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07.02.2007 13:14, guest: ~Дзанат~

I didn't know they were books, not a collection of articles. Oh, I wish I could get it... I don't know Nikitsky personally, so I don't know where to start asking... Who to go to there. In general, the list of his articles, recently updated on Coleopterists, looks tempting. Ready to buy a lot for a lot of money, take away, kill... confused.gif

So write to him and ask. Ask the KMK publishing house, maybe there are still copies of this book, and K. Mikhailov in the Zoo Museum...

07.02.2007 16:06, Mikhail F. Bagaturov

If Gusakov is still at the Department of Entomology at Moscow State University, then you can also ask him. Misha Chemeris can also be strained if you manage to catch him smile.gif
If my memory serves me correctly, these are not just KMK-printed publications.

07.02.2007 16:33, omar

Friends! Thank you very much! Offer more, I will think and choose, try and try! Really thank you. But! If someone still has scans, or photocopies, or originals, and he lives in Moscow, my thanks... nnu how to say it... shuffle.gif beer.gif jump.gif mol.gif in general, choose what you like. I'm in a very stupid position. I am an official, and it is almost impossible to get out during working hours on business on a weekday, but at the same time in the workplace you can eat this time with a shovel. Almost around the clock. If anything, write in PM or on the soap, see above.

07.02.2007 20:21, RippeR

"Besides Griboyedov, Nikitsky has published two books"

Nikitsky displayed books, but only griboyedov was displayed lol.gif
Likes: 1

07.02.2007 22:36, Necrocephalus

How interesting about Boros... a fairly common beetle in central Russia

As it turned out, this beetle is also not uncommon in our country. It occurs regularly, sometimes in fairly large clusters under the bark of dry, rotten pines and in the spongy, pitted upper layer of wood.
Maybe the northern border of the species ' range is located in the Yaroslavl region? Or are there reliable finds from more northern regions? It is clear that this is just a guess, but there must be some explanation for its rarity in the Yar. area.
By the way, just today I went to the pine forest "po zhuki" smile.gif, and there I took a photo of a cute bunch of boros that settled down for the winter under the bark. Please excuse the quality - I took pictures on my mobile phone.

Pictures:
picture: 070207_153838.jpg
070207_153838.jpg — (57.64к)

08.02.2007 9:27, omar

Heaps never found, cool! wink.gif

08.02.2007 9:34, omar

In my opinion, the range of the species extends north to the northern outskirts of the taiga zone. However, I have never met him outside the Arctic circle.

08.02.2007 9:37, Dmitry Vlasov

2Necrocephalus
I was referring to Nikitsky's books on beetles of the MO. I don't know about the northern border of the Boros... It is also listed from the Komi Republic. What is interesting in Europe is considered endangered, all finds are published and they except Fennoscandia in recent decades account for units!!!
You can collect and send it to the bourgeoisie for export.
2Omar
I can send photocopies of articles and books by Nikitsky (and some other researchers of the beetle fauna of the Moscow Region), but I'm in Yaroslavl and I can send them in parts.
Likes: 1

10.02.2007 2:22, Necrocephalus

You can collect them and send them to the bourgeoisie for export.

I am already preparing documents for the export smile.gifof Bourgeoisie, but they really asked that boros be exported not through Belarus - they are interested in stable and uninterrupted supplies of boros smile.gif

18.03.2007 22:17, Necrocephalus

The ripper, as always, burns! lol.gif

Especially about Lebia crooks major smile.gif

Today I also went to catch beetles, again walked through the melting puddles. The turbidity in them has already settled and the puddles have become much more transparent - it's easier to see the floaters in them smile.gif
As a result, I caught: two Agabus (Gayrodytes) beetles of different species; a few divers from the genus Hydroporus, and I caught a couple of some rather interesting ones-they are smaller and noticeably darker than all the other divers that live in those puddles (and there are a lot of them). I also caught a beautiful swimmer (Dytiscus marginalis) in a rather shallow puddle, although, as far as I know, it is an inhabitant of larger reservoirs (as its size indirectly indicates). He wasn't swimming at all, just sitting in the grass... I was also lucky enough to catch another beetle from the same family - Colymbetes striatus. This is the first time I've seen one (like marginalis, by the way smile.gif)
The ground is empty again. I mean, not a single bug was seen. But I saw ants, some midges... Well, still postvail five traps with a solution of vinegar. Let's see if anyone gets caught smile.gif

