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Autumn fauna, in general, is almost the most interesting. In some regions, it is also poorly studied.that's why it's interesting
Evolution of quality - the previous photo was taken 4 years ago with the help of thousands of tricks and duplicates on Chinese optics, it was necessary to manually remove from the ugly background and the image is suitable for printing t k at 300 pixels, wild aberrations climb on the duim. Photo below on the no longer new Watering can 2 years ago. And the last one on a new powerful watering can a ...
As for the file format, you may just skip that and it will be automatically determined. Choose that manually only when it's determined wrongly and shots are not added then.
I'm new here,so I apologize in advance if I write in the wrong topic. And I want to ask this question: Yesterday I saw and photographed a small tragedy-two wasps were fighting,during the battle one wasp bit off the other's head,picked up the headless body and flew away with it. There were wasps... well, they are different (I am a complete teapot in biology and therefore the wording is "lame"), so ...
Who else could have made such incisions?There have been suggestions that these are natural cracks in the crust, but you are probably right.
For the catalog, as one of the properties of the view, I need to fix the ability to specify views that are similar in appearance (i.e., what can be confused, for example). Depending on whether to put all the similar ones in one pile or always divide them in pairs, you need to organize the database somewhat differently. Therefore, there is a need to find out in advance (before publishing content), ...
Nikita, the service is temporarily suspended cause people didn't get keen on that. First (even if everybody doesn't care the subj and even the discussion) there should be at least few users ready to offer butterflies for exchange and add lists to the database. Now the season's nearly over so there could be some. As for "nature" shots at Lepidoptera.pro, this is not some concept but a matter of ...
The plants under the butterflies also confused me:for example, well-recognized and completely non-tropical physostegia and buddleia.Buddleia is still not quite "completely non-tropical", rather a southern genus.
[Acanthocinus nodosus (F.) in flight, Louisiana, USA]Thanks for that one. I was just thinking how these guys with such long antennae keep them in flight, aimed somewhat backwards or ...? And now I know. Thank you.And now I am wondering that it should be pretty tough not to hit something like branches or leaves flying this way deep in a thick forest.
Yes, it's interesting,but the same person found it and described it?I had an idea-since no one else has found it for more than a hundred years since the first discovery,and it is possible that that specimen belonged to the most northern species of T. niger from neighboring China, then maybe there was (or is) some relict in Olga Bay to the north of the main range small population of this ...
No one offers to sign with your first and last name without fail. You can just use nicknames, with the area of interest as a characteristic (as it is now on the forum). In my opinion, it is not the list itself that is more important, but the location of entomologists.And, besides, is the possibility of repeating that precedent excluded now, without any map, by some other actor?Everything is ...
"House" of the bagworm butterfly-PsychidaeFor " Excuse me, but what is it?" there is a topic: Classification of insects -> Who is it? http://molbiol.ru/forums/index.php?showforum=53Every Russian speaker distinguishes between "who" and"what"! A "house" is an inanimate object. I'm interested in the BEHAVIOR in this case: WHO DID THIS? Here above is also a "nut job". And I suggested something ...
Who is it? 10 mmTranscarpathian lowland. 27.VII.2011 Phymatodes pusillus, I think IMHO Hylotrupes bajulus is rickety a bit.In deep pardon! Obmishurilsya! Fornax13 is absolutely right, here is the confirmation: http://www.zin.ru/Animalia/Coleoptera/eng/hylbajdk.htm