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Australia, Northern Territories

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09.04.2015 13:58, Ele-W

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09.04.2015 21:05, Kharkovbut

Here is what is immediately determined. Maybe later we will be able to determine some of the remaining ones.

1. Unknown Dragonfly. Darwin, NT, Australia. March 2009
Pantala flavescens, male

2. Unknown Dragonfly. Darwin, NT, Australia. May 2011
Ceriagrion aeruginosum, female

3. Unknown Dragonfly. Darwin Botanic Gardens, Darwin, NT, Australia. April 2011
Ceriagrion aeruginosum, female

7. Unknown Dragonfly. Darwin Botanic Gardens, Darwin, NT, Australia. April 2011
Diplacodes trivialis, female

8. Unknown Dragonfly. Robin Falls, NT, Australia. April 2011
Diplacodes trivialis, female

9. Unknown Dragonfly. Litchfield National Park, NT, Australia. April 2008
Diplacodes trivialis, male

10. Unknown Dragonfly. Litchfield National Park, NT, Australia. August 2009
Diplacodes haematodes, male

This post was edited by Kharkovbut-09.04.2015 21: 06
Likes: 1

10.04.2015 4:54, Ele-W

Here is what is immediately determined. Maybe later we will be able to determine some of the remaining ones.


Thank you so much, just incredible and amazing! smile.gif

10.04.2015 4:58, Ele-W

So, there are only 3 UFOs left!

1. Gynacantha sp. Darwin Botanic Gardens, Darwin, NT, Australia. April 2011

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2. Agriocnemis sp., female. Darwin Botanic Gardens, Darwin, NT, Australia. April 2011

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3. Neurothemis stigmatizans, female. Darwin Botanic Gardens, Darwin, NT, Australia. April 2011

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All the others are neatly signed and arranged in folders.

This post was edited by Ele-W-11.04.2015 05: 11
Likes: 3

10.04.2015 5:00, Ele-W

Okzalaos that this does not apply to dragonflies. shuffle.gif

this is the skin of a song cicada nymph. wink.gif


I moved it to an album with cicadas.

Nymphal exuvium. Christchurch Botanic Gardens, New Zealand. January 2005

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This post was edited by Ele-W-11.04.2015 05: 01
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10.04.2015 5:01, Ele-W

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This post was edited by Ele-W-10.04.2015 17: 36
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10.04.2015 16:20, Victor Titov

Here's another one I found on the subject of dragonflies - very old pictures from New Zealand, an empty dragonfly larva (if I'm not mistaken, of course).
Christchurch Botanic Gardens, New Zealand. January 2005

No, it's the skin of a song cicada nymph. wink.gif

10.04.2015 17:29, Ele-W

No, it's the skin of a song cicada nymph. wink.gif


Not a day without blunders-it becomes my motto! lol.gif

Thanks! smile.gif

How do I sign it? Just "nymph"?

10.04.2015 17:37, Ele-W

And traditionally-termite mounds. This time at sunset.

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10.04.2015 17:45, Ele-W

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10.04.2015 17:46, Ele-W

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10.04.2015 21:49, Victor Titov

  
How do I sign it? Just "nymph"?

I guess it's "Nymphal exuvium."

10.04.2015 23:25, Kharkovbut

So, there are only 3 UFOs left!

1. Unknown Dragonfly. Darwin Botanic Gardens, Darwin, NT, Australia. April 2011

2. Unknown Dragonfly. Darwin Botanic Gardens, Darwin, NT, Australia. April 2011

3. Unknown Dragonfly. Darwin Botanic Gardens, Darwin, NT, Australia. April 2011

1: Gynacantha sp.

2: Agriocnemis sp., female

3: Neurothemis stigmatizans, female
Likes: 1

11.04.2015 5:00, Ele-W

I guess it's "Nymphal exuvium."


