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And what is the exchange for? And how do I buy them?tayfun1@mail.ruExchange for live crops of other species or for dried butterflies. Forwarding by mail or with a train conductor (if possible). Write to me at rm@tut.by, if you want to purchase.
On Wednesday, April 25, the Moscow Zoo received another batch of pupae of tropical butterflies of different species. So in the next week the departure of "svezhak" will begin. By the way, the pupae themselves are suspended in a convenient place for viewing. For those who haven't been there yet, there's the Indonesia Pavilion, the central greenhouse, and the glass by the stairs to the second - ...
I apologize for answering only now - I haven't looked at this page for a long time. Shot by Sony F-828 - very convenient for macro photography in the field. You just need to additionally purchase positive lenses and even better macro adapters DCR-150 and DCR-250 (what is it you can see on the Internet, if you use the designations I gave as a search word)
Is that you?" http://molbiol.ru/forums/index.php?showuser=17689Does the name and time of registration match? Also forgot your password?I don't remember the registration time and password anymore (it's a sin), but the name matches...
Exactly on the roots, and not in them?"...Larvae always in deep roots (in dead or dying, sometimes rather fresh roots of old trees) not even approaching the ground level. Fligt June-july, adults usually not on flowers, can be often found on the vegetation arround the host trees." Svacha, Danilevsky, 1988This post was edited by KDG - 04/23/2007 20: 58
The method of working with sieves is described in more detail in the section "Winter collection of insects". At the request of those who wish, I can throw in bibliographic references. And you can trot out the feelers anywhere - from bedding, dust, piles of hay, moss, etc. Only until you sift a few cubic meters, you will not understand the method.This post was edited by stierlyz - 04/21/2007 10: 34
About consumption, theoretically, they should consume the same, in practice, losses in cartridges-connections-cables-temperature costs are imposed. And about the luminosity, it is easier to "focus" one point source than ten, one large lamp is further visible. In more detail, I will try to write later.
We have only one Microlestes species - Microlestes minutulus. If you are interested in it, write to your personal account.I want to thank Dinusik (a) once again (already publicly) for sending me material on the Microlestes genus (and not only)!The parcel flew from Blagoveshchensk to Rostov-on-Don for two weeks, the beetles survived!To Dinusik: I made a mistake, in addition to Syntomus, there is ...
Timokhin: I said a spacious jar. And the Pavonia isn't so big that you can't fit in it. This isn't pear-shaped Saturnia, or even tau. As far as I know, there is no more than 80 mm in wingspan, this is if the female, and the male is much smaller.
About fishing for tentiria. In the Crimea, I caught them for bananas. Just take a banana and put it under a stone and they run from all around there and stay on it, and in the morning come and collect them.
RippeR: just the head end of the cocoon has a silk thread structure that allows you to push the cocoon walls apart from the inside with a little effort.
I want to try out car windshields. We have a car service nearby, so there are piles of them rotting...
Anomala (Euchronomala) mongolica Faldermann, 1835Primorye, Khasansky district, Andreevka village, 19-29. 07. 2006Morozzz thank you very much for the material
Necrodes littoralis (Linnaeus, 1758) (=asiaticus Portevin, 1922)Primorye, Khasansky district, Andreevka village, 19-29. 07. 2006Special thanks to Morozzz for the material
Euconnus_(s. str.) _hirticollis_(Illiger) det. S. Kurbatov Caught in Russia, Kaliningrad region, National Park "Curonian Spit", 24.07-3.08.2006, yellow traps. Pictures:Euconnus__s.str.__hirticollis__Illiger__600.jpg — (101.76к)
Exactly, A. fatidica (Hübner, 1824). V. N. Olschwang has already clarified the situation to me:banal ochepyatka. It was necessary to immediately look at the Karsholt and Razowski catalog.I'm withdrawing the question.This post was edited by scarabee - 04/06/2007 11: 39
I need to estimate approximately the mass of insects in the biocenosis of a meadow. Basic methods:1. Biocenometers of various designs2. Net-braid Chetyrkina3. Entomological mowing with recalculation of the net stroke length and its diameterThere are still many different techniques, tricks, and so on.Share with me-Alexander V. Lagunov - lagunov@ilmeny.ac.ru
I'll trade beetles for butterflies.It is weak in beetles,I pick it up as I find it.There are rhinos, scarabs and bronzes of the Mediterranean.For more information, write to taler@front.ru
Okay , I'll take it out and repeat it. Although I doubt that it's anything interesting, since I haven't seen any of them interesting.. Always only 1 species, and I caught many near that place.. Well, then I'll wait for what's how, and then I'll throw
And I also think that Eoloderma agnata is still a Latin name, not a Russian one Apolecta leviza, Clivina fossor, Karyoscapha limbata, Heterotarsus karinula ... ad infinitum
Yes, it was only thanks to Matalin's article that I dispelled my doubts. So, the wrong color of their antennae is common. Or there is an error in green. This isn't my first copy either. with a similar color scheme.This post was edited by omar - 03/23/2007 09: 53
The atlas is the same, but the price difference between Yandex. Disk and Internet traffic is approximately the same as the quality difference. 14 MB-from the Internet and about one and a half CDs (one with text and one with illustrations) - according to the ad suggested above. 72 color tables crammed into 9,5 MB are not worth serious discussion.
