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Who is it? Help us identify our neighbors!

Community and ForumHow to get rid of insectsWho is it? Help us identify our neighbors!

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26.11.2008 10:03, Alexandr Rusinov

Are you sure they were bread grinders?" Maybe furniture, for them a parquet floor for food is just right?

26.11.2008 17:20, VAZ

They were assigned to me before the species in ZINA-Stegobium paniceum. My culture lives in flour. If you would like to check the species, I can provide you with the material.
http://www.tropicarium.ru/beetle1.htm

27.11.2008 10:51, Испуганная

Guys momogite pliz...I have 2 problems at once...we rented an apartment and there's trouble...
First of all, there were some insects in the bathroom...very small, dark ones...there are apparently adults they jump...and the young ones are even smaller and don't seem to jump...you can see them on the sink and on the tub near the wall.
Secondly, small black caterpillars were found in the room in the sofa under the pillows...we decided to change the sofa...they took away the old one, along with the chairs, just in case...however, then we saw that it kind of crawls out from under the paint on the floor...
please tell us who they are and how to exterminate them without harming the little kitten and yourself.... I'm terribly afraid of all insectsfrown.gif((

27.11.2008 10:58, Bad Den

In the bathroom, the ones that jump are most likely legwings (Collembola). The recipe for how to get rid of probably one - try to fix leaking pipes and faucets.
Black caterpillars - possibly the larvae of skin-eating beetles (Dermestidae) against them can help a good cleaning and chalk "Mashenka"

This post was edited by Bad Den - 11/27/2008 11: 15

27.11.2008 11:07, Испуганная

thank you.and where do the larvae live???and smear in this case where???

27.11.2008 11:46, Bad Den

thank you.and where do the larvae live???and smear in this case where???

Smear - along the baseboards, along the cracks in the floor (if the floor is wooden).
Likes: 1

27.11.2008 16:08, Kroko

user posted image

Please tell me, is this also a kozheed?

27.11.2008 16:09, omar

Yeah

27.11.2008 16:21, Kroko

Thank you for your prompt response. They ate a dried scorpion at my house, the creatures. I will fight...

27.11.2008 21:41, Ma Mantis

Trofim
No, not laggedsmile.gif Behind Meant cicadas in general, just gave the impression that leotau forbids" to have a place to be " Aphrophoridae in the Cicadoidea. There are all sorts of expressions from not very savvy, such as " pAmAgite, we have bedbugs or some other beetles...". But do not frighten a person with the rank of taxa! wink.gif
Likes: 1

28.11.2008 2:47, Мих

and they ate my entire collection. For the company of a moth. So with one scorpio, we got off cheap!

28.11.2008 12:38, Marina70

Good afternoon!
Unfortunately, there are no photos left in the first message.
Can you tell me if my animals are also weevils?
The description is very similar - 2 mm long, hard, 6 legs and proboscis

Pictures:
picture: DSCN77412.jpg
DSCN77412.jpg — (31.62 k)

DSCN77413.jpg
DSCN77413.jpg — (99.83к)

28.11.2008 12:48, omar

It looks like rice.

28.11.2008 12:51, Victor Titov

This is Sitophilus oryzae L., omar. yes.gif

This post was edited by Dmitrich - 28.11.2008 12: 52

28.11.2008 13:27, Marina70

Thank you all so much for your reply smile.gif

28.11.2008 15:29, Bad Den

So, M. V. Mokrousov defined this animal as Laelius nigricrus (Bethylidae).
Parasite of beetles from sem. Anobiidae, Bostrichidae, Dermestidae.
Likes: 3

28.11.2008 15:43, Fornax13

So, M. V. Mokrousov defined this animal as Laelius nigricrus (Bethylidae).
Parasite of beetles from sem. Anobiidae, Bostrichidae, Dermestidae.

And to me, and to me such!!! mol.gif Only live ones, otherwise the attagens are fucked up...
Likes: 1

28.11.2008 15:53, omar

Oh, come on. They bite and stink.

01.12.2008 15:56, Alekseyy

Hello.
At home (in a residential urban zhzb room), strange beetles have settled, small, brown in color, and periodically fly in the evening (when the light is on). Specifically, I constantly catch them from the light bulb that hangs on the ceiling, flying to the computer table (wooden). I don't know, maybe they're after either my tea, or the table itself, or the meat (i.e. me) smile.gif
I also found, in small numbers, the corpses of these beetles on the windowsill.
Near the cabinet (on the ceiling) found larger individuals. Apparently, they have something to do with wood, or clothing.

In general, last year, the same beetles periodically caught my eye, but then they disappeared somewhere by themselves, it was somewhere in September, and in the spring in my opinion, too, I then thought maybe it was May beetles. Now it's already December, there are more beetles, and apparently they are not going anywhere. I'd like to know who they are and what to do with them. And then suddenly they eat "meat", they will eat me at night, on the sly smile.gif

I took a few pictures (see attached file), the beetles are quite small, the pictures didn't turn out very well.

bugs.jpg

01.12.2008 18:03, Victor Titov

It looks like a tobacco beetle (Lasioderma serricorne F.) from the grinders. Pest of all kinds of plant products. Look for their breeding ground (cereals, crackers, dried medicinal herbs, dried mushrooms, etc., etc.) and destroy it.

