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Moscow and the Moscow region

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06.05.2010 15:25, vasiliy-feoktistov

Everything!!! I tear my ass off the computer and go proshvyrnutsya around! smile.gif

I will report for this brief tour of the surrounding area of my city:
The cherry tree is already blooming in the city.
As soon as I left the entrance, I immediately picked up 3 copies on the sidewalk. Sipha obscura (however, it is always full in our city).
Then I took a walk to the forest park:
1) The forest is just beginning to bloom.
2) 3 spruce trees that apparently "feathered entomologists" worked on before me.
3) Just a swampy edge.
4) Sour cherry blossoms are in full swing.
5) Grape snails are indestructible.
6 and 7) Typical spring butterflies.
8) Some moth on a birch tree. No one knows: who is it?
9) Spring bumblebees are simply pleasing to the eye.
10) Tritomegas bicolor is a pretty cute ground scutellum.
11) Half-eaten ragout taken from one of the Christmas trees in photo # 2.12
) And this is an example of thoughtless human barbarism (I found several of them). I don't understand? confused.gif
13) The actual collection itself.
14) Afodka from this collection. I will be grateful for the definition (specially removed it separately).

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Likes: 20

06.05.2010 15:33, Zhuk

moth - Lomographa bimaculata
Likes: 1

08.05.2010 18:38, DavBaz

I was at the PTZ today. There were various springtime platitudes like Levana and Ruby....I saw a swallowtail in the clearing...unfortunately, I couldn't catch it..bystry found smile.gifhimself in the forest west of Luzhkov very many males Aglia tau

08.05.2010 19:14, Vlad Proklov

I can say almost the same about today's Burrow (only the swallowtail was caught). smile.gif
Tau took the series without any problems.
Zorek could only see two - and he was able to catch one.

Here are the pictures (bug definitions will come in handy):
http://kotbegemot.livejournal.com/528650.html

This post was edited by kotbegemot-05/08/2010 19: 37
Likes: 1

09.05.2010 3:32, vasiliy-feoktistov

Nutcracker: Selatosomus aeneus Linnaeus, 1758
Likes: 1

10.05.2010 18:57, Victor Titov

I can say almost the same about today's Burrow (only the swallowtail was caught). smile.gif
Tau took the series without any problems.
Zorek could only see two - and he was able to catch one.

Here are the pictures (bug definitions will come in handy):
http://kotbegemot.livejournal.com/528650.html

"Some leaf - eaters on the alder" - Linaeidea aenea (Linnaeus, 1758).

This post was edited by Dmitrich - 05/10/2010 18: 57
Likes: 1

10.05.2010 22:15, Pavel Morozov

Fishing report on May 7-8 in Chigasovo, Odintsovo district, Moscow region. The year is good, fortunately, the weather contributed. On the night of the 8th, even with a drizzle, so that incerts and Gothics climbed by the scruff of the neck. Immediately after dark, a female E. pavonia came to visit, but she didn't give any eggs. Unexpectedly, Lampropteryx suffumata arrived, which I had never met before, only in the PTZ.
Otherwise, it is typical for a given time and place.
In the afternoon, I found a butterfly on the window that looked like Nola confusalis

Pictures:
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Likes: 17

10.05.2010 22:33, Ilia Ustiantcev

08-10. 05. 2010 Moscow region, Odintsovo district, near the village of Pestovo. Compared to the first of May, there is not much new, there are crested birds, only three new types of shovel. Raspberries and Carterocephalus silvicolus flew out of the diaries. Chin and yaskolka blossomed in the forest.

Arctiidae
Eilema sororcula
Drepanidae
Drepana falcataria
Geometridae
Aethalura punctulata
Chiasmia clathrata
Cleora cinctaria
Ectropis crepuscularia
Ematurga atomaria
Hypoxystis pluviaria
Lomographa bimaculata
Lomographa temerata
Paradarisa consonaria
Plagodis dolabraria
Selenia dentaria
Selenia tetralunaria
Cyclophora pendularia
Earophila badiata
Eupithecia ?conterminata
Eupithecia lanceata
Hydria cervinalis
Lampropteryx suffumata
Lobophora halterata
Trichopteryx carpinata
Xanthorhoe biriviata
Xanthorhoe fluctuata
Xanthorhoe spadicearia

