E-mail: Password: Create an Account Recover password

About Authors Contacts Get involved Русская версия

show

European Countries

Community and ForumTravel and expeditionsEuropean Countries

Pages: 1 ...13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21... 24

17.08.2016 14:13, Vlad Proklov

Svezhak.

Cochylis hybridella:

user posted image

Crocidosema plebejana:

user posted image

Udea ferrugalis:

user posted image

Second generation of Peribatodes rhomboidaria:

user posted image

Here is Bryophila domestica:

user posted image
Likes: 17

20.08.2016 13:42, Vlad Proklov

Continue.
E. quadripunctaria became even more, yesterday 24 pieces arrived. There have never been so many of them here!

Udea ferrugalis continue to fly:

user posted image

Palpita vitrealis is a migrant, just like the previous one. The first time I see them in the garden, before that I only met them in Portugal:

user posted image

Eupithecia phoeniceata, also for the first time I see. This one is a resident:

user posted image

This post was edited by kotbegemot - 08/20/2016 14: 19
Likes: 15

25.08.2016 23:20, Vlad Proklov

A couple of fresh walks:

https://evergestis.wordpress.com/2016/08/20/wandle-meadow-9/
https://evergestis.wordpress.com/2016/08/25/shoreham-by-sea/

user posted image

user posted image
Likes: 13

08.09.2016 3:42, Vlad Proklov

By the way, in London on butterflies golyak full came: mass of Noctua pronuba, N. comes and N. janthe, X. xanthographa, C. clavipalpis, P. rhomboidaria, and tons of Epiphyas postvittana.

Boxwood fireflies flew again (you can't see any noticeable harm on the boxwoods in the garden) - and the dark shape is noticeably more common than in the first generation, I think it was just an accident.

From interesting things, you can now draw either migrants, or random instances of additional generations of anything.

user posted image

user posted image

user posted image

user posted image

And so I'm here I went to Hastings But I didn't find any interesting insects there, just beautiful places:

user posted image
Likes: 12

08.09.2016 8:56, коты

[quote=kotbegemot,27.07.2016 18:40]
Likes: 3

08.09.2016 13:40, Vlad Proklov


Oddly enough, I've never actually seen this view at night. Only during the day. I haven't seen any yellow ones at all. In general, as far as I know, this is a diurnal dipper like...

It flies both day and night.
But during the day I saw it only once (and, by the way, yellow) - and at night I see it in a trap on a regular basis (now they have already left).
Likes: 1

08.09.2016 17:44, Vlad Proklov

Today in the kitchen I found a Mormo maura of a medium degree of tubiness:

user posted image
Likes: 12

14.09.2016 14:24, Vlad Proklov

London is quite hot during the day and warm at night - but there are no migrants and it is a deadly melancholy.

Ennomos fuscantaria:

user posted image

And so everything is the same. There are plenty of boxwood fires.

user posted image

user posted image

Brood Colocasia coryli:

user posted image
Likes: 18

18.09.2016 12:09, Vlad Proklov

The first Omphaloscelis lunosa of the year:

user posted image

user posted image
Likes: 12

18.09.2016 18:59, Vlad Proklov

Today's event:
https://evergestis.wordpress.com/2016/09/18...right-common-9/

user posted image

user posted image
Likes: 13

18.09.2016 23:07, Kovalevsky

Specifically, this sundew, in my opinion, is more similar to D. intermedia than to D. rotundifolia.
Likes: 1

18.09.2016 23:22, Vlad Proklov

Specifically, this sundew, in my opinion, is more similar to D. intermedia than to D. rotundifolia.

There they most likely grow together.

18.09.2016 23:25, Vlad Proklov

But this one is intermedia, I agree-fixed.

23.09.2016 22:05, Vlad Proklov

Polymixis lichenea:

user posted image

user posted image

This post was edited by kotbegemot - 05.10.2016 15: 44
Likes: 9

23.09.2016 22:15, Vlad Proklov

And from the news - the day before yesterday I went to Seaford, because the third generation of Lasiommata megera flew. I even saw one , but it was blown away before I could blink.

The places there are beautiful:

user posted image

user posted image

user posted image

user posted image

And today I was in Shoreham-by-Sea (also in Sussex), for the same purpose. I saw three vixens, but I couldn't take a picture weep.gif

Not only are there very steep slopes - they are still all pitted with rabbits, that is, if you do not wring your neck , you will break your legs.

user posted image

In general, I have not developed with the vixen yet...
Likes: 15

24.09.2016 15:08, Vlad Proklov

Luperina testacea:

user posted image

user posted image

Omphaloscelis lunosa flies every night:

user posted image

user posted image
Likes: 12

24.09.2016 16:33, Ilia Ustiantcev

By the way, what about the finds of testacea in central Russia? It's high time to catch it!

24.09.2016 18:01, Vlad Proklov

By the way, what about the finds of testacea in central Russia? It's high time to catch it!

The nearest finds are in the Chernihiv and Sumy regions of Ukraine, right on the border with the Bryansk region.
Likes: 1

30.09.2016 21:43, Pavel Morozov

Briefly about the trip to South Germany, Freiburg in mid-September.
If it can be called a report at all.
There was a business trip, but the proximity to some kind of nature made it possible to take a walk and see something in the short free hours.
The place is located not far from the Black Forest, in principle, even some of its edge. The weather was mostly very warm.
Pieris rapae and Vanessa atalanta flew during the day, and Orgyia antiqua males were numerous at the edge of the forest. I even noticed a whole cluster of them near a pile of brushwood, but there must have been a female there. Picked, but without any result. At night, too, something flies. Collected a male Trichiura crataegi. Quite common Phlogophora methiculosa, caught Noctua pronuba. From other animals-in the mass of large slugs, unafraid gray herons.

