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Australia, Northern Territories

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28.04.2011 15:27, Ele-W

With beetles, Mr. Bush is quite consistent - Agathidium bushi
Is in honor of the American president, and not because the beetle lives in the bush.
http://www.zin.ru/animalia/coleoptera/rus/politics.htm


Well, what happens! eek.gif

28.04.2011 15:28, Ele-W

1. Perhaps it is Araneidae. Similar to Leucage dromedaria. Female
2. The same one, it seems.
3.?
4. Argiope keyserlingi  jump.gif
5. Agriope sp.?
6. +
7. + male.


Thank you, I'll sign you all now.

28.04.2011 15:50, Ele-W

Elle, thank you so much for the very informative photos , you are just great! But if you try to attract insects using DRL on the screen, porridge from fermenting fruits, can you put soil traps with vinegar or some other bait ? Can the species range of insects increase significantly ? And we will all be thrilled to immerse ourselves in the contemplation of the Australian entomo fauna ! mol.gif  jump.gif  beer.gif


I've already given up trying to lure anyone in. smile.gif In October, I spent three weeks on traps-glasses, baskets, pits, even bought yellow plateslol.gif-I lured them to apple cider vinegar, honey, oil, various fruits (of varying degrees of spoilage), meat, shrimp, sausage and other food products. Only ants are lured in terrible numbers. Tired to the point of impossibility. frown.gif

Screen (white background with lighting) while in the project, I will not find a fabric on which insects can cling and that it looks good in the pictures. I overcome the resistance of my family, because they are not very happy about "experiments with midges" on our balcony. smile.gif
Likes: 1

28.04.2011 15:53, Ele-W

All sorts of small animals flew into the room through the holes in the mosquito net.

1.

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Darwin, NT, Australia. April.
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28.04.2011 15:55, Ele-W

2.

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Darwin, NT, Australia. April.
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29.04.2011 5:49, Ele-W

Insects from the last Sunday trip.

1. Someone's large food supply.

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Manton Dam, NT, Australia. April.
Likes: 1

29.04.2011 5:50, Ele-W

2. A bug from Coreidae or Alydidae.

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Manton Dam, NT, Australia. April.

This post was edited by Ele-W-04.05.2011 17: 35
Likes: 2

29.04.2011 5:51, Ele-W

3. The red-eyed patient fly.

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Manton Dam, NT, Australia. April.
Likes: 3

29.04.2011 5:53, Ele-W

4. I already shot similar boogers a few months ago, but they were painted differently.

A cicada from the family Derbidae.

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Manton Dam, NT, Australia. April.

This post was edited by Ele-W-04.05.2011 17: 35
Likes: 5

29.04.2011 16:16, Dr. Niko

1. Perhaps it is Araneidae. Similar to Leucage dromedaria. Female
2. The same one, it seems.
3.?
4. Argiope keyserlingi  jump.gif
5. Agriope sp.?
6. +
7. + male

Thank you for the beautiful photos.

1. Then Tetragnathidae and Leuca u ge dromedaria.

4. If we have already decided to determine by habit, then it may well be A. aetherea shuffle.gif

Thank you for the photos, Ele-W!

29.04.2011 17:00, Ele-W

1. Then Tetragnathidae and Leuca u ge dromedaria.

4. If we have already decided to determine by habit, then it may well be A. aetherea shuffle.gif


Made amendments.

29.04.2011 17:25, Ele-W

Moths of the last week.

1. Heterallactis sp. ©

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Darwin, NT, Australia. April.

This post was edited by Ele-W-30.04.2011 10: 36
Likes: 5

29.04.2011 17:26, Ele-W

2. Spodoptera mauritia ©

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Darwin, NT, Australia. April.

This post was edited by Ele-W-30.04.2011 10: 37
Likes: 4

29.04.2011 17:27, Ele-W

3.

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Darwin, NT, Australia. April.
Likes: 4

29.04.2011 17:27, Ele-W

4. Theretra silhetensis. ©

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Darwin, NT, Australia. April.

This post was edited by Ele-W-30.04.2011 10: 38
Likes: 5

29.04.2011 17:28, Ele-W

5. Chlorocoma sp., can dichloraria ©

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Darwin, NT, Australia. April.

This post was edited by Ele-W-30.04.2011 10: 39
Likes: 5

29.04.2011 17:28, Ele-W

6. Chlorocoma sp., can dichloraria ©

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Darwin, NT, Australia. April.

This post was edited by Ele-W-30.04.2011 10: 39
Likes: 6

29.04.2011 20:41, Zhuk

Moths of the last week.
1.

Heterallactis sp.
  2.

Spodoptera mauritia
  4.

Theretra silhetensis
  5.

  6.

Chlorocoma sp., can dichloraria

30.04.2011 10:40, Ele-W

Heterallactis sp.

Spodoptera mauritia

Theretra silhetensis
Chlorocoma sp., can dichloraria


Thanks! smile.gif

30.04.2011 17:34, Arikain

1. Then Tetragnathidae and Leucauge dromedaria.

4. If we have already decided to determine by habit, then it may well be A. aetherea shuffle.gif

Thank you for the photos, Ele-W!