This post was edited by Dmitrich - 01.12.2008 18: 05

01.12.2008 19:10, amara

It looks like a tobacco beetle (Lasioderma serricorne F.) from the grinders. Pest of all kinds of plant products. Look for their breeding ground (cereals, crackers, dried medicinal herbs, dried mushrooms, etc., etc.) and destroy it.

Famously, you saw them, and at first I thought that this is some kind of leatherhead Attagenus maybe.
Likes: 1

02.12.2008 15:26, Dmitry Vlasov

2VAZ-thank you for the information, very interesting, sorry to refer difficult....

02.12.2008 23:22, omar

Reddish wood parquet of the Soviet period-birch. I had those things eating her up pretty easily. As well as pine. In a pine jar of red pepper, they ate it right through. Wall thickness-2 cm.

02.12.2008 23:52, BlackWorm

Periodically I find dark red Worms with legs but, and the front legs are large and very small near the end of the tail. At the end of the tail there is a cross-split (thin antennae) like red horns. I find them all the time in the same place and with" children " small, under the sofa and in a pile of dust!
My room is very clean and I clean up the dust every other day.
The first time I killed 2 and did a general cleaning, I didn't find any nests. cool.gif
But after 3 days, there were already 5 of them in the same place!!!! teapot.gif
Who are they? Help, mom is in shock, thinks it's from the blanket!!!

02.12.2008 23:54, BlackWorm

the size of an adult worm is somewhere 5-6 mm.

03.12.2008 0:00, Bad Den

photo by

03.12.2008 12:04, Victor Titov

I have a vague doubt that we are talking about bony centipedes. Take a look here: http://foto.spbland.ru/details/120162/ and here http://macroclub.ru/gallery/showphoto.php/photo/1392 Looks like it?

This post was edited by Dmitrich - 03.12.2008 12: 05

03.12.2008 18:59, Guest

I have a vague doubt that we are talking about bony centipedes.


In the case of bonefish, the opposite is true - the farther the legs are from the head, the longer they are. And here, indeed, you can't figure it out without a photo...

03.12.2008 19:25, Fornax13

Google skin-eating larvae.

03.12.2008 20:41, BlackWorm

from kozheedov more or less this one is similar, but remotely
http://www.zin.ru/Animalia/coleoptera/imag..._angustum_1.jpg
This one still looks like a crawler....

My body tapers to the tail, and if you look at it from above, the legs are not visible at all! (except for the front pairs, but even then they don't perform well)That is, they are not protruding to the left and right like a leatherworm, and even more so like a centipede. But if you look from the side, you can see two large light red paws closer to the head, the rest are smaller and they are not visible at all to the tail.
There is no sawyere on his head. The body itself is hairless, smooth (hard) and glossy like the shell of an armadillo.
But there is a light red sawyere at the end of the tail! The tail is thin and of medium sharpness...

03.12.2008 20:52, Fornax13

Doesn't look like it?
http://www.pbase.com/image/36891362
Likes: 1

03.12.2008 21:10, BlackWorm

here is my primitive drawing, I certainly drew the body shape incorrectly because I am not an artist, but pay attention to the tail, it crosses like thin feathers, the color is light red like the legs.

Pictures:
 the image is no longer on the site: Image.jpg Image.jpg — (39.57к) 03.12.2008 — 17.12.2008

03.12.2008 21:12, Fornax13

Hm... Try taking a photo anyway...

03.12.2008 21:14, BlackWorm

Doesn't look like it?
http://www.pbase.com/image/36891362

yes, this one is more similar only yours still has large hairs in my opinion and the shape to the tail is still thick! And the antennae on the tail are completely different, look what kind of antennae I drew!!!

03.12.2008 21:15, Fornax13

Well, then I don't know.. Photo to the studio smile.gifBy the way, and what region?

03.12.2008 21:18, BlackWorm

Hm... Try taking a photo anyway...

listen, who is this worm on your link? it vaguely resembles mine in its shape and legs and the nature of its tail. What size is it? Mine is somewhere 5-6mm.
And please tell me where it is found and what it eats!!! wink.gif Is it opsen for humans? teapot.gif

03.12.2008 21:21, BlackWorm

Well, then I don't know.. Photo to the studio smile.gifBy the way, and what region?

I will definitely take a picture, but for this you need to wait a few days at least.
central region, Moscow.

03.12.2008 21:25, Fornax13

The larva of a leatherworm from the genus Attagenus - I also have these running around. Approximately this size is, and the beetles are brown, oval,3-3.5 millimeters. Not for humans. Feeds on keratin/chitin-containing substances of animal origin: wool, hair, dry insects.
Likes: 1

03.12.2008 22:32, BlackWorm

The larva of a leatherworm from the genus Attagenus - I also have these running around. Approximately this size is, and the beetles are brown, oval,3-3.5 millimeters. Not for humans. It feeds on keratin/chitin-containing substances of animal origin: wool, hair, dry insects.

Now the doubts are gone I always saw them in piles and dust and hair.
Tell me the larvae themselves, where are they born? Can I wear a blanket? We have a stupid Chinese (or Turkish) thick blanket on the couch. I hadn't noticed such insects before the blanket... weep.gif
Q can large teddy bears have similar parasites?

Are you fighting them yourself, or are they "friends"to you?

Thank you, but if I find a photo, I'll do it anyway...

03.12.2008 23:08, Fornax13

They eat entomological collectiones, so they don't hold it in high esteem. Larvae are born where the female lays eggs. If the blanket is woolen, then they can also be there, if it is not used. Now everywhere Attagenus smirnovi lives in houses, like an African by origin.

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