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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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11.08.2011 12:12, cefeida

managed to take a photo

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P1070317.JPG — (4.35мб)

11.08.2011 18:26, adetkov

It is similar to the larva of the flour crustacean (Tenebrio molitor). The name makes it clear what harms flour. Then, most likely, adult black beetles with a length of just under 2 cm will be found.

11.08.2011 18:36, cefeida

> Similar to the larva of the flour crustacean (Tenebrio molitor).

we looked at their photos, it doesn't look like our client.

11.08.2011 18:50, Маслина

Help!!!! I have these scales (bristle-tails) (identified by the photo above) wound up in a new bed, or rather under the bed linen drawer, that's where I found them! THE HORROR!!! I'm terrified of all these animals! At the factory, they show certificates (the bed is imported) and say, they say, we have nothing to do with 100%! There are a lot of bed linen and towels in the drawer ((((do you need to wash everything, iron it out? How to exterminate????? What to do????? Where do they lay their eggs???? and can they breed all over the apartment? I have little kidsfrown.gif(((I'm in a panic ((((PLEASE HELP!!!!!

11.08.2011 19:51, vasiliy-feoktistov

  
At the factory, they show certificates (the bed is imported) and say, they say, we have nothing to do with 100%! There are a lot of bed linen and towels in the drawer ((((do you need to wash everything, iron it out?

Of course, they have nothing to do with it. The reason is most likely in poorly dried underwear: dry it first. Sugar flake likes high humidity.

11.08.2011 20:29, scarit

In addition, scallops eat rotting fabric, so they feel great in underwear (or in rags, for example, in the bathroom).

11.08.2011 20:30, scarit

They are not dangerous for children.

13.08.2011 21:32, Света Боброва

TO help I don't know what kind of spider it is tell me!!!!!!!! I'm shocked!!!!!!I killed him in the kitchen!!!!

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20.08.2011 20:39, Arikain

Wolf spider from the family Lycosidae, in my opinion some kind of Trochosa (Trochosa sp.).

21.08.2011 20:31, Panic

user posted imageWhat is it and how to destroy it?

21.08.2011 20:37, Evgenich

Harmless, but very fast creature - flycatcher (Scutigera coleoptrata). It is listed in the Red Book of Russia!

21.08.2011 21:00, Panic

I live in Canada. and I really want to destroy it. How can you not tell me???

21.08.2011 21:03, Panic

I looked it up on Wikipedia - there aren't any in Canada.(((what is it??

21.08.2011 21:05, Panic

Scolopendra?

21.08.2011 21:27, Evgenich

Panic
Read less Wikipedia!!! umnik.gif
Why not in America? Got it!
See this article, for example:
http://work.colum.edu/~cshaw/scutigera.php
Likes: 1

21.08.2011 21:59, Panic

Thank you very much. The article is gorgeous. I don't believe Vicki anymore. I'm glad it's not a Centipede, as Google showed in the pictures. Thank you again.

21.08.2011 22:28, cefeida

Help! now, in addition to the next pair of caterpillars caught this morning (photo in the message above), moths have appeared - they look sluggish. Who are they and what do they need??!! - they hang out mostly in the kitchen, on the ceiling

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22.08.2011 9:05, Evgenich

cefeida
Check all the cereal cans, there's a nest of them!!!
Likes: 1

22.08.2011 13:21, AlexEvs

Why didn't anyone answer DanMar's question about grasshopper bellies? Or have you erased your messages?
In general, I will answer just in case. As far as I understand, these are the so-called hairworms-Nematophora. These are internal parasites of insects. The life cycle for most species is unknown. In the simplest case, the larva is introduced into the insect and develops into an adult in it. After that, the adult worm "forces" the insect to go to the water, exits the insect into the water, killing it. They mate in the water, etc. Sometimes the life cycle is complicated by the presence of intermediate hosts. How to deal with hairy men I have not met. I don't know why this happens only in males, either.
Likes: 1

22.08.2011 13:55, Zlopastnyi Brandashmyg

IMHO, it doesn't look like a hairy guy at all. I would have assumed that these were testes, since I almost didn't study the morphology of the internal genitalia of orthopteroids, so I didn't say anything.
Likes: 1

22.08.2011 14:01, Zlopastnyi Brandashmyg

This is what a "freshly crawled" hairworm looks like (Peru, 2008).

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Likes: 2

22.08.2011 16:00, AlexEvs

Indeed, then it is clear why only males have such structures. I've seen just such white hairs. The Peruvian copy is really dirty. If I find a photo in the evening, I'll post it.

22.08.2011 17:14, Zlopastnyi Brandashmyg

The hairs I saw, and had seen several times, were not white, but rather yellowish-brownish, rather sclerotized. This beast crawled out of an unidentified (alas!) an insect is exposed to the light during fishing, so soil particles are visible on it. I fixed it and, as it turned out, in vain. As I was told, after leaving the host, the worm must shed on the imago, and the larva is practically indeterminate.

