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10.06.2017 13:57, Vlad Proklov

A little bit out of the trap lately.

Amblyptilia acanthadactyla:

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Emmelina monodactyla. These besiege simply:

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Eudonia mercurella:

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Ostrinia nubilalis:

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Scopula imitaria:

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Orthonama obstipata:

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Eupithecia intricata:

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Caradrina clavipalpis:

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Hoplodrina ambigua:

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Hadena bicruris:

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Diarsia rubi:

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Agrotis clavis:

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And here is such a cicada -- Issus coleoptratus:

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Likes: 12

10.06.2017 23:57, Vlad Proklov

Something added:

https://evergestis.wordpress.com/2017/06/09/hampton/
https://evergestis.wordpress.com/2017/06/10...okham-common-7/

For beetles, if not so determined, correct! (I hope everything is correct, but I'm not a real welder yet)

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Likes: 11

11.06.2017 20:44, Vlad Proklov

Today's event:
https://evergestis.wordpress.com/2017/06/11...hinsons-bank-8/

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Likes: 8

11.06.2017 21:19, Vlad Proklov

And here's Pammene aurana from yesterday's Bookham, shot this morning in the lab shed greenhouse:

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Today, too, two pieces were caught on the hogweed.

This post was edited by kotbegemot - 11.06.2017 23: 54
Likes: 9

14.06.2017 23:34, Vlad Proklov

Today's and yesterday's events:

https://evergestis.wordpress.com/2017/06/13...ridge-common-2/
https://evergestis.wordpress.com/2017/06/14...country-park-4/

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Likes: 7

15.06.2017 0:24, Andrey Ponomarev

And here's Pammene aurana from yesterday's Bookham, shot this morning in the lab shed greenhouse:

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Today, too, two pieces were caught on the hogweed.

Cool listovertok

15.06.2017 0:31, Vlad Proklov

Cool listovertochka

In central Russia, it is rare, known from the Tula region - and in the Moscow Region I know only one find in Moscow, in the Kurkin floodplain (L. Bolshakov).
Look at the inflorescences of hogweed (not giant!!!) -"you'll find it."

This post was edited by kotbegemot - 06/15/2017 00: 34
Likes: 1

15.06.2017 0:39, Vlad Proklov

And briefly about the weather and butterflies.

Rhyacionia buoliana from yesterday's walk in Elmbridge Common:

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The rest are from the garden trap.
Bryotropha affinis:

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Idaea fuscovenosa:

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Well, these poperli:

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Likes: 10

15.06.2017 20:29, Vlad Proklov

Today's event:
https://evergestis.wordpress.com/2017/06/15...edon-common-27/

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Likes: 12

16.06.2017 20:45, Vlad Proklov

Today's event:
https://evergestis.wordpress.com/2017/06/16...okham-common-8/

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Likes: 11

17.06.2017 21:18, Vlad Proklov

Из South Norwood - Homoeosoma sinuella:

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From a garden trap.
Endotricha flammealis:

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Mormo maura. Arrived yesterday the freshest - put it in the refrigerator, because immediately could not take a picture on time. Today I get it-this fool is all fucked up!

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For the first time I see Craniophora ligustri:

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Today the heat is thirty degrees, was in Shoreham-by-Sea.
No shit.

Who cares -- here's the album:
https://www.flickr.com/photos/evergestis/se...157685172564475

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Likes: 8

18.06.2017 11:56, коты

On the 12th photo, if you count the cool flowers on top, we also have such flowers growing and now blooming, I just saw them yesterday. I wonder what it is...

18.06.2017 12:00, Vlad Proklov

On the 12th photo, if you count the cool flowers on top, we also have such flowers growing and now blooming, I just saw them yesterday. I wonder what it is...

If these are the ones you mean:

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then it is some kind of Melaleuca sp.
In gardening, the old generic name Callistemon is used.
Likes: 1

18.06.2017 12:02, коты

Yes, that's what I meant..))