Thank you very much! Now I won't be wrong if I see it again. smile.gif

11.04.2015 5:21, Ele-W

Dear Kharkovbut, you are my hero! The words " thank you so much!" they do not sufficiently reflect the feeling of gratitude that I feel, it is just something akin to reckless worship of unattainable peaks. The truth is the truth. smile.gif

11.04.2015 5:24, Ele-W

So, the album

Dragonflies

completely finished! All dragonflies with names, it's sumsas, how great! smile.gif

I send images to the archive. And I will try to fill up this daddy as much as I can, because we have a lot of dragonflies flying now, the off-season has already begun.
Likes: 1

11.04.2015 13:11, Victor Titov

 
1. The appetizer was removed from the menu, it turned out that it was not a dragonfly!

Well, you should not exclude it from the menu: just clarified the name of the dish. wink.gif

11.04.2015 14:30, Ele-W

Well, you should not exclude it from the menu: just clarified the name of the dish. wink.gif


The dish with the updated name was sent to the special menu:

Fillies, aka "Locusts"

What else to call the album-I didn't have enough imagination.

11.04.2015 15:56, Ele-W

There aren't a lot of fillies in the album yet, but they are big ones - mares, I'm not afraid of that word. Scary and terrible.

1. Acrididae. Elsey National Park, NT, Australia. December 2009

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11.04.2015 15:56, Ele-W

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This post was edited by Ele-W-11.04.2015 15: 57
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11.04.2015 15:58, Ele-W

2. Acrididae. Mataranka Homestead, NT, Australia. April 2010

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11.04.2015 15:59, Ele-W

3. Acrididae. Darwin, NT, Australia. September 2011

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11.04.2015 15:59, Ele-W

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11.04.2015 16:00, Ele-W

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11.04.2015 16:00, Ele-W

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11.04.2015 16:01, Ele-W

4. Acrididae, Cyrtacanthacridini, Valanga sp. Darwin, NT, Australia. February 2011

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11.04.2015 16:02, Ele-W

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11.04.2015 16:02, Ele-W

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This post was edited by Ele-W-11.04.2015 16: 05
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11.04.2015 16:03, Ele-W

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11.04.2015 16:04, Ele-W

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11.04.2015 16:04, Ele-W

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11.04.2015 16:07, Ele-W

And a romantic encounter between two monsters.

5. Acrididae. Darwin, NT, Australia. April 2013

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11.04.2015 16:10, Ele-W

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11.04.2015 16:12, Ele-W

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The album contains a lot of details and two short videos.
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11.04.2015 16:15, Ele-W

And while that's all about mares, there are still subfolders of pictures in the "Acrididae" folder, but they still need to be sorted out, and I don't have the courage, because I'm completely unable to distinguish fillies from grasshoppers if I don't sign them in time, so many mistakes are expected. But I'll sort it all out in time. smile.gif

11.04.2015 22:48, Jaguar paw

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Spider-Dendrolycosa icadia (L. Koch, 1876), Pisauridae smile.gif

This post was edited by Jaguar paw - 11.04.2015 22: 51
Likes: 1

12.04.2015 3:36, Ele-W

Spider-Dendrolycosa icadia (L. Koch, 1876), Pisauridae smile.gif


Thank you very much! smile.gif

With a running start and not waking up, I almost ran to sign the dragonfly with this beautiful name. lol.gif But I came to my senses in time!

12.04.2015 8:18, Jaguar paw

Likes: 1

13.04.2015 11:59, Ele-W

One note - you have spiders in the album with insects, but spiders (with scorpions, solpugs, etc.) belong to the class Arachnida, and already with the classes insects (Insecta), crustaceans (Crustacea) and others, are part of the type of arthropods (Arthropoda) animals smile.gif


redface.gif Oh, that's right, spiders aren't insects! After all, I remembered, but again I forgot, I'm ashamed. shuffle.gif

Hence, the question now arises - perhaps it is possible to rename the existing "Insects" subcategory so that spiders are included there? Or not?

Or you can move the spiders to a separate sub-category "Arachnida", then there will be only one album. Which is not rational, but possible.

13.04.2015 12:34, Jaguar paw

  redface.gif Oh, that's right, spiders aren't insects! After all, I remembered, but again I forgot, I'm ashamed. shuffle.gif 

Hence, the question now arises - perhaps it is possible to rename the existing "Insects" subcategory so that spiders are included there? Or not?

Or you can move the spiders to a separate sub-category "Arachnida", then there will be only one album. Which is not rational, but possible.
Thank you so much!

If you don't want to fuss, rename it Arthropoda, which can later include crustaceans, centipedes, centipedes, etc. umnik.gif

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