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21.12.2006 15:49, guest: le_lapin: comment on Where can I get Oncopeltus fasciatus?

Thank you so much for your efforts. However, I know all these authors well. The article is based on materials that were prepared several years ago. And now none of them can help me in this matter.

21.12.2006 13:24, RippeR: comment on Jotaphora admirabilis

All that from Primorye regarding insects have done, please post.. - insects ARE VERY GOOD

20.12.2006 4:51, Dmitrii Musolin: comment on Arthropod Systematics & Phylogeny free online

To the Entomologists of the World"Arthropod Systematics & Phylogeny", formerly Entomologische Abhandlungen, is a scientific journal published by the Museum of Zoology, Dresden, Germany (Museum für Tierkunde, Dresden).http://www.arthropod-systematics.deResearch fields covered by Arthropod Systematics & Phylogeny are the taxonomy, morphology/anatomy, Phylogeny (molecular or ...

19.12.2006 1:28, Bad Den: comment on Mosquitoes

So the midge is not only and not so much mosquitoes...

18.12.2006 23:41, vlad-veras: comment on Drosophila

Colleagues!If possible, tell me the contacts of laboratories where they mess with fruit flies, non-flying forms are needed.

08.12.2006 21:59, критикан: comment on Enicospilus ramidulus

And who told you it was Opion luteus? The photo clearly shows sclerotized spots in the radial cell of the forewings (under the pterostigma), which clearly indicates that this rider belongs to the genus Enicospilus. Now there is no determinant at hand, and I am not sure that in the European part of the country there is something besides E. ramidulus (L.), although for Europe at least a couple of ...

08.12.2006 21:59, критикан: comment on

And who told you it was Opion luteus? The photo clearly shows sclerotized spots in the radial cell of the forewings (under the pterostigma), which clearly indicates that this rider belongs to the genus Enicospilus. Now there is no determinant at hand, and I am not sure that in the European part of the country there is something besides E. ramidulus (L.), although for Europe at least a couple of ...

08.12.2006 21:43, Guest: comment on Imperator (Dolichomitus imperator)

And based on what you decided that this is D. imperator? I would not be so categorical. IMHO at the emperor yaytsekladya podlinee will be. Besides, is he sitting on a pine tree?

08.12.2006 16:11, Juglans: comment on Viktor Nikolaevich Kuznetsov

Too bad! The person is good and friendly... And he, already ill, was reduced.

06.12.2006 3:46, Dmitrii Musolin: comment on Topics for school students' scientific work

It would also be a good idea to conduct a faunal analysis of beetles in several areas: set traps in a typically residential area with a small number of green spaces, near industrial enterprises or at the intersection of busy streets and somewhere in the vicinity, in parks, etc.the same comparison is also interesting for the distribution of damage types (overeating, mining, skeletonization, etc.)

06.12.2006 2:12, guest: Proctos: comment on Encarsia formosa

These are most likely encyrtides, you need to look at the determinant of V. Tryapitsynna

05.12.2006 2:16, Juglans: comment on Apterygota

This is a picture from the same book Pictures:Collembola.jpg — (107.79к)

04.12.2006 18:37, Pavel Morozov: comment on Ampelophaga rubiginosa

Ampelophaga rubiginosa. The usual hawk moth of the Far East. It is distributed in the Khabarovsk and Primorsky Territories, China, Korea, etc. Caterpillar on the Amur grape (Vitis amurensis)

04.12.2006 12:42, Tigran Oganesov: comment on Hag moths Primorye

It would be bigger, of course.

04.12.2006 2:06, beetleboy: comment on No one offers butterfly boards?:)

"It's better to pass it yourself" is not the best option. I thought so until I saw the luxury boxes. I wanted to run away properly and throw my own from the balcony as far as possible (just pull out the beetles first)This post was edited by beetleboy - 12/04/2006 02: 09

03.12.2006 15:00, Pavel Morozov: comment on Noctuidae Sypnoides sp

A scooper from the genus Sypnoides (possibly S. hercules). Andreevka, Primorsky Krai, Khasansky district, 28.07.06. On light. In Russia, this genus is represented by 3 species that live in the south of the Far East.

03.12.2006 14:26, Mylabris: comment on Leaf beetle (Chrysochares asiatica)

ssp. orientalis Lop.