18.06.2017 17:04, STG

From June 8 to 16, I went to Northern Greece (nomes of Thessaloniki and Kavala) to relax with my family, and of course I fished. There aren't many photos, so the report is short and focuses on mattresses. Zhukov caught in three different landscapes: the coast near the village. Asprovalta (shrubs, at altitudes up to 100 m), Stephanion Forest (oak, 500-600 m) and Mount Pangeon (beech, 600-1200 m):
image: _____. jpg

On the coast and in the nearby foothills on thistles hang out herds of bronzebirds and abscesses, crowds of black-bodied animals run on the ground, crunchers and rhinos fly well into the light. I hung up a tube UV lamp on batteries-I left it in Greece, because it's a real hemorrhoid to transport it through airports, and when I changed planes in Belgrade, I was dragged to open my luggage twice. Crunches of Anoxia in these places are strange – they practically do not go to the light, although they buzz constantly in the trees at sunset and dawn. The small oak forests in the whole area are completely bald, I understand that there is an epidemic of unpaired silkworms-everything is covered with butterflies, pupae and caterpillars, so even down by the coast there is Calosoma sycophanta. Among the barbels, pretty Stictoleptura cordigera and, singly, purpuricenus of two species were often found.
picture: _________.jpg

Much higher (from 500 m), if you overcome rather difficult primers for a passenger car, normal oak forests with large trees begin on relatively flat areas. There are also Lucanus cervus and Cerambyx cerdo. Oaks, however, are also almost all devoured, so that there are a lot of quails both on the trunks and on the ground. In fresh cow's milk - clouds of scarabs. On the flowering shrubs – an abundance of bronzes (but the views are the same as below). In one place, during a rainstorm, I successfully met a lot of hiding in the bushes of purpuricenus and several goldfish Chalcophorella stigmatica.
picture: ___________.jpg

I made a special trip to the beech forests on Pangaeon for morimus and rosalia. The road there is excellent, paved almost to the top. From 600 to 1200 altitude – solid beech, though on very steep slopes. In some places, the trees are simply titanic, several meters in circumference; there are also spot cuttings. Rosalie, damn it, I didn't find a fig (probably early), and I had to run for morimuses for several hours (one beetle per hundred trees))). A pair of some beautiful dark blue nutcrackers and, unexpectedly, a pair of Cerambyx scopolii were found on the fresh wood.
picture: ___________.jpg

Colleagues, please help me with the definition of "undefined" and "undefined". Here, actually a photo of the catch (approximately on the same scale) with short comments:

picture: 1._________.jpgpicture: 2._________.jpg
For the first time I caught deer not in the light, but from the trees. Cool. Especially if the current oak tree is found))).

picture: 3.______.jpg
Cerdo on the lower parts of the trunks did not sit a fig. They actively crawled at a height of 4-5 meters, an ordinary net can not reach. I had to knock them out of there with all sorts of garbage))). As a result, I got tired of it and didn't take much.

picture: 4._________.jpg
The Morimuses are beautiful! By the way, they do not move at all – they sit without moving, at the roots of a beech tree or on a trunk no higher than a meter. The tanner flew to the island at night. I didn't take parallelepipeds – they are everywhere and boring. But what is this big fat ground beetle (ran across the road this morning)?

picture: 5._________.jpg
Pretties massively climbed the oaks and ate caterpillars. Curiously, almost all of them have minor injuries to their legs. We managed to collect no more than two dozen completely intact ones.

picture: 6._________.jpgpicture: 7._________.jpg
Scarabs, of course, are made from tortillas. I haven't disassembled them yet, but they differ noticeably in size, possibly different. Rhinos-climbed into the light, but some frivolous, too painful horns the boys have short.