22.08.2011 19:00, Коллекционер

This is what a "freshly crawled" hairworm looks like (Peru, 2008).

fuuuuu frown.gif

22.08.2011 19:42, Bad Den

As I was told, after leaving the host, the worm must shed on the imago, and the larva is practically indeterminate.

It needs to be placed in water i.e. and wait until it sheds?
Do we have experts on them?

22.08.2011 20:54, Zlopastnyi Brandashmyg

As I was told, communication was "second-hand", in moist soil. Maybe you can throw some of them in the water, but I'm not an expert here. The only expert I know is Sergey Spiridonov from Moscow.

22.08.2011 22:37, Triplaxxx

Alternatively, the grasshopper may have contained the larvae of the nematode Mermithidae. They develop inside insects, and as far as I know, the largest species in our country develop just in the erect-winged ones.

22.08.2011 22:39, cefeida

  cefeida
Check all the cereal cans, there's a nest of them!!!

Thank you for your advice!
And who are they, they were their own tracks? I'll go look for cookies because there are no cereals. You don't need to poison them just throw everything out?)

22.08.2011 23:05, cefeida

People, please tell me more how to deal with hay eaters-very razdrpazhayut-smeared gel but they still crawl kae where-we will soon transport things and do not want to distribute them with things

22.08.2011 23:57, okoem

And who are they, they were their own tracks? I'll go look for cookies because there are no cereals. You don't need to poison them just throw everything out?)

This is the barn firefly Plodia interpunctella. In breadcrumbs, or old cookies, too, can be. You don't need to poison, just steal it. Well, there are still "clean" cereals hermetically sealed.

23.08.2011 14:18, AlexEvs

I have seen hairworms come out of diplopods Pachyiulus krivolutskii (those who were in the North-West Caucasus saw them - such big white smelly gooseberries). They get out into the water and in the streams you can find quite a lot of them. They are pure white in color. These worms were passed on to Spiridonov. These are adults. I think the life cycle is different for different species. It is likely that some of them come out of the host as an adult, others as a larva.
Or maybe it's really not hairy, but methamphydes.

23.08.2011 20:30, cefeida

This is the barn firefly Plodia interpunctella. In breadcrumbs, or old cookies, too, can be. You don't need to poison, just steal it. Well, there are still "clean" cereals hermetically sealed.

they searched through all the food deposits at home and found nothing - they can't be in bumega? the only option left is an unexplored vent shaft - is it really possible that they are getting to us on it? and what should I do in this case?

24.08.2011 3:47, Dmitry Vlasov

they searched through all the food deposits at home and found nothing - they can't be in bumega? the only option left is an unexplored vent shaft - is it really possible that they are getting to us on it? and what should I do in this case?

Look again in dried fruits, maybe where they are lying around... Only butterflies can enter through the ventilation, cover with a mosquito net, gauze or similar

24.08.2011 14:10, DanMar

Thank you all very much!!! It seems that these structures were testes after all, and the specimen itself died from some parasitic fungi, as it later acquired an unpleasant smell and bluish color. But I can't say anything, since I don't understand either the internal organs of Erectus or these parasites. Sorry to bother mol.gifyou . The only thing that bothered me in this case was that the structures were very different from everything else.
Likes: 1

28.08.2011 8:48, IrinaMinaeva

today I found this in the room, there is no food, so it seems that it is not a cockroach, and it is not very similar (?)
I searched in the Internet, it is very similar to the COMMON BLACK GROUND BEETLE
is it safe? and where could it have come from?

____________041.jpg
Likes: 1

28.08.2011 9:05, vasiliy-feoktistov

Absolutely safe: this is some kind of beetle from the family of Ground beetles. Appeared from the street or brought with something.
Likes: 1

28.08.2011 13:22, Bad Den

  today I found this in the room, there is no food, so it seems that it is not a cockroach, and it is not very similar (?)
I searched in the Internet, it is very similar to the COMMON BLACK GROUND BEETLE
is it safe? and where could it have come from?


Safe. As Vasily already wrote, he appeared from the street, could have flown into the light.
Likes: 1

03.09.2011 21:52, Вздохухоль

I've read 20 pages so far, but I haven't found my own problem confused.gif
In general, it appeared a few days ago. About 1.2 cm, the body is in the form of a slightly elongated leaf, I did not find the head, but a certain process sticks out on one side. The body is soft, in longitudinal folds, the legs are very short, I think there are 6 of them, but I'm not sure. It crawls very slowly.
What is this mess? I've never even seen anything like it.

Sorry, the picture is very fuzzy, but the general outline is visible.DSC00005.JPG

03.09.2011 23:44, Dracus

Doesn't that sound like it? This is the larva of the babbler fly.

http://www.dpughphoto.com/images/syrphid%2...ens%2070307.JPG

So the photo is very fuzzy, of course.

05.09.2011 14:23, AGG

We won't see it either lol.gif
and you can take a photo, not "this"

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