30.11.2006 20:50, Vlad Proklov: comment on Leptophyes albovittata

Probably from the genus LeptophyesOf course, this is a common plate tail (Leptophyes albovittata).

29.11.2006 22:36, RippeR: comment on Clanis undulosa

HANDSOME GUY!!!!

29.11.2006 11:36, Bad Den: comment on Mosquitoes in the winter forest

Small dung beetles (Scarabaeidae, subfamily. Aphodiinae)

28.11.2006 10:40, Dmitry Vlasov: comment on Insect Collection

If the species is rare, I usually take a "series", i.e. several copies, and if a "banal" type of May beetle, then I take one copy from different geogr. points. Unless, of course, there's some kind of aberration. This is in my collection, and if for exchange, etc., then I take the maximum - it's enough to change and transfer to the ZIN.

23.11.2006 22:34, Pavel Morozov: comment on Smerinthus and all, who are in Moscow?

Yes, indeed, it is true, they say, if you want the job to be done well, do it yourself.

02.11.2006 23:39, Necrocephalus: comment on Art requires..A butterfly:))

Entomologists! I'm waiting for one of you to visit (I can't handle two). Don't forget to bring the butterfly's corpse with you. Have you thought about the consequences? Or after the photo shoot, will you request a couple of hundred hungry dead eaters?

31.10.2006 16:40, Santa Claus: comment on Where can I buy fruit flies?

I brought back from Moscow a couple of mutant drosophila species that can't fly. But so far their number is very small.These can be ordered directly from the site http://www.tropicarium.ru/ (they carry out delivery to Kiev).

31.10.2006 4:17, Dmitrii Musolin: comment on Two $3,750 awards for research into Lepidoptera conservation

[from Entomology Discussion List <ENTOMO-L@listserv.uoguelph.ca>]The Joan Mosenthal DeWind AwardThe Xerces Society is now accepting applications for two $3,750 awards for research into Lepidoptera conservation.SUBMISSION REQUIREMENTSThe DeWind awards are given to students who are engaged in research leading to a university degree related to Lepidoptera conservation and who intend to ...

30.10.2006 23:29, guest: Гость: comment on Polistes gallicus

You're wrong about the polysts, because you didn't take any measurements. Females and workers of the first 3-4 weeks in this species , as well as in Polistes nimphus, differ in size. An experienced observer in June will always be able to distinguish the female founder from the workers. Later in the season, the female is distinguished by worn wings and certain behavioral features.

30.10.2006 23:29, guest: Гость: comment on

You're wrong about the polysts, because you didn't take any measurements. Females and workers of the first 3-4 weeks in this species , as well as in Polistes nimphus, differ in size. An experienced observer in June will always be able to distinguish the female founder from the workers. Later in the season, the female is distinguished by worn wings and certain behavioral features.

27.10.2006 16:51, Охотник за осами: comment on Number of antennal segments in Hymenoptera

how does it not give? A larger number of segments gives greater mobility, because when mating, the male needs mobility to enter the female, imagine that the insect is a knight, who will be more mobile, who has cast armor,or the one with armor consists of plates?

26.10.2006 20:33, Necrocephalus: comment on Crimean ground beetle

There is some information about the breeding of the Crimean ground beetle here.As for the cost of a dry beetle - as far as I remember, on the site www.entomolog.com it is $ 14. Buy a beetle beetle... I think this is quite problematic, it will be easier to find it yourself in the habitat. Just keep in mind that if you are a Russian and you are going to transport beetles across the ...

25.10.2006 11:11, vespabellicosus: comment on Saxon wasp Dolichovespula saxonica

Dolichovespula OS always has only one worker cell. Usually so: sometimes the second tier with small cells and on the sides-large uterine. Usually small ones belong to males and occasionally to worker wasps. Most likely, in your case it was.

24.10.2006 20:52, Tigran Oganesov: comment on Where do moth larvae get their water from?

Water is certainly metabolic. For example, when keratin is digested, a water molecule is released along with the formation of a cysteine molecule. This is how skin-eating beetles get water. Moles have the same thing, I suppose.

24.10.2006 18:26, guest: Олег: comment on Need water beetles

We need swimmers from the North Caucasus. Preferably from mountain reservoirs.