picture: 8.__________.jpg
Bronzes could be harvested by the ton. The species composition seemed to be the same everywhere. I took a little bit: row 1 and 2 - probably Protaetia angustata of different shades, row 3-Protaetia cuprea obscura, row 4-Cetonia aurata (selected with purple PS-Cetonia aurata var. cupricollis Hepp, 1939, I hadn't seen them before), well, a few geotrupins (there were a lot of them; probably the usual stercorosus). At the end of the 3rd row – purple cetonia, and, most interesting, - completely blue Protaetia! My son found it on the ground in the oaks. Who is it? Judging by the appendage – more likely kupreya…

picture: 9.___________.jpg
1 row – Large abscesses of Mylabris calida (I tried to mortise in a dry way so that the color is not lost). Row 2 – massive black-bodied calves from the coast, probably Pimelia subglobulosa. 3 row-chernotelki with mountain dubnyakov-like the spitting image of our Gnaptor spinimanus. 4 row – anoxia (I saw it often, but did not catch it!), pentodons (two pieces in the village near the lanterns) and several Chalcophorella stigmatica from one prickly bush in the mountains.

picture: 10______________.jpg
Purpuricenes are probably two species: kaehleri and budensis. Agapantia-rarely at different heights on thistles and grasses – did not determine. Scopolii-it's clear, well, three pieces of figs knows what: some kind of beetle, a black body and a spank…

picture: 11.__________.jpg
The last mattress, with some change. Abscesses – 4 species, all with thistles – did not determine (perhaps yellow and orange in a dot – the same thing). Small crunches of different types (in the light and on grass) – did not determine. Two small red unknown beetles in the 2nd row and two dark blue nutcrackers in the 5th row-from old beech logs-did not identify. Beautiful barbels with hearts-Stictoleptura cordigera. 4 chernotelki-also from the coast, some tentiria, probably. Well, the rest is just a small thing (I don't take any smaller ones, I'm lazy))).

Thank you in advance for the hints in the definition. If there is a desire to purchase something from the material-write in the personal account. Beetles - in Moscow.
picture: ______________.jpg

This post was edited by STG-19.06.2017 07: 12
Likes: 11

18.06.2017 17:48, NIKSTER

18.06.2017 18:46, Vlad Proklov

I keep seeing the word "trap" in your messages. What kind of trap are we talking about?

Robinson trap, like this:

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18.06.2017 18:58, NIKSTER

Robinson trap, like this:

And where should insects accumulate?

18.06.2017 19:10, Vlad Proklov

And where should insects accumulate?

But in the bucket itself. I put egg cartons in there, and they climb into them and sit there.
In the morning, you need to check the earlier, the better: if the trap heats up in the sun, everyone inside is khan.

19.06.2017 13:06, Vlad Proklov

Out of today's trap.

Athrips rancidella. A recent invader eating garden dogwood:

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Anarsia innoxiella. Recently described double of A. lineatella. Adding a new view to the list is always a great joy:

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Apamea sublustris. I, the fool, thought that this is a broken lithoxylaea and released it! And it's rare hereweep.gif:

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Likes: 8

19.06.2017 18:44, Victor Titov

From June 8 to 16, I went to Northern Greece (nomes of Thessaloniki and Kavala) to relax with my family, and of course I fished.
..Two small red unknown beetles in the 2nd row...

Bostrichus capucinus.

And the crunchers in the first row on the mattress with a "trifle" (very conditionally-too big for a trifle wink.gif) - Aplidia ?transversa.
Likes: 1

19.06.2017 21:54, Vlad Proklov

We still have a heat wave of 31 degrees. I was in Richmond.
It's all fucked up. Flying mass of Maniola jurtina, Coenonympha pamphilus and Petrophora chlorosata.

I saw a broken Cyclophora linearia on a tree:

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Petrophora chlorosata:

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And the flowers in the album:
https://www.flickr.com/photos/evergestis/al...157685257853795

Boring frown.gif
Likes: 8

20.06.2017 12:48, Vlad Proklov

The heat is slowly subsiding, and this morning it is overcast , although the nights are still warm.
Bugs are flying, and this is an indicator.
Out of today's trap.

Batia lunaris:

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Bryotropha domestica:

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For the first time in my garden I see Ethmia dodecea:

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Anania coronata:

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Eulithis mellinata:

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Apamea lithoxylaea:

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Likes: 15

21.06.2017 22:10, Vlad Proklov

The heat is still there.

Mythimna l-album from Today's Trap:

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Likes: 9

23.06.2017 16:45, Vlad Proklov

We continue our gatherings =)

This is from the day before yesterday's Ashtead.