Pictures:
picture: IMG_0056.jpg
IMG_0056.jpg — (364.5к)

picture: IMG_9660.jpg
IMG_9660.jpg — (449.02к)

picture: IMG_9670.jpg
IMG_9670.jpg — (468.84к)

picture: IMG_9691.jpg
IMG_9691.jpg — (600.04к)

picture: IMG_9872.jpg
IMG_9872.jpg — (422.55к)

Likes: 20

05.10.2016 15:11, Vlad Proklov

From the now flying one.

Dryobotodes eremita:

user posted image

Aporophyla lutulenta:

user posted image

Polymixis flavicincta (and what I defined above is P. lichenea):

user posted image

Here is such an Omphaloscelis lunosa:

user posted image

This post was edited by kotbegemot - 05.10.2016 15: 45
Likes: 17

10.10.2016 13:48, Vlad Proklov

London is pretty dreary. Crowds of ordinary Noctua (pronuba / comes/janthe) and one fimbriata. Xestia xanthographa, Caradrina clavipalpis, and other garbage.

Aporophyla nigra:

user posted image

user posted image

Polymixis flavicincta. These are also quite common:

user posted image
Likes: 15

11.03.2017 19:46, Vlad Proklov

Spring crept up unnoticed:
https://evergestis.wordpress.com/2017/03/11...edon-common-20/

user posted image

user posted image
Likes: 16

14.03.2017 17:33, Vlad Proklov

The second time caught today in the garden Alsophila aescularia (the first was in 2006). Not the most common moth I have here, although in England it is not uncommon:

user posted image

And besides it-Caloptilia populetorum, Diurnea fagella, Epiphyas postvittana and Orthosia gothica.
Likes: 11

17.03.2017 21:01, Matvey Markhasin

British court finds collector guilty of killing butterflies:
http://old.gorod48.ru/topnews/433477/
Sorry, if not on the topic, but are such cases known to anyone???

17.03.2017 21:49, ИНО

Senility was growing stronger...

By the way, we also had a lot of such moths last week, but now some others have gone, bigger and more beautiful.

21.03.2017 19:48, Vlad Proklov

Photos from today's short walk (absolutely nothing special):

https://evergestis.wordpress.com/2017/03/21...ndle-meadow-10/

And Xylocampa areola from today's trap:

user posted image

This post was edited by kotbegemot - 21.03.2017 19: 53
Likes: 12

22.03.2017 14:54, Romyald

... of course, nothing special if you go to the same places...here you need either freedom, or to see everything as in childhood...

28.03.2017 21:09, Vlad Proklov

Today's event:
https://evergestis.wordpress.com/2017/03/28...okham-common-5/

user posted image

user posted image
Likes: 12

01.04.2017 18:07, Vlad Proklov

Today's event:
https://evergestis.wordpress.com/2017/04/01...edon-common-21/

user posted image

user posted image
Likes: 13

06.04.2017 18:36, Vlad Proklov

A few short posts:

https://evergestis.wordpress.com/2017/04/02...ight-common-10/
https://evergestis.wordpress.com/2017/04/04...-hill-common-4/
https://evergestis.wordpress.com/2017/04/05...edon-common-22/
https://evergestis.wordpress.com/2017/04/06/richmond-park-8/

user posted image

user posted image
Likes: 12

08.04.2017 18:20, Vlad Proklov

Today's event:

https://evergestis.wordpress.com/2017/04/08...hinsons-bank-6/

user posted image

user posted image
Likes: 16

12.04.2017 13:56, Vlad Proklov

Yesterday's event:

user posted image

Grapholita internana:

user posted image

Adela reaumurella:

user posted image
Likes: 13

12.04.2017 19:43, Dmitry Vlasov

Yesterday's event:

user posted image


Where is it? GB???

12.04.2017 19:47, Vlad Proklov

Where is it? GB???

Yes, at Wimbledon Common, the grass was burning on Saturday. Well, they quickly put it out and did not switch to vereshchatnik.

12.04.2017 19:56, Dmitry Vlasov

Yes, at Wimbledon Common, the grass was burning on Saturday. Well, they quickly put it out and did not switch to heather.

And some microlepidopterologists say that only in the RFII in the spring there are falls... (Vlad, a claim to our friend from sunny California)

This post was edited by Elizar - 12.04.2017 19: 57

12.04.2017 20:31, Vlad Proklov

And some microlepidopterologists say that only in the RFII in the spring there are falls... (Vlad, a claim to our friend from sunny California)

Well, in England, they don't specifically burn dry grass - in this case, someone probably threw out a cigarette butt that wasn't extinguished.

12.04.2017 20:37, ИНО

I am surprised that in England the grass dries up to a combustible state, I thought it was only our steppe attack.

12.04.2017 20:56, Vlad Proklov

I am surprised that in England the grass dries up to a combustible state, I thought it was only our steppe attack.

And for a couple of weeks there was no rain and it was sunny and unusually warm for the beginning of April, until 24 last weekend. Just hold up a match.

13.04.2017 1:11, ИНО

It seems that something is happening with the global climate.

13.04.2017 19:49, Vlad Proklov

Today's event:

https://evergestis.wordpress.com/2017/04/13/sheep-leas-2/

user posted image

user posted image
Likes: 14

Pages: 1 ...13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21... 24

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.