22.03.2007 14:18, Dmitry Vlasov

And we only have bedbugs-soldiers climb, even butterflies have never seen, although on the street +13

06.04.2007 23:35, Victor Titov

01.04 walked through the clearing on the site of spruce-deciduous plantings in the vicinity of the city. Under the bark of spruce stumps, there is a mass of Rhagium inquisitor (I took a couple for the date-point), also under the bark of a sawn and rather rotten spruce trunk, two Badister species: unipustulatus (1 specimen) and bipustulatus (2 specimens), Stomis pumicatus (1 specimen) and Chrysomela vigintipunctata. In puddles (from snowmelt in the track, warmed up) - Helophorus, Hydroporus (the first more) and one Enochrus. Under the bark of an elm stump-gribovik-Triplax.

06.04.2007 23:48, Bad Den

And in Nizhny Novgorod today it snowed.... frown.gif

07.04.2007 0:01, Victor Titov

We also have snow today, +2 in the afternoon, in the forest on trees and on the ground, even in the city there is "fresh" wet snow in places...

24.04.2007 19:53, Aleksey Adamov

Today I found two butterflies (almost on the surface of the soil). I don't understand them at all. Who are they, can you tell me?
picture: B1.jpg

24.04.2007 20:11, Bad Den

2 Adamov:
Zerynthia polyxena
Likes: 1

24.04.2007 21:17, Aleksey Adamov

She turns out to be in our kr. book sitting...

24.04.2007 21:40, Aleksandr Safronov

She turns out to be in our kr. book sitting...

She sits everywhere in the CC! tongue.gif

25.04.2007 8:36, Tigran Oganesov

Adamov, was it just my imagination, or are you really sticking pins in your wings? eek.gif

25.04.2007 8:43, omar

Skewering, skewering! yes.gif lol.gif

27.04.2007 21:26, Aleksey Adamov

  Adamov, was it just my imagination, or are you really sticking pins in your wings? eek.gif


shuffle.gif Yeah... I actually did not torment butterflies before (2-3 pcs in total)... Therefore, without the slightest remorse, I pierced it... teapot.gif

28.04.2007 8:29, Tigran Oganesov

Oh, it would be nice to have some belyanka, and then polixena ...

28.04.2007 8:33, Guest

For them there polyxena, as the KDG says, is a "dirty look" wink.gif

28.04.2007 8:34, Guest

Well, they've already stripped me of my name, too...

28.04.2007 10:41, Tigran Oganesov

Well, they've already stripped me of my name, too...

Mass repressions lol.gif

28.04.2007 13:00, KDG

For them, polyxena is, as the KDG puts it, "a dirty sight" wink.gif

so it is smile.gif

28.04.2007 21:46, Pavel Morozov

But the Ryazan population of polyxena (in the Solotchi area), I heard, was covered.
Maybe they're lying?

28.04.2007 21:49, Vlad Proklov

But the Ryazan population of polyxena (in the Solotchi area), I heard, was covered.
Maybe they're lying?

Well, it was also given as a normal view for the Oka Nature Reserve. Certainly it is more widespread in the Ryazan region than it is known smile.gif

29.04.2007 0:14, Pavel Morozov

And, anyway, you need to know the places. We went to the Vladimir region to pick up P. apollo. If you didn't know where to look on the map , it's not a fact that you would have found it.

29.04.2007 0:34, Vlad Proklov

And, anyway, you need to know the places. We went to the Vladimir region to pick up P. apollo. If you didn't know where to look on the map, it's not a fact that you would have found it.

The Passionate Maniac, perhaps? Or closer? I've heard that there is one in the Petushkovsky district as well, but I don't know if it's still there...