Blastobasis lacticolella:

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Gypsonoma dealbana:

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Grapholita lobarzewskii:

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Hydriomena furcata:

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These are from a garden trap.

Euzophera pinguis:

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The second time I see here stray Petrophora chlorosata (both two - in the last week). On warm nights, you can see that they are very well distributed, because the nearest suitable biotopes are about five kilometers away in a straight line:

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This is, like, Hoplodrina blanda, not H. octogenaria?

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Agrotis puta second generation gone:

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The first Noctua comes of the year:

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This post was edited by kotbegemot - 23.06.2017 16: 57
Likes: 13

25.06.2017 15:50, Vlad Proklov

Fresh from the garden trap.

Orthonama obstipata:

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Hecatera dysodea:

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Likes: 12

26.06.2017 14:04, Vlad Proklov

Out of today's trap.

Recurvaria nanella:

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Clepsis consimilana:

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Eilema lurideolum:

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Likes: 11

26.06.2017 22:16, Vlad Proklov

Today's event:

https://evergestis.wordpress.com/2017/06/26...sthorns-wood-4/

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Likes: 13

29.06.2017 16:59, Vlad Proklov

From the Monday trip:

Carcina quercana:

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Sphrageidus similis:

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From the garden trap:

Noctua janthe:

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Noctua fimbriata:

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Likes: 12

01.07.2017 3:47, Vlad Proklov

Male and female Metalampra italica from Barnsthorns Wood:

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Likes: 12

01.07.2017 18:35, Vlad Proklov

Out of today's trap.

Enarmonia formosana:

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Selenia dentaria (by the way, can you somehow persuade it to spread its wings?):

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And here is this hrundel flew in and sat (Dorcus parallelepipedus):

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And a ragged nicteola. Who knows - it's revayana? Or is it too ragged to say?

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This post was edited by kotbegemot - 01.07.2017 18: 37
Likes: 12

01.07.2017 21:28, NIKSTER

Out of today's trap.

Selenia dentaria (by the way, can you somehow persuade it to spread its wings?):


In principle, you can. I saw them in the shade of the forest, sitting on the tops of plants.
The wings are mostly in a semi-open state.
Here is an example of a recent photo of a Village.

Pictures:
picture: IMG_8786.jpg
IMG_8786.jpg — (61.61к)

01.07.2017 21:29, Vlad Proklov

In principle, you can. I saw them in the shade of the forest, sitting on the tops of plants.
The wings are mostly in a semi-open state.
Here is an example of a recent photo of a Village.

Well, yes , but they reveal them completely, it's interesting...

01.07.2017 21:35, NIKSTER

Well, yes , but they reveal them completely, it's interesting...

I searched the Internet smile.gif
In general, almost all photos of villages are either semi-open or closed.

This post was edited by NIKSTER - 01.07.2017 21: 36
Likes: 1

01.07.2017 23:08, Andrey Ponomarev

Well, yes , but they reveal them completely, it's interesting...

They do not fully disclose their wings.
Likes: 1

02.07.2017 0:19, gstalker

Croatia, Senj, Segodnja

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Likes: 16

02.07.2017 22:41, Vlad Proklov

Today's event:
https://evergestis.wordpress.com/2017/07/02...en-hall-park-6/

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Likes: 12

05.07.2017 19:36, Vlad Proklov

Something added:

https://evergestis.wordpress.com/2017/07/03...ndle-meadow-12/

https://evergestis.wordpress.com/2017/07/05...okham-common-9/

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Likes: 16

06.07.2017 14:31, коты

Today's event:

https://evergestis.wordpress.com/2017/06/26...sthorns-wood-4/



You often see a picture of Camilla with the title White Admiral)
Is this really what they call it in Britain, or is it a personal interpretation? Just wondering...

06.07.2017 15:50, Vlad Proklov

You often see a picture of Camilla with the title White Admiral)
Is this really what they call it in Britain, or is it a personal interpretation? Just wondering...

This is its English name.
Likes: 1

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