Noctuidae
Acronicta rumicis
Autographa gamma
Colocasia coryli
Conistra vaccinii
Panolis flammea
Orthosia cerasi
Orthosia cruda
Orthosia gothica
Orthosia gracilis
Orthosia incerta
Cerastis rubricosa
Cerastis leucographa

Notodontidae
Notodonta torva
Odontosia carmelita
Pterostoma palpina
Clostera anachoreta
Stauropus fagi

Plus in Moscow on the day of departure Drymonia ruficornis
Saturniidae
Aglia tau
Chimbachidae
Diurnea fagella
Depressariidae
Agonopterix arenella
Pyralidae
Aphomia sociella
Zophodia grossulariella

Choreutidae
Choreutis pariana

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This post was edited by Ilya U-05/10/2010 22: 38
Likes: 16

16.05.2010 14:25, Vlad Proklov

Report on yesterday's Festivals:

http://kotbegemot.livejournal.com/529256.html

Definitions are welcome smile.gif
Likes: 6

16.05.2010 14:47, vasiliy-feoktistov

Aspen rhynchitis: Byctiscus betulae Linnaeus, 1758? (looks like)
Blackthorn: Upis ceramboides Linnaeus, 1758
Pine elephant: Pissodes sp. pini?
Likes: 1

16.05.2010 14:58, Vlad Proklov

C aspen, podi, Byctiscus populi?

16.05.2010 15:05, vasiliy-feoktistov

C aspen, podi, Byctiscus populi?

Maybe betulae can be easily (I get confused in them, maybe someone else can tell me something?).
Likes: 1

16.05.2010 15:09, RippeR

Geotrupes stercorosus
Likes: 1

16.05.2010 15:19, Victor Titov

Report on yesterday's Festivals:
Definitions are welcome smile.gif

Dung beetle Geotrupes sp. - Anoplotrupes stercorosus (Hartmann in L.G.Scriba, 1791).
As for Byctiscus (populi or betulae), you need to look at the bottom - in betulae it is never blue, as a rule, the same metallic color as the top. Populi's bottoms and legs are almost always blue. In addition, betulae are noticeably larger.

This post was edited by Dmitrich - 05/16/2010 15: 19
Likes: 2

16.05.2010 16:12, Victor Titov


As for Byctiscus (populi or betulae), you need to look at the bottom - in betulae it is never blue, as a rule, the same metallic color as the top. Populi's bottoms and legs are almost always blue. In addition, betulae are noticeably larger.

I messed up a little redface.gif- I meant that populi is always two-tone (top of one color, bottom of another color), while the bottom is always blue. And betulae is monochrome (both the bottom and top are the same color).
Likes: 2

16.05.2010 16:58, Liparus

Report on yesterday's Festivals:

http://kotbegemot.livejournal.com/529256.html

Definitions are welcome smile.gif

populi is
Likes: 2

16.05.2010 19:25, Pavel Morozov

There is still a benefit in the summer shutdown of hot water.
I went to the dacha in snatches to the bathhouse, and at the same time turned on the light bulb. I turned it on pretty well.
I even went into the woods at the weekend.
Still fly Rheumaptera cervinalis, but 3/4 of them are already torn. Normally poperli khokhlatki, of which I (finally!) I was pleased with Furcula bicuspis, I had no luck with them before. We managed to collect Clostera pigra eggs, let's see what happens. I tried the same number with females of Drymonia ruficornis and Pheosia gnoma, but without success. There were Spilosoma bears, and the first hawk moth for me this season also came.
There are still a lot of Aglia tau in the forest - one "male flight" in 2-3 minutes. Most of them are already torn, but I caught three of them for sport.
The first moth Spargania luctuata and scoops Panemeria tenebrata appeared. In the clearing, young mountain ash trees are almost completely eaten by Aporia crataegi caterpillars.

