E-mail: Password: Create an Account Recover password

About Authors Contacts Get involved Русская версия

show

Who is it? Help us identify our neighbors!

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

Pages: 1 ...63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71... 168

18.09.2010 14:12, london

  
Her sneaker smile.gif

A sneaker is never the way out
Most likely that drupe. The surest option would be to cover all the cracks and crevices in the house and preferably eliminate any dampness, especially in dark places.
They are predators and they are only interested in small insects worms and molyuski so you do not grazit anything, in extreme cases a dust pump and on the street)))

18.09.2010 17:36, guest: katya

When I came to this apartment, I opened the floors, especially where the baseboards were filled with cement. And all to no avail. I live in the Kirovsky district. I can't take a picture, because at the sight of this monster, I start to get very scared and rather spray with a specialized spray. Dampness in this apartment can not be eliminated, because the dark side, first floor. The sun doesn't get in. Here is whether to call various services for cleaning, will it help?

18.09.2010 17:45, guest: katya

Where do you live (geography)? If in the south-then scolopendra, if to the north-then drupe (without a photo it is difficult).
Her sneaker smile.gif


I looked at the photo, it looks like I have scolopendra. weep.gif weep.gif weep.gif
please tell me how to deal with this viper!?

18.09.2010 17:52, vasiliy-feoktistov

I looked at the photo, it looks like I have scolopendra. weep.gif  weep.gif  weep.gif
please tell me how to deal with this viper!?

Pin it down or catch it and let it out on the street, and that's all there is to it: there's no need to mess around with anything else. Both of them are related wild animals and do not live at home (it's autumn now and it's more likely that they have crawled in for the winter to settle down). Maybe it's her after all: http://ru.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lithobius_forficatus

18.09.2010 19:50, Guest

Pin it down or catch it and let it out on the street, and that's all there is to it: there's no need to mess around with anything else. Both of them are related wild animals and do not live at home (it's autumn now and it's more likely that they have crawled in for the winter to settle down). Maybe it's her after all: http://ru.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lithobius_forficatus

No, the other one...
Okay, this was the only case, and then the second one crawls out, and in the same place!!!
And I feel bad... weep.gif weep.gif weep.gif
It seems to me that she will climb into bed at night, then in general I will die weep.gif weep.gif weep.gif weep.gif

18.09.2010 21:57, vasiliy-feoktistov

I live in the Kirovsky district.

And the Kirovsky district is not the Leningrad region by any chance? Then you don't have a centipede by default, just a drupe and no one else.

18.09.2010 23:37, Elion

Do you have a flycatcher?" http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/comm...e_centipede.jpg

19.09.2010 0:03, Guest

Do you have a flycatcher?" http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/comm...e_centipede.jpg

not a flycatcher, it's definitely frown.gif

19.09.2010 0:04, Guest

And the Kirovsky district is not the Leningrad region by any chance? Then you don't have a centipede by default, just a drupe and no one else.

Saint Petersburg, I watched kostyanka. What I have looks more like a centipede, but not a copy.

19.09.2010 7:46, vasiliy-feoktistov

Saint Petersburg, I watched kostyanka. What I have looks more like a centipede, but not a copy.

Yes, you have a drupe (scolopendra is the only thing that could have been imported from the Crimea, for example).

This post was edited by vasiliy-feoktistov - 19.09.2010 09: 52

19.09.2010 7:51, Guest

Yes, you have a drupe (scolopedra is the only thing that could have been imported from the Crimea, for example).

Thank you, tell me if there are any measures to combat them?
I want to call specialists for disinfection, will it help?

19.09.2010 8:01, vasiliy-feoktistov

Thank you, tell me if there are any measures to combat them?
I want to call specialists for disinfection, will it help?

I don't know, it's easier to pass it on. These are generally wild animals (not strictly confined to human habitation). In any park, you will find them in abundance under the bark of trees. Don't make a big deal out of a molehill.

