E-mail: Password: Create an Account Recover password

About Authors Contacts Get involved Русская версия

show

Australia, Northern Territories

Community and ForumInsects imagesAustralia, Northern Territories

Pages: 1 ...16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24... 75

01.02.2011 11:29, Ele-W

8. Tetragnatha sp., female. ©

user posted image

user posted image

user posted image

This post was edited by Ele-W-11.02.2011 15: 17
Likes: 4

01.02.2011 11:29, Ele-W

user posted image

user posted image

user posted image

Berry Springs, NT, Australia. January.
Likes: 4

01.02.2011 11:32, Ele-W

This is the end of the spiders in this place, then there will be grasshoppers. Well, or so - creatures similar to grasshoppers. smile.gif
Likes: 1

01.02.2011 13:19, Pirx

The last spider looks very unusual. Thanks for the photo!

01.02.2011 14:45, Ele-W

The last spider looks very unusual. Thanks for the photo!


You are welcome. smile.gif

01.02.2011 15:25, Ele-W

Grasshoppers, as I call them.

1.

user posted image

user posted image

Berry Springs, NT, Australia. January.
Likes: 4

01.02.2011 15:26, Ele-W

2.

user posted image

user posted image

user posted image
Likes: 4

01.02.2011 15:27, Ele-W

user posted image

user posted image

Berry Springs, NT, Australia. January.

This post was edited by Ele-W-01.02.2011 15: 28
Likes: 4

01.02.2011 15:29, Ele-W

3.

user posted image

user posted image

user posted image

Berry Springs, NT, Australia. January.
Likes: 4

01.02.2011 15:31, Ele-W

4.

user posted image

user posted image

Berry Springs, NT, Australia. January.
Likes: 4

01.02.2011 15:52, Zlopastnyi Brandashmyg

All Acrididae, the first one is a larva.

01.02.2011 16:48, Ele-W

All Acrididae, the first one is a larva.


I read about Acrididae. Not grasshoppers. smile.gif

How does a larva differ from an adult?

This post was edited by Ele-W-01.02.2011 17: 07

01.02.2011 17:09, Ele-W

5.

user posted image

user posted image

user posted image
Likes: 4

01.02.2011 17:13, Ele-W

user posted image

user posted image

user posted image

Berry Springs, NT, Australia. January.
Likes: 4

01.02.2011 17:29, Ele-W

6.

user posted image

user posted image

Berry Springs, NT, Australia. January.
Likes: 4

01.02.2011 18:03, Ele-W

7.

user posted image

user posted image

user posted image

Berry Springs, NT, Australia. January.
Likes: 4

01.02.2011 19:04, Zlopastnyi Brandashmyg

The larva differs from the adult by shortened elytra. In fact, the elytra can also be damaged to varying degrees in adults, but there is an "iron" sign: in larvae, the elytra are inverted, i.e. the edge of the elytra, which in an adult will be turned outwards, in larvae, on the contrary, is turned inwards. I'll try to find a picture, but it's hard to explain it in words.

01.02.2011 19:22, Zlopastnyi Brandashmyg

Here, "abused" your own photo.

Pictures:
picture: tegmina.jpg
tegmina.jpg — (185.93к)

Likes: 2

01.02.2011 19:24, Zlopastnyi Brandashmyg

I wrote Acrididae and now I'm afraid-the family has already been crushed repeatedly.
The PVO will come and correct it.

02.02.2011 13:08, Ele-W

Here, "abused" your own photo.


Thanks! Very informative, I will know where to look next time. smile.gif

02.02.2011 13:10, Ele-W

But this is just a grasshopper-the Tettigoniidae family.

Katydid Conocephalus sp.

user posted image

user posted image

user posted image

This post was edited by Ele-W-03.03.2011 17: 25
Likes: 4

02.02.2011 13:13, Ele-W

user posted image

user posted image

user posted image
Likes: 4

02.02.2011 13:15, Ele-W

user posted image

user posted image

Berry Springs, NT, Australia. January.
Likes: 4

02.02.2011 13:17, Ele-W

Forgotten spiders, missed them by accident. Adding it.

9. skakunchik-Salticidae ©

Very small and very quick spider.

user posted image

This post was edited by Ele-W-06.02.2011 16: 31
Likes: 4

02.02.2011 13:18, Ele-W

user posted image

user posted image

user posted image

user posted image

Berry Springs, NT, Australia. January.
Likes: 4

02.02.2011 13:20, Ele-W

10. Tetragnatha sp. ©

When I photographed it, I thought it was some kind of small green bug, but at home I saw a spider web. Still a spider.

user posted image

user posted image

user posted image

Berry Springs, NT, Australia. January.

This post was edited by Ele-W-11.02.2011 15: 23
Likes: 4

02.02.2011 13:21, Ele-W

The ubiquitous green tree ants Oecophylla smaragdina.

user posted image

This post was edited by Ele-W-10.02.2011 07: 40
Likes: 4

02.02.2011 13:22, Ele-W

user posted image

user posted image

user posted image

Berry Springs, NT, Australia. January.
Likes: 4

02.02.2011 13:24, Ele-W

The creature resembles a large ant, but is very fussy, constantly moving in all directions at once.

user posted image
Likes: 4

02.02.2011 13:25, Ele-W

user posted image

user posted image

user posted image

Berry Springs, NT, Australia. January.
Likes: 4

02.02.2011 13:30, Ele-W

Yellow booger.

user posted image

Berry Springs, NT, Australia. January.
Likes: 4

02.02.2011 13:33, Ele-W

Cockroach. Family Blattellidae.

I accidentally noticed him, he was well disguised. Two indistinct shots, distracted by a spider, turned around - no cockroach. Escaped.

user posted image

user posted image

Berry Springs, NT, Australia. January.

This post was edited by Ele-W-03.02.2011 04: 29
Likes: 4

02.02.2011 13:36, Ele-W

Just before the storm, I found something that looked like a bee on a blade of grass.

It's a wasp.

user posted image

user posted image

user posted image

This post was edited by Ele-W-05/14/2014 13: 10
Likes: 4

02.02.2011 13:37, Ele-W

user posted image

user posted image

Berry Springs, NT, Australia. January.

This post was edited by Ele-W-02.02.2011 13: 38
Likes: 4

02.02.2011 13:40, Ele-W

Finally, there are no insects here, but it seems to me that these things have something to do with insects.

1.

user posted image

Berry Springs, NT, Australia. January.

This post was edited by Ele-W-05/14/2014 12: 57
Likes: 3

02.02.2011 13:41, Ele-W

Case Moths, Psychidae sp.

user posted image

user posted image

user posted image

Berry Springs, NT, Australia. January.

This post was edited by Ele-W-04.03.2011 09: 39
Likes: 4

02.02.2011 13:43, Ele-W

That's all I managed to find in three hours of continuous searches in the bushes and grass. smile.gif

02.02.2011 14:34, Zlopastnyi Brandashmyg

It doesn't look like a grasshopper, it looks like a cricket.


But this is just a grasshopper-the Tettigoniidae family. But more precisely... I can't even tell if it's a larva or an adult: there are no rudiments of wings at all, i.e. if it's a larva, it's very young. Clearly a female. The spines on the forelegs are prehensile-M. B. podsem. Meconematinae?

02.02.2011 14:36, Zlopastnyi Brandashmyg

As for the cockroach, I can safely say: I don't know what it is. The Blattellidae family, and I can't go any further in the photo.

02.02.2011 15:47, Dr. Niko

Yellow booger.

Positive cicada smile.gif

Pages: 1 ...16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24... 75

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.