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Likes: 16

16.05.2010 21:39, chebur

Report on Saturdays and nights from Saturday to Sunday in the Chekhov district of the Moscow region.
Day.
Forest ravine.
Aglais urticae L (several)
Araschnia levana L (many)
Cupido argiades Pallas (one female)
Many males Anthocharis cardamines L
Leptidea sinapis / reali
Pieris brassicae L
Pieris napi L
Caught a male Aglia tau Linnaeus on the fly, 1758 jump.gif
Pseudopanthera macularia flew everywhere and the
usual array of moth moth perched on the trunks of fir trees:
Aethalura punctulata D&S
Cleora cinctaria D&S
Ectropis crepuscularia D&S
Lampropteryx suffumata D&S
and scooper Pechipogo strigilata L
In light birch on flowers were fed by Hyles galii Rottemburg, 1775. At the sight of me, he flew away and flew around almost the entire forest, returning to his former place, where he was overtaken by my net. smile.gif
I found one male Carterocephalus silvicolus M in a spruce forest
and saw one Papilio machaon L, but I couldn't catch it.
From micra:
Sitochroa verticalis L
Schiffermuelleria schaefferella L
Eulia ministrana L
On Stellaria holostea-Metriotes lutarea Haworth
On Veronica chamaedrys-Cauchas fibulella D&S
On linden - Bucculatrix thoracella THUNBERG, 1794

I caught the light from evening to one o'clock. I decided to hang two lamps: with a view of the forest and the neighbors-a UV tube (so as not to disturb people) and a DRL 250 with a view of the site (the viewing angle is only 60 degrees). As a result, crested and volnyanka flew to the UV (maybe something else, but I only saw them in the dark shuffle.gif), and everything else - to the DRL. I came to the conclusion that UV should be hung in conjunction with a regular daylight lamp...
Overall, the catch is good. Here's a list of what arrived:
Almost simultaneously came two species Plagodis dolabraria Linnaeus, 1767 and Plagodis pulveraria Linnaeus, 1758 +
Hypomecis punctinalis Sc
Lomographa bimaculata F (very much)
Lomographa temerata D&S (very much)
Selenia dentaria Fabricius
Epirrhoe alternata Müll
Lobophora halterata Hufn
Xanthorhoe biriviata Borkhausen
Xanthorhoe ferrugata Cl
Xanthorhoe spadicearia D&S
Timandra amata L
Два или три Eupithecia sp. (I'll put it up for definition)

Acronicta megacephala D&S
Acronicta rumicis L
Cucullia umbratica L
Deltote bankiana Fabricius
Agrotis exclamationis L
Orthosia gothica L
Orthosia incerta Hufn

Nola confusalis HERRICH-SCHÄFFER, 1847

Male Calliteara pudibunda LINNAEUS, 1758

Pheosia gnoma
Fulcula bicuspis BORKHAUSEN, 1790 (first time I caught a harpy)

Eilema sororcula Hf (in bulk)
Phragmatobia fuliginosa L

Drepana falcataria L (in bulk)

Korscheltellus lupulinus L

Agonopterix arenella D&S
Agonopterix heracliana L
Gracillaria syringella Fabricius (много)
Plutella xylostella L
+ a few more interesting micros, which I will post in the definition.
Likes: 10

18.05.2010 20:51, Zhuk

Hello everyone I haven't written any reports for a long time, but this is something worth writing about smile.gif
Last weekend, from May 14 to 16, I was in the village (as always, Ruzsky district, Lenkovo). Caught the light, the night was just chic, flew great. The species composition was very pleased when spilosomes flew along with fresh Gothic flowers. I got the impression that it was simultaneously April 15 and June 20 smile.gif. 3 species of hawk moth also flew - pine, poplar and ocellate. On the lilac tree near the house I took 6 Apeira syringaria caterpillars. They are already pupating, not in a very standard way-they are suspended on twigs, as in daytime straight.

And now about the main thing, I caught 2 scoops of Minucia lunarisandPhlogophora methiculosa!!! jump.gif As far as I know, lunaris was noted only a couple of times, and metticulosis is generally questionable for the Moscow region!

