Insects Database
Insects
 Ants
 Arachnids
 Bees
 Beetles
 Booklice - Barkflies
 Bugs
 Bumblebees
 Cicadas
 Crane flies
 Dragonflies
 Earwigs
 Flies
 Isopods
 Locusts
 Mosquitoes
 Moths & Butterflies
 Plant-parasitic Hemipterans
 Praying Mantises
 Wasps


Photography with cameras
Nikon D3x, Nikon D300, Canon 50D
Image editing with Photoshop
Webdesign @ Pixel-Partisan.com

Keyword: Asia


Overview - a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z
Asian

Seite 1 von 8     1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 
Western honey bee
The Western honey bee (Apis mellifera) was formerly known as the European honey bee. It belongs to the genus of honey bees, which is thought to have existed for the last 100 million years. . It was previously only widespread in Europe, Africa and Asia. Because of its importance to apiculture, the honey bee was brought to other continents in the course of colonisation. In Asia there are 8 other species of bees, of which the Eastern honey bee (Apis cerana) is the most well known. Honey bees are divided into 25 sub-species. One of these is the European dark bee, which was originally only native north of the Alps.
>> Bees -> Honey Bees
Stenodema laevigata
...der true bugs (Hemiptera), the suborder typical bugs (Heteroptera), the family capsid bugs (Miridae), the subfamily Mirinae, the tribe Stenodemini, and the genus Stenodema. Stenodema laevigata are found from Europe to North Africa and from Southeast Asia to East Asia.
>> Bugs -> Stenodema Laevigata
The fairy-ring longhorn beetle has several sub-species such as Pseudovadonia livida livida or Pseudovadonia livida caucasica. This species is widespread and frequently encountered throughout Western Europe, Central Europe, Western Asia and Central Asia and often appears in large numbers in small areas. The development history of this species, which reproduces each year is not yet fully understood. Thread status: this species doesn’t seem to be endangered.
>> Beetles -> longhorn beetles -> Fairy-ring longhorn beetle
Bumblebees
...a sting for defence, they belong to the stinging bees. There are approximately 250 species of bumblebees. They live mainly in the temperate and cooler areas of the northern hemisphere. There is a particularly large variety of species in Europe and Asia; In Europe there are approximately 70 species, 36 of which can be found in Germany. Examples of European bumblebee species are: Bombus argillaceus, Bombus jonellus, Bombus subterranus, Bombus veteranus, Bombus alpinis, Early Bumblebee, Bombus pomor...
>> Bumblebees
Common green bottle flies
The common green bottle fly (Lucilia sericata) belongs to the family of Blow-flies (Calliphoridae) and is widespread in Europe and Asia. The body length ranges from 7 to 11 mm and has a metallic sheen in green and gold colours.
>> Flies -> Common green bottle flies
Hoverflies
Hoverflies (Syrphidae) are a family of the order Diptera. There are 500 species in Europe, 1,800 in the Palearctic (the region comprising Europe and Asia - north of the Himalayan foothills - together with North Africa and the temperate part of the Arabian peninsula) and approximately 6,000 globally. The most striking characteristic of the hoverfly is its ability to remain in one place when flying, ...
>> Flies -> Hoverflies
This hoverfly is found in Europe, Central Asia and North Africa from April to September. It mainly lives in gardens, where it can be found on Apiaceae or Umbelliferae (hogweeds, carrots etc). Its larvae develop in small, muddy bodies of water, but also in rotting holes filled with water in the b...
>> Flies -> Hoverflies -> Myathropa florea
Eristalis arbustorum are found throughout the world (Europe, Africa, Asia and North America), especially in open terrain. Their preferred food source is nectar and the pollen of plants from the sunflower family (Asteraceae) and the carrot family (umbellifers). Eristalis arbustorum appears from March to October.
>> Flies -> Hoverflies -> Eristalis arbustorum
Bibio marci
The Bibio marci is the most frequently occurring member of the family Bibionidae. Bibio marci are widespread in Europe and Asia. They belong to the order Diptera and are encountered? are common? from March on, swarming out frequently around 25 April. Bibio marci are black and shiny. Their bodies can reach a length of 8 to 11 mm. They are similar to flies but are the...
>> Mosquitoes -> Bibionidae -> Bibio marci
Large white
The large white (Pieris brassicae), also called cabbage butterfly or cabbage white, belongs to the family Pieridae. The large white is found in a variety of habitats in northern Africa, Asia and Europe. In Europe, the large white is the most well known butterfly.
>> Moths & Butterflies -> Butterflies -> Large White


Quick search: Species - Europe - Family - Common - Bugs - Genus
Honey - Helophilus - Flies - North - Bee - Subfamily - Suborder - Sicus
Keywords
abcdefghijklm
nopqrstuvwxyz
German Flag German
 Contact
 Copyrights
 Imprint
 New pictures
 Unknown insects
 Unknown spiders
Frequent Queries: