Diptera.info :: Identification queries :: Other insects, spiders, etc.
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[Heteroptera] Lygaeidae sp
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crex |
Posted on 25-11-2006 01:11
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Member Location: Sweden Posts: 1996 Joined: 22.05.06 |
From midwest Sweden 2006-OCT-12. There are few Heteroptera larva photos on the net ... At the house wall where this was found I have also seen, what I believe is, Eremocoris abietis. Could this be it?
crex attached the following image: [101.61Kb] Edited by crex on 04-12-2006 23:10 |
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crex |
Posted on 30-11-2006 08:39
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Member Location: Sweden Posts: 1996 Joined: 22.05.06 |
This was a tricky one, as all immatures are, I guess ... |
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Juergen Peters |
Posted on 30-11-2006 12:36
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Member Location: northwest Germany Posts: 13910 Joined: 11.09.04 |
Hello! crex wrote: From midwest Sweden 2006-OCT-12. There are few Heteroptera larva photos on the net ... At the house wall where this was found I have also seen, what I believe is, Eremocoris abietis. Could this be it? With those antennae it looks to me more like a Coreidae larva. Best regards, Jürgen -=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-= Juergen Peters Borgholzhausen, Germany WWW: http://insektenfo... -=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-= |
jorgemotalmeida |
Posted on 30-11-2006 16:07
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Member Location: Viseu - PORTUGAL Posts: 9295 Joined: 05.06.06 |
I thinks this is not a larva... but a nymph. |
crex |
Posted on 30-11-2006 16:28
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Member Location: Sweden Posts: 1996 Joined: 22.05.06 |
jorgemotalmeida wrote: I thinks this is not a larva... but a nymph. For some reason it's called both larva or nymph, I think. Frank and Martin knows this better. I'm still not completely convinced it's not a Lygaeidae larva/nymph ... |
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Xespok |
Posted on 30-11-2006 18:15
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Member Location: Debrecen, Hungary Posts: 5550 Joined: 02.03.05 |
I also thought about Lygaeidae or Pyrrhocoridaen nymphs. It is better to restrict the use of larva for holometabolous insects at lease as far as Arthropods are concerned, so spiders, crustaceans, and non-holometabolous insects (like the Orthopteroid and Hemipteroid linages) have nymphs. Yet in the case of Non-Arthropods the word larva and larval stages are frequently. If I remember correctly nymphs are larval stages that resemble mostly the adult stage (like orthopteroid and hemipteroid nymphs are like small version of the adult stage usually without the wings). Edited by Xespok on 30-11-2006 18:17 Gabor Keresztes Japan Wildlife Gallery Carpathian Basin Wildlife Gallery |
Frank Koehler |
Posted on 30-11-2006 21:52
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Member Location: Bornheim / Rheinl. (D) Posts: 280 Joined: 30.09.06 |
Yes, I agree with Gabor. In german lanuage we use both, but larva is the usual word. But in english it seems to be usual to use "nymph". So I changed all "larva" to "nymph" at our heteroptera hp. By the way: The shown Lygaeidae nymph can?t be identified. Best regards Frank
--------------------------------------------------- Col.: http://www.koleop...de/gallery Het.: http://www.hetero... --------------------------------------------------- |
crex |
Posted on 30-11-2006 22:40
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Member Location: Sweden Posts: 1996 Joined: 22.05.06 |
Frank Koehler wrote:... By the way: The shown Lygaeidae nymph can?t be identified ... What does that mean? Do all Lygaeidae nymphs look alike or is it that you don't recognize this one? Thnx all for your efforts on this little fellow |
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