Here is the actual catch list:
Drepaninae:
Drepana falcataria with custom pattern
Tethea or

Geometridae:
Chlorissa viridata
Xanthorhoe biriviata, ferrugata, fluctuata
Epirrhoe alternata
Lampropteryx suffumata
Ecliptopera silaceata
Hydriomena impluviata
Rheumaptera cervinalis finally took it, I was not lucky with them.
Eupithecia exiguata and many others, I haven't really looked yet
Lobophora halterata
Plagodis dolabraria
Lomographa temerata
Petrophora chlorosata
Lomaspilis marginata
Chiasmia clathrata
Paradarisa consonaria
Aethalura punctulata
Ectropis crepuscularia
Selenia dentaria
Apeira syringaria (гусеницы)

Saturniidae:
Aglia tau

Notodontidae:
Drymonia ruficornis first caught
Notodonta ziczac
Pheosia tremula
Clostera curtula
Clostera pigra
Cerura vinula

Noctuidae:
Hypena rostralis
Minucia lunaris
Cucullia lactucae
Phlogophora meticulosa

Lymantriidae:
Calliteara pudibunda

Arctiidae:
Eilema sororculum

user posted image
Heroes of this report smile.gif
user posted image

Apeira syringaria caterpillars
user posted image
Likes: 20

18.05.2010 21:05, lepidopterolog

Nu you zhuk)

19.05.2010 7:25, Sergey Didenko

A somewhat belated report on the past weekend.
Bugs from Dorogali-2, where Nikitsky this time installed as many as 7 window traps. Vlad and I (Kotbegemot) caught efrosin and moth moth Petrophora chlorosata there, which it should be noted were found everywhere in that area, including at night in the country. The night (at the dacha in Neftyanik) was cool, by 2 o'clock the temperature dropped to 9 degrees, which, compared to the previous warm nights, led to a lousy summer at night. There are only two proserpines and a female pavonia (zero. in general, it is not clear why it arrived so late this year, the bulk of them flew away in early May). There was also a scoop of Simyra albovenosa, everything else was too banal, uninteresting, and besides in small quantities. Even Vlad on mikra was upset almost completely zero frown.gif

Pictures:
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DSC03897_1.JPG — (164.67 k)

Likes: 15

19.05.2010 9:12, Vlad Proklov

A somewhat belated report on the past weekend.
Bugs from Dorogali-2, where Nikitsky this time installed as many as 7 window traps. Vlad and I (Kotbegemot) caught efrosin and moth moth Petrophora chlorosata there, which it should be noted were found everywhere in that area, including at night in the country. The night (at the dacha in Neftyanik) was cool, by 2 o'clock the temperature dropped to 9 degrees, which, compared to the previous warm nights, led to a lousy summer at night. There are only two proserpines and a female pavonia (zero. in general, it is not clear why it arrived so late this year, the bulk of them flew away in early May). There was also a scoop of Simyra albovenosa, everything else was too banal, uninteresting, and besides in small quantities. Even Vlad on mikra was upset almost completely zero frown.gif

Still, not everything was in small numbers: you seem to have forgotten the May crunches and Calliteara pudibunda smile.gif
And I just got back on my feet today, thanks to furazolidone! Don't you remember - no one else ate cheesecakes? lol.gif

This post was edited by kotbegemot - 05/19/2010 09: 13

19.05.2010 9:31, Vlad Proklov

Here is a list of butterflies from Dorogaly, like I didn't forget anything:

Canephora hirsuta
Sterrhopterix fusca
Plutella xylostella
Metriotes lutarea
?Carpatolechia alburnella
Clepsis senecionana
Apotomis turbidana
Ancylis badiana
Ancylis uncella
Ancylis laetana ушла
?Rhopobota myrtillana
Pyrgus malvae
Carterocephalus silvicola
Carterocephalus palaemon
Papilio machaon
Gonepteryx rhamni
Pieris napi
Celastrina argiolus
Lycaena phlaeas
Lycaena tityrus
Callophrys rubi
Boloria euphrosyne
Araschnia levana
Aglais io
Nymphalis c-album
Lomographa bimaculata
Lomographa temerata
Macaria liturata
Pseudopanthera macularia
Ematurga atomaria
Cephis advenaria
Aethalura punctulata
Ectropis crepuscularia
Hypoxystis pluviaria
Petrophora chlorosata
Jodis putata
Xanthorhoe biriviata
Xanthorhoe spadicearia
Epirrhoe alternata
Likes: 7

19.05.2010 9:52, vasiliy-feoktistov

Don't you remember - no one else ate cheesecakes? lol.gif

Did you wash them down with beer smile.gif

19.05.2010 9:54, Vlad Proklov

Did you wash them down with beer smile.gif

Well, that's later! ))

19.05.2010 9:56, vasiliy-feoktistov

Well, that's later! ))

