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Crimea, Ukraine, Belarus and Moldova

Community and ForumTravel and expeditionsCrimea, Ukraine, Belarus and Moldova

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15.05.2009 8:17, okoem

One instance of Hadena silenes. As for me, this is the only and only valuable copy from the entire trip.

The most interesting find is Rebelia nocturnella - this is the second specimen for the Crimea!

Likes: 2

15.05.2009 9:06, Egorus

For Ripper, your report on Crimea, dated 04.05.09, does not show
approximately 15 photos. I see rectangles with a red cross.
Specify the number of the photo with Hadena.

For okoem, for the first two hours, four such baggies were the only
visitors to the screen. Because of the wind, and perhaps behaviorally, they were constantly
moving across the screen with fluttering wings. I didn't get a good photo.
And, because of" vague suspicions", the photo got into " Reports...", and one copy
was taken for the collection. (It also turned out badly – they are too small)

Chesnochnitsy with Kerch. p-va. One of the participants writes a note on them.
(Although it is east of Karadag, but they speak according to chesnochnitsa, each find
is (still) written.

15.05.2009 12:13, RippeR

her?

Pictures:
 the image is no longer on the site: 20.JPG 20.JPG — (55.1 k) 15.05.2009-29.05.2009

15.05.2009 13:18, Трофим

Andrey. You didn't hear anything, or maybe you were looking for Piri. I don't have the opportunity to take my exams right now frown.gif. Interestingly, we have probably already passed the years. And then in all the northern directions of the eyeglass just cut down. Especially Aglia, we would like such a large number of them. Do we have any arrests known to Aglai?

15.05.2009 17:31, okoem

For okoem, for the first two hours, four such baggies were the only
visitors to the screen. Because of the wind, and perhaps behaviorally, they were constantly
moving across the screen with fluttering wings.

Eeeeh... I envy you with white envy!
On the screen, fluttering their wings-this is a characteristic feature of baggies - they have no time to rest, life is too short - the female must be found in time and die quietly. smile.gif
her?
That's the one.

This post was edited by okoem - 15.05.2009 17: 34
Likes: 2

15.05.2009 22:32, Egorus

For rhopalocera, when, quite recently, before the crisis, in the trains
of a homeless type, "managers" offered a choice of black/kr. caviar at
a price of 25 UAH. (=5usl.=40 UAH.today), for a half-liter jar, then
you start to be suspicious of expensive, theoretically real
caviar in such a package. That's why I didn't ask for the price. But to buy
a kalkan at the price of approx. 3usl.per kg. - quite acceptable.


For Ripper By Haden, okoem answered. And photos seg. in the evening are viewed
all.

This post was edited by Egorus-15.05.2009 23: 31

16.05.2009 18:39, Victor Titov

With the help of flashlights, examining the trunks of trees,
we managed to collect some ground beetles.

24IMG_2816_ik.jpg

In my opinion, in the top row, the three left-most beetles are not ground beetles, but black-bodied ones like Nalassus... shuffle.gif

16.05.2009 19:42, RippeR

Trofim: I've never been outside Piri, and I have nowhere to go..

Thaler: our spring is going well! Everything is on time.

I went to the woods again today. Caught a lot of stuff. The most interesting is Cortodera villosa, about a dozen or more )

They set one trap with wine for a week, for barbels.
Caught: 3 scopoli, 4 Phymatodes testaceum, 1 Rhagium sycophanta, 1 Cortodera humeralis.And hornets and moths.

Zhuchatniki, beware of the congress, there will be interesting barbels smile.gif
Likes: 4

17.05.2009 9:32, RippeR

Back to yesterday's report:

Who can tell you what kind of sausage?
DSC00166.JPGDSC00167.JPG

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DSC00184.JPG
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Likes: 18

17.05.2009 10:44, Liparus

[quote=RippeR,17.05.2009 10:32]

17.05.2009 10:46, Liparus

Back to yesterday's report:

and what is the beetle in the 5th photo on the right down

17.05.2009 11:02, okoem

Who can tell you what kind of sausage?
Some kind of cocoonworm. Reminds me of clover.
Likes: 1

17.05.2009 14:19, RippeR

and what is the beetle in the 5th photo on the bottom right

What's this picture? write the name.

