.2007 14:37, Aleksandr Ermakov

And I caught exclusively on flowering parasol plants. Well I caught three pieces in my life wink.gif

28.07.2007 14:49, Victor Titov

It is not common in the Yaroslavl region, but it occurs regularly. I never found it on flowers. Caught either in flight, or on the dry roadsides of aspens and poplars (even in the city). I know that the species is listed in the Red Book of the Kaluga Region.

This post was edited by Dmitrich - 08/16/2007 18: 41
Likes: 1

28.07.2007 16:00, Nilson

I caught it only twice: in Belarus, in a small forest about ten years ago, and in Montenegro this summer on the tunnel wall (below the photo of this particular female). However, the beetle perfectly imitates the wasp - I decided to grab it from the third time!
Remember that there is an even rarer very similar species - N. ulmi. I wish I could catch him.

10. VII. 2007, Montenegro, Petrovac district

Pictures:
picture: necydalis_major_dors.JPG
necydalis_major_dors.JPG — (108.05к)

picture: necydalis_major_ventr.JPG
necydalis_major_ventr.JPG — (105.24к)

Likes: 7

28.07.2007 16:15, omar

So Ulmi seems to live only in the Caucasus? Or am I wrong?

28.07.2007 16:17, omar

This picture of you, Neilson, is very unusual. It is a rare case when the glare of light on the beetle is not annoying, but looks harmonious. Thank you.
Likes: 1

28.07.2007 18:10, Nilson

So Ulmi seems to live only in the Caucasus? Or am I wrong?

For the USSR, it is known, indeed, only for the southern regions - Yu. Ukraine seems to have been caught near Novorossiysk and in Transcaucasia. And in Europe, it is also common in the middle zone.

This post was edited by Nilson - 07/28/2007 18: 11
Likes: 1

28.07.2007 19:55, RippeR

Nilson:
Yours is very similar yes.gifto ulmi, because the main difference between ulmi is the ring on the back thighs instead of dark spots reaching to the clutch (I didn't find the words to explain it properly smile.gif)
In this case, just the spots of barley do not reach, but are more similar to rings.. okay, we are waiting for KDG smile.gif

28.07.2007 20:26, Nilson

It would have been easier if it had been a male. According to Plavilshchikov, I still got N. major-the dotted lines of the 4th and 5th segments of the abdomen are the same.

28.07.2007 21:15, Anthicus

For the USSR, it is known, indeed, only for the southern regions - Yu. Ukraine seems to have been caught near Novorossiysk and in Transcaucasia. And in Europe, it is also common in the middle zone.


N. ulmi in the Baltic States and Fennoscandia is recorded for Latvia and Lithuania. It has not been found in Latvia for the last 100 years, but in Lithuania (in the south) there are still actual finds. so, not only Ukraine...
Likes: 4

30.07.2007 12:47, rpanin

Vo vo..

I've been chasing him for half my life smile.gif


Most of it,but nothing. weep.gif

30.07.2007 13:35, Frantic

I dream of catching this beetle for at least 10-15 years. Summer's gone again, but no.. So if anyone has extra whole individuals to exchange, you are welcome:-)

30.07.2007 13:39, Zhuk

Damn, if I'd known earlier , I'd have caught it. Ter when I go, they will be gone.

30.07.2007 13:44, Frantic

Yes, most likely, they moved away. Although the summer is not clear. It's all mixed up. Maybe you'll still find some "late" female:- ) If, of course, you are not going in September: -)

30.07.2007 13:47, Zhuk

I'll get a Terrier at the end of August. They'll definitely be gone by now. If no one will exchange you, then next year I will catchwink.gifa monkey

30.07.2007 14:32, guest: Лариса

I'm sorry, for God's sake, I'm a bore.

Necydalis major major Linné, 1758, или Necydalis major aino Kusama, 1975?

30.07.2007 14:36, guest: Лариса

Sorry, second only to Japan and Sakhalin

30.07.2007 14:44, Mikhail F. Bagaturov

Let's just say the bug isn't frequent. But still caught.
He fished in Transcarpathia, Moscow region and Leningrad region. Most often in the forest or on fallen trunks.

Pictures:
picture: necidalis.JPG
necidalis.JPG — (39.87к)

Likes: 6

30.07.2007 14:57, omar

I only have one thing. From the Moscow region. On the logs of your own house. Pine house (!)

30.07.2007 15:00, omar

Although Nikitsky collected it almost everywhere in the region, in small quantities, of course.

30.07.2007 15:03, Zhuk

I remember catching a male and a female, and then walking back along the road, and they flew past me.

30.07.2007 15:06, omar

Dekulakize! cool.gif

30.07.2007 16:11, Bad Den

2 copies.
One on the flowers, the second-on the trunk of a willow tree near a pond, all in the Desert St. (Arzamas district)
Likes: 1

30.07.2007 17:19, Aleksandr Safronov

In the Tula region, the species is also rare. Examples from an old planting with oak, poplar, and willow trees. Imagos were found sitting on foliage high enough from the ground.

Pictures:
picture: Necydalis_major.jpg
Necydalis_major.jpg — (88.2к)

Likes: 7

30.07.2007 19:53, KDG

In the Moscow region, the species is truly rare. KDG, please share how to calculate the habitat? I would especially appreciate a photo with traces of typical crimes.

there is only one way to fully calculate the habitat - to catch an insect or find debris in the wood. After all, there are plenty of suitable places, and they do not live everywhere. About the photo glukho-caught a beetle 10 years ago, since then the station has been almost completely destroyed.
Likes: 1

30.07.2007 20:25, KDG

30.07.2007 21:07, Nilson

It would be nice, of course, to have a series of both to watch.

31.07.2007 9:45, treator

Last month I discovered imago majora under pine bark
Likes: 3

31.07.2007 9:52, Anthicus

Last month, I discovered imago majora under pine bark


Imagos like to hide under the distant bark. Obviously, I don't care what the tree is.
Likes: 4

15.02.2008 21:31, Nilson

In short, the bug that is in the photo from the 13th post is still ulmi. According to knowledgeable people, major is found deeper in the mainland, on the coast of Montenegro-N. ulmi.
Likes: 3

15.02.2008 22:31, Cerambyx

And indeed, where is it seen - that Majog would have black tops of the shins! But N. major is really common in places. In the Orenburg region, I catch it every year, it occurs both on flowers and on forage trees. In 2006, I collected 60 pieces of them in three days, the beetles were sitting on the dry roadsides of live birches. Once I picked out about 20 pupae from a large dead willow stump.
Likes: 4

Pages: 1 2

New comment

Note: you should have a Insecta.pro account to upload new topics and comments. Please, create an account or log in to add comments.

* Our website is multilingual. Some comments have been translated from other languages.

Random species of the website catalog

Insecta.pro: international entomological community. Terms of use and publishing policy.

Project editor in chief and administrator: Peter Khramov.

Curators: Konstantin Efetov, Vasiliy Feoktistov, Svyatoslav Knyazev, Evgeny Komarov, Stan Korb, Alexander Zhakov.

Moderators: Vasiliy Feoktistov, Evgeny Komarov, Dmitriy Pozhogin, Alexandr Zhakov.

Thanks to all authors, who publish materials on the website.

© Insects catalog Insecta.pro, 2007—2024.

Species catalog enables to sort by characteristics such as expansion, flight time, etc..

Photos of representatives Insecta.

Detailed insects classification with references list.

Few themed publications and a living blog.