That's the reason apparently wink.gif

19.05.2010 10:22, vasiliy-feoktistov

I want to present a small city report.
I wandered around a little with beer, a camera and a stain in my neighborhood (I can't go anywhere yet).
1) The ubiquitous Silpha obscura eats a snail crushed by someone.
2) Around Rhagium (Megarhagium) mordax DeGeer, 1775 (mainly on flowers).
3) On nettles, etc. full of Athous haemorrhoidalis Fabricius, 1801
4) Another love from Drepana falcataria Linnaeus, 1758 (for some reason, the second year I'm lucky to see such scenes).
5) The contents of the stain (what I took then). By the way, I will be grateful for the definition of a dead eater-he is there alone.

Pictures:
1_S.obscura.jpg
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2_R.mordax.jpg
2_R.mordax.jpg — (230.73к)

3_A.haemorroidalis.jpg
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4_D.falcataria.jpg
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picture: 5_17.05.2010.jpg
5_17.05.2010.jpg — (155.73к)

Likes: 12

19.05.2010 11:12, Dr. Niko

And I just got back on my feet today, thanks to furazolidone! Don't you remember - no one else ate cheesecakes? lol.gif

For food poisoning with diarrhea, ersefuril also helps well. If anything smile.gif
Likes: 1

19.05.2010 11:27, Victor Titov

I want to present a small city report.
By the way, I will be grateful for the definition of a dead eater-he is there alone.

Silpha tristis Illiger 1798
Likes: 1

19.05.2010 11:33, barry


2) Around Rhagium (Megarhagium) mordax DeGeer, 1775 (mainly on flowers).

And I don't have much luck with mordax... sycophanta - please... smile.gif

19.05.2010 11:38, vasiliy-feoktistov

And I don't have much luck with mordax... sycophanta - please... smile.gif

We have the opposite: R. mordax is always full, but R. sycophanta has never met. Apparently the region depends confused.gifon

19.05.2010 11:52, barry

We have the opposite: R. mordax is always full, but R. sycophanta has never met. Apparently it depends on the region confused.gif

Yes, we don't seem to have a shortage of mordax, just bad luck...
Likes: 2

19.05.2010 11:54, Victor Titov

And I don't have much luck with mordax... sycophanta - please... smile.gif

We have the opposite: R. mordax is always full, but R. sycophanta has never met. Apparently it depends on the region confused.gif

sycophanta is a more southern species, in the Moscow region, as far as I remember, it was recorded only for Lukhovitsky and Serebryanoprudsky districts.
Likes: 2

19.05.2010 13:54, RippeR

we have mordax marked, but never caught it. A sycophant can be caught, the main thing is to know where. So I think it's just that the sycophant is more common in the south, and the muzzle is more common in the north
Likes: 2

19.05.2010 15:29, vitalbata

I will give an example that in Lithuania Rhagium mordax is common, and Rhagium sycophanta is rare.
Likes: 2

20.05.2010 21:31, omar

We have the opposite: R. mordax is always full, but R. sycophanta has never met. Apparently it depends on the region confused.gif

R. sycophanta only in the south of the region. and not vezde
Likes: 1

20.05.2010 22:41, Vabrus

In our country, both mordax and sycophanta are equally common. Probably because it's neither north nor south=))

This post was edited by Vabrus - 05/20/2010 22: 41
Likes: 2

21.05.2010 3:54, vasiliy-feoktistov

R. sycophanta only in the south of the region. and not everywhere

So I'm talking about it, too yes.gif. For sycophanta, in general, it is better to go to the Ryazan province, Mordovia, etc. We have the same R. mordax and R. inquisitor (this coniferous) full.

21.05.2010 8:38, Victor Titov

So I'm talking about it, too yes.gif. For sycophanta, in general, it is better to go to the Ryazan province, Mordovia, etc. We have the same R. mordax and R. inquisitor (this coniferous) full.

By the way, about the "coniferous" R. inquisitor. In the Yaroslavl region, its development was reliably noted not only on coniferous trees, but also on birch. Found both Elizar and I.

21.05.2010 9:29, Alexandr Rusinov

Both Elizar and I found it.

And I found it repeatedly... And as a rule, it developed on birch trees burned after a fire...
Likes: 1

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