17.05.2009 17:59, Liparus

What's this picture? write the name.

DSC00171.JPG

17.05.2009 23:58, RippeR

some Mordelidae

18.05.2009 0:14, omar

And I would say that the narrow-wing. Lucky you on them smile.gif

18.05.2009 0:14, omar

I like 161

18.05.2009 0:15, omar

Maybe Fornax will recognize it. Something stupid lay out in opredelenin Zhukov 161

18.05.2009 0:19, RippeR

161 - Cortodera villosa
Likes: 1

18.05.2009 0:45, omar

161 - Cortodera villosa

cool! I've never seen such things And they said that there are no cortoders on flowers wink.gif

18.05.2009 4:08, RippeR

Cortoders are found on flowers. Humeralis, there, on the flowers of hawthorn is full, villos more often comes across plants, but now we managed to find flowers on the flowers. The rest of them, according to theory, are also found on some flowers that are gnawing in the fields, the only problem is that they practically do not know who and on which ones, since the beetles are not frequent and rather secretive.
Likes: 1

18.05.2009 10:17, svm2

There was a need to go To the Cherkasy region , but not without taking the opportunity to fish.
15.05.09 Moscow timeStaroselye, Smelyansky district, Cherkasy region (N49°17,035’, E031°40,191’) 21-30 to 24-00 cold +10 in the beginning +6 at the end.Years worthless

1-S.harpangula

2-L.marginata
3-L.adustata
4-C.cinctaria
5-S.lunularia
6-T.flavicaria
7-C.annularia
8-C.punctaria
9-X.fluctuata
10-E.unangulata

11-D.dodonaea
12-P.capucina

13-M.lunaris

14-A.gamma
15-A.rumicis
16-C.coryli
17-Ch.trigrammica

18-C.pudibunda

8.11.18-more than 10 copies, the rest is single(1-5)
Likes: 2

18.05.2009 10:39, omar

Liparus, if you like trubkoverty so much, go to Legalov's website.
Likes: 1

19.05.2009 10:17, svm2

To the report for 09.05 (Zhytomyr polesie),
http://molbiol.ru/forums/index.php?showtop...ndpost&p=897809
D. Murastyy sent me a couple more photos
picture: zh11.jpg
picture: zh22.jpg
Likes: 10

19.05.2009 18:42, Egorus

Likes: 1

20.05.2009 23:56, Liparus

We went with Barry to the region for the whole day, traveled by train: pine forest, deciduous, and river valley
In the pine forest there was a massive reproduction of some black flies
According to the results of fishing the most travelable place is a deciduous forest with small sunny glades
The funny thing is that as I just started eating a cursed banana, he suddenly fell out of me from the hands of a dung heap (Emus hirtus!), caught,Boris even took a photo, but it's a pity the second one got washed off in the dung...
I didn't catch any false slayers and I didn't catch any cryptorhinuses either frown.gif

Please comment if anything unusual or och. ordinary

This post was edited by Liparus - 05/21/2009 00: 03
Likes: 13

21.05.2009 0:45, Aaata

What kind of beetles are on IMG_7774.JPG top left resembling silkworms?

21.05.2009 7:33, AlexEvs

And these, in my opinion, are the nutcrackers. I also noticed them. Interesting beetles...

21.05.2009 8:20, Bad Den

What kind of beetles are on IMG_7774.JPG top left resembling silkworms?

I think it's Melandryidae

21.05.2009 9:15, omar

Budden is right, this is Hypulus quercinus must be. And must be picked out of rotten oak.
Likes: 1

21.05.2009 10:54, Liparus

Budden is right, this is Hypulus quercinus must be. And it should be picked out of rotten oak.

