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Megan is correct - the first trap is one of the Rove beetle
Insect Identification Services Ltd
Email: i...@insectidentification.co.uk
Tel: +44 7392 854405
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On Thu, Jun 30, 2016 at 8:48 AM, JAVIER TACON CLAVAIN <jtaco...@ucm.es>
wrote:
> This is a message from the Museumpests.net List.
> To post to th
What size are they - if Box Elder bugs they are rhopalids (Rhopalidae)
On 23 February 2017 at 17:40, wrote:
> Hello –
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> Found some of these while at a meeting yesterday. Are they roaches?
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> Thanks,
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> Leon …
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> Leon Zak
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> l...@zaks.com
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> http://zaks.com
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These are lygaeid bugs (Hemiptera: Lygaeidae) and are plant suckers so not
damaging - they are usually brought in on peoples clothes or otherwise
transported indoors.
Regards,
Stuart
On 23 February 2017 at 17:40, wrote:
> Hello –
>
>
>
> Found some of these while at a meeting
Hi Frances,
Yes this is most likely to be the larva of one of the 'house moths',
possibly a tineid (Tineidae), but possibly an oecophorid (Oecophoridae).
An interesting observation being that there is *one *caterpillar plus
*two *head
capsules - this frequently occurs with larvae stuck on
I'd second Richards ID, *Uleiota *sp., but we would need much better images
to determine further than that and ideally the specimen itself.
Stuart
On 19 January 2017 at 14:44, Pollack, Richard J wrote:
> Cara,
>
> The form of the antennae and other characteristics
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