How many liters of honey do you need to catch for, say, 14 days? I can't decide how much to buy!Well, it depends on what kind of butterflies you're going to catch. If large and nocturnal-then for each butterfly not less than a liter. The technology of fishing is this-you put a barrel of honey in the middle of the field (preferably more expensive honey) and wait for butterflies. When they arrive, ...
I don't have any materials from the European part. But a find there is quite possible-the species is very synatropic.So I think: what if my find is one of the first? Although it is unlikely, of course...
As far as I know, is the beetle rare, or can it still be found if you search in the appropriate places?If you get to the "place" and at a good time (May, early June) , you can score quite a lot. I've seen a series of dozens of copies.
While poking around the Internet for information on Lathridius, I came across a pheromone database.Pherobase.netI hope it helps someone to catch something new: -)
Oops whether?! I'm talking about synanthropy (or is it not a strict conclusion?!)And I caught taiga in ordinary soil glasses, and oddly enough, I usually went with some toddlers. apparently, they have something close not only outside, but also inside...Fellow colleagues, can you tell me if anyone has ever caught a glacier and other wingless mecopter? How, where to look, what to lure the beast ...
Oh, my God! I used to use ether for anesthesia (in the 70-80's and early 90's), and the color was often changed by leptures, paquitas, and so on. (not to mention the" rigidity " of the material). And since the late 90's, I started using ethyl acetate, and it seems to work better on "colored" barbels. And what else besides chloroform is possible? Don't talk about cyanides...By the way, about ...
The last list without a name - a friend reprinted and printed it out. But I'll ask what authors they were.If the redux is somewhere on the border of Ukraine, then we most likely have a stray one.It looks like we still have Khazars, also flying on the border. But again, most often stray. Although the fact of her death has not yet been published, except for 1-2 copies of dubious origin. Riparty's ...
Mini-PEET awards to enhance transfer of taxonomic knowledgeSSB is pleased to announce the availability of awards to enhance thetransfer of taxonomic expertise, modeled after the highly successfulPEET program at NSF. Unlike the NSF PEET program, awards will not belimited to taxonomically understudied taxa; the primary purpose ofthis program is to pass on taxonomic expertise in general. The ...
Scholarships and travel awards for scientists from developingcountries to obtain modern systematics training in the United StatesSSB announces the availability of scholarships for scholars fromdeveloping countries to attend workshops and courses in systematics,or to visit a lab engaged in systematic research for training. Theemphasis of this program is the transfer of knowledge to thescholar's ...
the photos are super and the views are super, as always!Parmeni all these are just super views!By the way, if you are still in the Crimea, Parmena lives there. It is collected by dusting on a rag from dry branches, or at night with a lantern on the trunks, sometimes in wild quantities.
Buy dry undrafted butterflies in entomological bags in good condition. Cheap. For the collection. Write to us linusha-a@yandex.ru
DAVIS,CALIFORNIA – One of the two largestbutterfly databases in the world , with importantimplications for the study of global change, will “go public” on March 1. Since 1972, Dr. Arthur Shapiro of the Centerfor Population Biology and Section of Evolutionand Ecology, College of Biological Sciences,University of California – Davis, has maintaineda butterfly-monitoring transect across ...
Couldn't it be, say, Galeruca melanocephala or Theone silphoides?Hardly. Last week, I showed this beetle to a professional entomologist (though not a specialist in leaf beetles). His verdict: this is either really G. laticollis, or some Caucasian Galeruca species very close to it. Here is.
Nikanor Fomich, stop being rude and conduct the discussion in a civilized manner. You are on the forum of entomologists, the vast majority of whom are specialists. About the official education of the participants-in this topic. By the way, insects still rest, as well as other animals. Another thing is that these may be short periods. Omar already said about the "primitive" ones.
Purpuricenus dalmatinus Sturm, 1843.Such a colorful beetle. Unfortunately, like many similarly colored species, the collection eventually fades to orange.10-18. VI. 2006, Montenegro, Budva region, oak bush.It is distributed in the Balkans with a call to Bulgaria, in Turkey and Syria to Egypt. It develops on an oak tree. Compared to the background species, P. budensis is infrequent. ...