Yes, it is, on a large trunk of a fallen oak (rotten) sat
Last time such a cat caught on the edge of the forest

21.05.2009 14:19, barry

We went with Barry to the region for the whole day,traveled by train: pine forest, deciduous, and river valley


We visited three places - Bezlyudovka, Vasishchevo, Udyanka. Everything took place in a panicked atmosphere. I missed about half of it, didn't have time to shoot it, and everyone was running away... nutcrackers vaguely resembling murinus and all sorts of small nutcrackers, bedbugs. I didn't run around much for moth plants, grasshoppers, and moths, and I also came across a lot of them... I wanted to dial home, but it doesn't fit much into the boxes, everyone climbs back in a crowd... in general, a nightmare. I left at 9 am, returned at the beginning of the 10th in the evening... smile.gif

A little bit of the footage, the rest will be posted on my website in the near future...

Catching Emus hirtus...
CRW_7594.jpg

and he himself is in a natural environment...
CRW_7588.jpg

(?) Diaphora mendica
CRW_7353.jpg

Rhynocoris annulatus
CRW_7361.jpg

Rhagium sycophanta
CRW_7438.jpg

Mnemosyne
CRW_7454.jpg

Cockroach
CRW_7462.jpg

Olethreutes arcuella
CRW_7525.jpg

Nutcracker Selatosomus cruciatus
CRW_7552.jpg

Hylobius transversovittatus
CRW_7571.jpg

This post was edited by barry - 05/22/2009 07: 54
Likes: 18

21.05.2009 15:36, Liparus

in general, a nightmare. Left at 9 am, returned at the beginning of the 10th in the evening...
(?) Pissodes pini
CRW_7571.jpg


well, with pissodes, you certainly bent smile.gifit Hylobius transversovittatus
Was sitting on tansy in a swampy lowland (there were swamps,willows,reeds nearby...

This post was edited by Liparus - 05/21/2009 15: 38

21.05.2009 16:08, barry

well, with pissodes, you certainly bent smile.gifit Hylobius transversovittatus
Was sitting on tansy in a swampy lowland (there were swamps,willows,reeds nearby...

I didn't do much digging, so you'd better spot the cockroach. smile.gif

PS: You asked about bedbugs yesterday IMG_7765.JPG you have a larva at the top and a Prostemma imago at the bottom (? like)aeneicolle. And someone with thick thighs above the imago?
And when you come for fullo-in a couple of weeks they will be gone...

This post was edited by barry - 05/21/2009 16: 11

21.05.2009 17:14, Borka

21.05.2009 17:49, rpanin

No, I think it's still sycophanta, I don't know about you, we have a very good beetle

At your place, where is it?
And it's not so good if you know where, how and when to catch it . I also used to think that the beetle is very rare, but now there are about 30 pieces lying around on mattresses.

21.05.2009 18:16, Vlad Proklov

We visited three places - Bezlyudovka, Vasishchevo, Udyanka. Everything took place in a panicked atmosphere. I missed about half of it, didn't have time to shoot it, and everyone was running away... nutcrackers vaguely resembling murinus and all sorts of small nutcrackers, bedbugs. I didn't run around much for moth plants, grasshoppers, and moths, and I also came across a lot of them... I wanted to dial home, but it doesn't fit much into the boxes, everyone climbs back in a crowd... in general, a nightmare. I left at 9 am, returned at the beginning of the 10th in the evening... smile.gif

Leafhopper -- Olethreutes arcuella.
Likes: 1

21.05.2009 18:30, Borka

At your place, where is it?
And it's not so good if you know where, how and when to catch it . I also used to think that the beetle is very rare, but now there are about 30 pieces lying around on mattresses.


We have it in Udmurtia, well, in the oak forests that it is, but not often, and to go to them from Izhevsk is not so close to me. And how and when to catch it?

21.05.2009 20:32, rpanin

[quote=Borka,21.05.2009 20:00]
Likes: 3

21.05.2009 20:39, RippeR

Yes, sycophanta goes well in traps! And even very much! Hawthorn, chokeberry, etc. are found on the tsyets, on the trunks of dry oaks and sweet cherries, mainly at the base. they also sit.

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