23.10.2006 17:08, Охотник за осами: comment on Photos of unusual wasps (hornets,vespulas) and large nests

vespins are Vespula (vulgaris, germanica, rufa, etc.) and Dolichovespula(saxonica, sylvestis, media) these are wasps (common, German, red-headed idr) and medium wasp (Saxon, forest, medium or dwarf hornet)large wasps (the wasp reaches a size of up to 2 cm)

23.10.2006 16:32, Laurie: comment on Quiz "Life of insects"

Thanks! Completed

22.10.2006 21:41, Bad Den: comment on Pupae of polyxena

They won't freeze when you send them?

22.10.2006 15:36, RippeR: comment on Papilio machaon and Papilio hospiton. What is the difference?

Если верить сайту, представленному Bad Den'ом, то сразу видно по нижнему красному пятну, что у хоспитона оно мелкое и вогнуто наверх, у махаона же красное пятно круглое или более менее круглое, не вогнутое, а ...

21.10.2006 18:43, Dmitrii Musolin: comment on Sirfid flies

Google gives out 279,000 sites for the word "syrphidae" and 374 for "sirfids"

17.10.2006 13:44, lepidopterolog: comment on Materials at the Moscow poultry market

If I'm not mistaken, there is a free bus from m. Vykhino.

12.10.2006 22:36, Chromocenter: comment on How does the bombardier beetle work?

So there are a lot of them, bombers... But no one tried to compare, say, the development of its "bombarding" glands, to understand what they come from. About the changes in the genes that caused this, and I don't hope that anyone was involved. I can't believe that this is something completely new for insects.Actually the question arose in connection with this ...

12.10.2006 14:12, RippeR: comment on Entomology and children

yeees.. You shouldn't have trusted your wife with the task-the child rolled around and sobbed - and I understand him! It is a pity that his family did not understand Well that I am no longer the age when you need to ask my mother for permission to drag something into the house. Well, or at least I explain that nothing terrible will happen, everything is sealed, everything is safe. For an ...

05.10.2006 8:34, Aleksandr Ermakov: comment on X-treme collecting insects

Once, in the mountains of the Northern Urals, I saw something that looked like a battered podaliri. It sat and sucked nectar from a clove. Then waved and .... In general, I ran on the stones Kurumnikov and yernikov with breaks of three hours (he scoffed at the bitch: back and forth flew at an altitude of 5-20 meters until finally disappeared. I calmed myself down for a long time afterwards that ...

04.10.2006 1:12, Chromocenter: comment on Climate change and shifting of the insect habitats

Wait! But the shift to the south is not due to warming...

02.10.2006 5:29, Shofffer: comment on Anaphaeis mesentina

 А почему называются по-разному?Значит так. Во-первых, это синонимы.Во-вторых, Papilio mesentina Cramer, 1780 - старший синоним. Но он преоккуперован Papilio mesentina Cramer, [1777], поэтому валидным названием является Belenois aurota (Fabricius, 1793).

28.09.2006 20:09, Guest: comment on Saturnia and its keeping

Our city doesn't have

27.09.2006 21:57, lepidopterolog: comment on Recommend literature on butterflies

About Reicholf-Rima - a mediocre popular book, more suitable for reading. Europe. Better buy Korshunov Errors there, if any, then in difficult groups (Oeneis, Erebia, etc.)

26.09.2006 19:22, Apis: comment on Beetle larva

Under what conditions should the first-year Odorous Woodworm caterpillars hibernate, and do they need diapause?This post was edited by Apis - 09/26/2006 19: 23

26.09.2006 0:14, Tigran Oganesov: comment on Mantises

The mantis is an ambush predator, and if the males are still somewhat active, the females are usually very sedentary, and after mating they will not catch up with the male, but how far the male will go depends on his activity...That's for sure, it won't work. Therefore, the problem is in a careful approach, deftly jumping on the back of the female and then jumping off. Read the article, even the ...

22.09.2006 5:44, plantago: comment on Aphid

I'd like to see the works myself.... http://www.paleo.ru/forum/viewtopic.php?p=20495#20495

20.09.2006 8:28, vespabellicosus: comment on Nectarina millifera, Honey wasps

Yes , I agree, Richards is a real expert! And how many species described....

19.09.2006 14:29, Охотник за осами: comment on Budding of colonies

Well yes rather it is a drone polyploid obtained by disrupting cell division in chromosomes

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