07.10.2010 22:40, diman100let

I saw this 10mm thing when I turned on the bathroom light at night. The tile is yellow, and the thing (so that it won't be seen?) she ran in a curved line from the floor to the wall, making a path of 30 cm in about 1 s. And it hid on the seam (grout is also white), settling clearly along it. Sat down and sits waiting for me to find something to pin her down. I started my counter-operation: I found something to pin down, approached the thing at a distance of 3-5 mm - it did not notice (did not feel???). Pressed down, released (slightly, slightly) - the thing curved around the block, (the speed is about 30 cm / sec, went around and went under the bath. Since then (5 min ago) I haven't met her. I didn't have time to take a picture with her. Love* at first sight! Do you understand? )))

1. Size L=10-11mm , B=1mm.
2. Shape: Oblong, smooth, teardrop-shaped-thin, thinning towards the end.
3. The outer cover is white. Not transparent! Legs probably yellowish
4. Can bend, for maneuvering
5. Very fast.

I also thought it was yellowish inside . Or maybe a reflex (yellow tile).

I want to know what kind of animal it is! But I don't understand (((. Please help ???

Pictures:
picture: ____________.jpg
____________.jpg — (3.09к)

07.10.2010 23:10, diman100let

Useful or harmful and dangerous ???

07.10.2010 23:27, guest: omar

Probably sugar flake. Google this name.

07.10.2010 23:51, diman100let

Thank you very much! Judging by all the descriptions in Google, this is it. Eh ((I shouldn't have finished it off)))

08.10.2010 0:14, guest: omar

Well, it does no harm, in principle.

08.10.2010 0:25, diman100let

They say it brings-if there are quite a lot of them divorced. I'm glad that this thing has now been identified, thanks to your knowledge !

09.10.2010 12:26, kiryacov

Good time to all, help identify the insect, it seems like it looks like an earwig, but damn the color is not there, the person says that it bites, I wonder what it is,

here is the link , there is a photo http://www.e1.ru/talk/forum/read.php?f=118&i=153193&t=153193

Sincerely Alexandr

09.10.2010 13:16, london

Good time to all, help identify the insect, it seems like it looks like an earwig, but damn the color is not there, the person says that it bites, I wonder what it is,

here is the link , there is a photo http://www.e1.ru/talk/forum/read.php?f=118&i=153193&t=153193

Sincerely, Alexander

It's definitely not an earwig ... this beetle is most likely a barbel, judging by the color, shape of the body and the length of the whiskers this is someone from Clytiinae if the tropics then I'm at a dead end, utosnite dimensions because most likely this is someone from Clorophorus, similar to varius but painfully massive smile.gifanyway it is not dangerous, it feeds on parts of flowers and lice especially not poisonous so what rest easy

15.10.2010 23:15, Netti

Hello! please tell me what kind of insect it is, how to deal with it ?
They fly, fall, live mostly apparently in the kitchen. Now there are a lot of them, before that in the summer (from May to August) almost never showed up. Panel house, 14th floor. Moscow.
Thanks !

Pictures:
picture: 1.JPG
1.JPG — (3.37 k)

picture: 2.JPG
2.JPG — (2.41 k)

picture: 3.JPG
3.JPG — (2.54 k)

picture: 4.JPG
4.JPG — (2.38к)

picture: 5.JPG
5.JPG — (2.3 k)

picture: 6.JPG
6.JPG — (2.17 k)

16.10.2010 6:17, Dmitry Vlasov

In Russian, this species is called a tobacco beetle. It develops in various products of plant origin, dried plants (spices, floristics, herbaria). Control measures: find a development revenge and throw it out. If something is very necessary and it is a pity - then freeze at -15 and below for at least a day.

