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All one thing I do not understand, there is a pubescence on the elytra or not! The bug itself is not there?
Top as large as possible. I need to see the pubescence of the elytra and the punctuation of the pronotum.
Yuri, can you show this beetle in the frame? Very small - you can't see anything. Most likely Harpalus (Pseudoophonus) ussuriensis, but no certainty.
Well, this author has everything without specifying the place/time. The only thing is that it seems to be South Asia based on the presence of Attacus taken in the same place. c a month ago, the author was already asked to provide data ... It has already been discussed a thousand times that it is not necessary to place the most interesting pictures without labels.
Sasha, about the dark one, you should understand that shooting/processing can have a very strong impact ... Yes, I do not rest-Matov also had examples of errors - this is from the photo! I can also determine my native ground beetles in many groups uncertainly, or even only up to the genus. Set it to inaccurate if you think it's necessary.
Sasha, I was stupid here and did not write - this is the definition of Alexey Matov (all I can, alas)
Corrected data. Goliathus orientalis / Confidently identified / Yuri Semejkin → Goliathus goliatus / Tentatively identified / Evgeny Komarov.
Yuri! Most likely the wrong definition in the museum. I don't think orientalis has such a form. It looks like a typical G. goliathus. Provincial museums have a lot of "miracles".
Corrected data. Harpalus / Confidently identified / Yuri Semejkin → Harpalus froelichii / Tentatively identified / Evgeny Komarov.
Corrected data. Oberea / Confidently identified / Yuri Semejkin → Oberea morio / Tentatively identified / Evgeny Komarov.
Yuri, and you can take a large belly from below, I need to look at the bristles there - a couple of them on the back edge, or there are additional ones! Then I will say for sure already.
Yuri, to determine ground beetles from the photo, it is highly desirable to take a picture vertically from above, Although this genus is not realistic from the photo in most cases.
Vasily, there is an incredible mess everywhere in the weevils! Given the size of the session, it's scary to imagine the amount of work. Just look at the genus Curculio - since Linnaeus (and not only him) initially described all the weevils in this genus, there are several hundred species of Curculio on the site, which are duplicated in other genera and even more than once. If you can still sort ...