29.04.2007 9:06, Pavel Morozov

Exactly there. And since these are fishing reports, I will say that there are other interesting things besides it: Maculinea arion, Plebejus idas, Melitaea aurelia, M. didyma.
Likes: 1

02.05.2007 23:06, Victor Titov

On April 29 and May 1, I walked through a mixed forest in the vicinity of the city. The weather was quite tolerable (from +8 to +12°), the sky was cloudy, but on May 1 it was more sunny (although the rain "dripped"). The forest is mixed (pine, birch, aspen), "permeated" by old reclamation channels, massively populated by beavers. There's a lot of aspen trees they've felled all around. Harvesting is mostly manual (under bark, dead wood, moss), as well as catching spring puddles and ditches. Result: Hololepta plana Sulz., staphylins (Ontholestes sp., Staphylinus erythropterus L., Philonthus sp., Quedius sp.), glistens (Glischrochilus sp., Ipidia binotata Reitter), Ostoma ferrugineum L., Ampedus balteatus L., Scaphidema metallicum F., Microlestes sp., floaters (Ilybius sp., Hydaticus seminiger Deg., Agabus undulatus Schrank).
Likes: 2

03.05.2007 8:12, omar

Microlestes of what kind? What species of this genus do you have in your region?

03.05.2007 22:34, Victor Titov

Microlestes of what kind? What species of this genus do you have in your region?

Alas, on the" green " they can not be brought to view shuffle.gif. I am sure that my friend Elizar can accurately answer your question (about the number of species found here). It seems to me (according to fees) that 2-3.

This post was edited by Dmitrich - 03.05.2007 22: 40
Likes: 1

04.05.2007 8:16, omar

Something is hidden, it is, however, not visible on the forum confused.gif

04.05.2007 9:09, vespabellicosus

I recently visited the neighboring region - Nizhny Novgorod region, Pilninsky district (west of the region). The trip was for work , but exploring the area in your spare time in search of insects is a sacred thing , as you know. Unfortunately, due to the cool weather, the entomofauna was not so noticeable. The landscape around the village is a coniferous forest with an admixture of birch. There were a lot of dark buttercups of the genus Sympycna, April 25-27 , so early I haven't seen them yet. I observed a female poliste Polistes nimpha , female bumblebees. Banal Aglais urticae , Nymphalis io , Gomnepteryx rhamni flew. Here is a brief report.
Likes: 2

05.05.2007 0:45, Victor Titov

Something is hidden, it is, however, not visible on the forum confused.gif

I'll cheer him up immediately! wink.gif
Likes: 1

06.05.2007 1:14, Victor Titov

Today (05.05) I was in the forest. It was terribly cold, there was snow, I quickly ran away. But there is something: I took 4 Aphodius nemoralis on a moose litter. Under the bark of dry pine-Cerylon sp. And from the pupa found on 01.05 under the bark of a rotten birch stump, Pyrochroa (Schizotus) pectinicornis was hatched today.
Likes: 2

06.05.2007 20:10, Aleksey Adamov

I broke out today... We're in the heat... my face and neck were burned (+wind in the steppe) like in July... Mosquitoes, fortunately, yet. I caught three butterflies, one of them - Iphiclides podalirius (Linnaeus, 1758), also CC, but even there it says that we have a lot of them.

There are more and more carabus in the floodplain, but only 4 species:


C. cancellatus Ill.
C. granulatus L.
C. clathratus L.
C. glabratus Pk.

Stenolopus is already much smaller. Now more and more other Harpalini, Brachinus, Chlaenius.
There is one valuable find: Harpalus dispar-in the literature, practically not marked for the region. "Practically" because it is marked only by Fomichev (he has erroneous instructions in his work). In the collection of our pet museum there is only 1 copy with the label "38" and that's it (!).

This post was edited by Adamov - 06.05.2007 20: 13
Likes: 4

07.05.2007 11:23, KDG

Well, I'll tell you...
I went to the steppe yesterday, it's a bit boring - the grass is low, there are few beetles, the wind is cold. Three species of Dorcadion (carinatum, holosericeum, pusillum tanaiticum) and Pilemia hirsutula were collected from barbels. There were also 5 species of Cleoninae (Leucosomus pedestris, Pseudocleonus cinereus, Cyphocleonus tigrinus, I don't know the rest), a crowd of tychius uralensis, 1 Probaticus. all other references are worthless.. frown.gif

This post was edited by KDG-05/07/2007 12: 50
Likes: 6

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