16.10.2010 13:46, Netti

Elizar, thank you very much ! Just a lot of all sorts of dried herbs (though from the pharmacy), apparently from there went. You know, he sometimes also sits on bread, is it an accident or does he also eat it ? Do you know if you can do something to avoid it in dried herbs-otherwise it turns out that you can't keep these herbs at home ((

16.10.2010 17:56, Dmitry Vlasov

Herbs should be kept in glass jars under a plastic lid so that they do not get colonized by tobacco beetle. Not a single infection will get through, thick polyethylene is not "up to their teeth". But put pre-frozen herbs in cans, because you can buy already infected ones.

18.10.2010 19:47, Netti

Thank you, Elizar!

24.10.2010 11:51, Chemist

Jumps 30 cm, length without mustache-4 cm, mustache about 7 cm. Apartment on the 8th floor, in Kiev. I found it early in the morning, despite the fact that the windows and the balcony were closed all night. Yesterday they did a general cleaning, moved the sink in the kitchen, could this thing live under it?

Pictures:
______DSCN2813.jpg
______DSCN2813.jpg — (322.38к)

______DSCN2814.jpg
______DSCN2814.jpg — (216.27к)

24.10.2010 12:01, vasiliy-feoktistov

Duc cricket in my opinion (larva)

24.10.2010 12:08, Mantispid

Similar to grasshoppers from the family Rhaphidophoridae
, most likely greenhouse, Diestrammena asynamora (Adelung, 1902)
Just what is he doing in the bathroom O_o

This post was edited by Mantispid - 24.10.2010 18: 38

24.10.2010 12:13, Alexandr Zhakov

Duc cricket in my opinion (larva)

40 mm larva, and then what is the adult?
something else.

24.10.2010 12:28, vasiliy-feoktistov

40 mm larva, and then what is the adult?
something else.

Sorry: I looked at the title of the topic inattentively shuffle.gif: of course this is not a cricket!
Likes: 1

24.10.2010 13:36, Мих

grasshopper greenhouse. Lives where it is damp , eats little.

26.10.2010 5:52, 111111

Hello, please help! We found insects at home, very similar to bedbugs, but for some reason transparent. They live in the cracks under the ceiling skirting board, drink blood at night, shit with black dots. I don't know how to upload a photo.

26.10.2010 7:17, 111111

Here is this misfortune!

Pictures:
picture: 2.JPG
2.JPG — (12.02 k)

26.10.2010 9:29, Victor Titov

Here is this misfortune!

The photo is extremely small and indistinct, but, apparently, bed beetles (Cimex lectularius) are yes.gif.

26.10.2010 17:01, 111111

Caught full! Very similar to a bedbug, but for some reason the belly is elongated, vezde write that it should be round. We do not know what kind of monsters and how to get rid of them! frown.gif

Pictures:
picture: 4.JPG
4.JPG — (111.29 k)

26.10.2010 17:17, Mantispid

Caught full! Very similar to a bedbug, but for some reason the belly is elongated, vezde write that it should be round. We do not know what kind of monsters and how to get rid of them! frown.gif

Bed bug, the most natural
http://coleop123.narod.ru/hemiptera/Cimex_lectularius.htm

This post was edited by Mantispid - 26.10.2010 17: 21

26.10.2010 17:19, Dmitry Vlasov

Bed bug. To get rid of it, you need to treat the entire apartment (especially behind the baseboards and wallpaper) with insecticides. It is easier to call the SES, they will process it for money...

28.10.2010 3:21, 111111

Thank you for your help!

31.10.2010 13:18, Guest

Good afternoon!
Please tell me, these insects began to appear in the apartment (Moscow) in the toilet. Several were found dead, and one was crawling along the wall. The size is 5 millimeters (from the tips of the "claws" to the end of the calf). Who are they and where could they have come from? I saw a similar photo on the forum, they wrote that it was a false scorpion, but since I'm not an expert, I can't be sure. Thank you in advance!

user posted image

31.10.2010 13:31, vasiliy-feoktistov

Not an insect, but an arachnid: A false scorpion is the very thing that is.
They are common in our apartments and absolutely not dangerous.

This post was edited by vasiliy-feoktistov - 31.10.2010 13: 32

Pages: 1 ...63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71... 168

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.