Aha,
1. it seemed to me that it belongs redface.gifto the Araneidae .
4. I thought that synonyms, thanks for the correction. A. aetherea is larger in size.

04.05.2011 6:36, Ele-W

Some kind of monster. There are not enough pictures and they are bad, because I was very afraid of this monster. redface.gif

Mole cricket. ©

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Darwin, NT, Australia. April.

This post was edited by Ele-W-04.05.2011 16: 58
Likes: 4

04.05.2011 6:37, Ele-W

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Darwin, NT, Australia. April.
Likes: 4

04.05.2011 6:38, Ele-W

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Darwin, NT, Australia. April.
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04.05.2011 9:10, Alexandr Zhakov

This is Medvedka http://ru.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mole cricket

04.05.2011 13:01, Ele-W

This is Medvedka http://ru.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mole cricket


Wow, I've heard the name a hundred times, but I've never seen it live. Horror on the wings of night!©

Thanks! smile.gif

04.05.2011 13:07, Ele-W

This is Medvedka http://ru.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mole cricket


And here's the question. smile.gif If it gets knocked up again , does it bite? redface.gif There is nothing in the article about this, but it looks terrible, just to the point of horror. And I hope it's not poisonous?"

And yes, we have some kind of underground, but very volatile, under the lanterns they soar like hawks and hunt all sorts of insect trifles. I had never seen them before this year.

04.05.2011 13:22, Zlopastnyi Brandashmyg

I've never heard of bears biting - I've always picked them up myself. On the other hand, they have quite decent jaws. Bears are not poisonous. In principle, they fly well in our region and are attracted to the light, and even more so in the tropics. In Peru, I observed a massive release of Scapteriscus into the world (this is another genus of the Gryllotalpidae family).

04.05.2011 16:30, Ele-W

I've never heard of bears biting - I've always picked them up myself. On the other hand, they have quite decent jaws. Bears are not poisonous.


So you just need to overcome your fear. It will be difficult. redface.gif

Likes: 1

04.05.2011 16:42, Ele-W

I've saved up some beetles! smile.gif

1. Representative of the ground beetle family. ©

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This post was edited by Ele-W-05.05.2011 05: 57
Likes: 5

04.05.2011 16:43, Ele-W

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Darwin, NT, Australia. April.
Likes: 4

04.05.2011 16:44, Ele-W

2. Plavunets (very similar to our Hydaticus). ©

Almost round, perfectly smooth and terribly mobile, I hope, the same beetle.

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This post was edited by Ele-W-05.05.2011 05: 58
Likes: 1

04.05.2011 16:54, Ele-W

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Darwin, NT, Australia. April.
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04.05.2011 17:00, Ele-W

Tomorrow morning I'll bring another third beetle, but I don't have time today.

04.05.2011 17:58, Arikain

The second one seems to be a waterfowl of some sort.

04.05.2011 19:11, Zlopastnyi Brandashmyg

So you just need to overcome your fear. It will be difficult. redface.gif


At first I wanted to write - don't be afraid, they don't bite! And then I was afraid that Kaak might bite you too. And I will be morally responsible frown.gif

And the Peruvian scapteriscus simply shocked me with its "predation". Arriving en masse at the light, they ran under their feet, grabbed fallen insects, often larger than themselves (!) and dragged them into burrows. However, if I remember correctly, they preferred already damaged victims. I still don't get it: it was the flying animals that began to dig under our screen, or the burrows were already under our feet from the beginning. Rather, the first one, but I didn't observe it more precisely.

04.05.2011 22:26, Dr. Niko

URL 1424-1425:
"Most likely it is Bavia aericeps Simon, 1877" © Marek Żabka.

shuffle.gif I couldn't resist asking a Polish arachnologist-salticidologist.

05.05.2011 4:12, Ele-W

URL 1424-1425:
"Most likely it is Bavia aericeps Simon, 1877" © Marek Żabka.

shuffle.gif I couldn't resist asking a Polish arachnologist-salticidologist.


Thank you very much! smile.gif I signed everything.

http://molbiol.ru/forums/index.php?showtop...dpost&p=1195313

This post was edited by Ele-W-05.05.2011 04: 12

05.05.2011 4:14, Ele-W

The second one looks like a waterfowl of some sort.


It reminded me of the "floating beetles" from my childhood. smile.gif Only a few times smaller.

05.05.2011 4:18, Ele-W

At first I wanted to write - don't be afraid, they don't bite! And then I was afraid that Kaak might bite you too. And I will be morally responsible frown.gif


The main thing is that it's not poisonous, but ... well, it won't bite you to death! I'll survive if anything happens. wink.gif Now you need to have the courage to touch it, that will be difficult. For some reason, this bear seems to me even scarier than cockroaches.

05.05.2011 4:22, Ele-W

Beetle number 3.

Lamellar mustache from hollows. ©

He became attached to me on a walk in the evening, clung to my hand, and so they came home with a bug. Oncoming people were very frightened by what they saw. lol.gif Because the beetle is a big one, I talked to it, scratched its wings, and it answered me with a gentle grunt. A nice beetle, calm and beautiful.

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This post was edited by Ele-W-05.05.2011 05: 59
Likes: 6

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