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Identification of Lepidoptera (Butterflies and Moths)

Community and ForumInsects identificationIdentification of Lepidoptera (Butterflies and Moths)

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15.05.2007 21:38, Vlad Proklov

 
Maybe it was, I don't know. In general, I got out of kuolka. I can't tell if it's just her coloring, or if she's worn out! IN GENERAL, WHO IS THIS?

It looks like Apamea crenata, a light specimen. It seems to be in good condition.

This post was edited by kotbegemot - 05/15/2007 21: 39
Likes: 1

16.05.2007 6:12, Tyomochkin

Right now, it's hard to tell if it's her or not. Butterfly on the straightener.
And at the expense of the condition: when viewed up close, it looks like a worn one. When I got home (I hadn't seen her before), she somehow flew into the bathroom and beat on the lamp for a long time! I'll check it out!

16.05.2007 8:20, svm2

to nimu 6-Apamea sordens
Likes: 1

17.05.2007 13:51, Tyomochkin

Is it Apamea crenata? I watched it myself, a controversial situation for me!

Pictures:
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IMG_0091.jpg — (133.76к)

17.05.2007 14:08, svm2

crenata, in my opinion,and in the picture where it is not straightened, it is better seen. It's too worn out.
Likes: 2

17.05.2007 22:39, nimu

In the fall, it was what was on the previous photo, now it is what is on the second, alive, shivering. There is an assumption that this is an odorous woodcutter.
Am I right? and if you're right, when should you prepare a straightener?

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picture: y.JPG
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picture: kok.JPG
kok.JPG — (125.4 k)

17.05.2007 23:03, okoem

2 nimu
I think you are right. The butterfly should appear in June-July.
Likes: 1

17.05.2007 23:09, Vlad Proklov

In the fall, it was what was on the previous photo, now it is what is on the second, alive, shivering. There is an assumption that this is an odorous woodcutter.
Am I right? and if you're right, when should you prepare a straightener?

It looks like it, but it can also be a Cossus terebra, I don't know what kind of tracks it has.
Congratulations, by the way: I have such at one time okochurilas, not pupated frown.gif
Likes: 1

18.05.2007 8:51, omar

Definitely Cossus cossus. You were very lucky, and I tried in vain to get them out of the sport, but I was never lucky. The caterpillar weaves a cocoon and dies in it. I don't know what she wants. confused.gif Now I don't even take it anymore, if I see it, it's a pity to ruin the animal.

18.05.2007 12:22, RippeR

I got it out easily.. If the pupa is in a cocoon, (if the cocoon of gossip is not so long ago), then you can wait a week, and then pull out the cocoon. Then, for about 2 weeks, you will have to keep the pupa in a jar or aquarium and wait for hatching..

19.05.2007 1:32, nimu

to omar; I still think it's too early to talk about "very lucky", but the main thing is the end result. For example, the caterpillar of the hawk moth eye also pupated without any problems, but as a result, the freak hatched, which did not spread its wings.

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19.05.2007 22:43, nimu

Help plz determine the scoop.
All Moscow region to light.

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19.05.2007 22:48, nimu

And this one I identified as Macdunnoughia confusa. Am I right?

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26.JPG — (29.43к)

19.05.2007 22:50, Vlad Proklov

Help plz determine the scoop.
All Moscow region to light.

1 - ?Nycteola sp. (Nolidae)
2 - Autographa gamma
3-Autographa pulchrina or A. buraetica. The second one is less common.
4 - Cerapteryx graminis
Likes: 1

19.05.2007 22:50, Vlad Proklov

And this one I identified as Macdunnoughia confusa. Am I right?

Yes! smile.gif
Likes: 1

20.05.2007 0:36, nimu

Tell me plz am I right to define the upper one as Adaptera zoegana L ?
And who is in picture 2?
Both Moscow region.

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picture: li.JPG
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20.05.2007 0:41, Vlad Proklov

Tell me plz am I right to define the upper one as Adaptera zoegana L ?
And who is in picture 2?
Both Moscow region.

1-Agapeta zoegana, yes.
2 - Agapeta hamana
Likes: 1

20.05.2007 13:43, nimu

Help plz spot the moth

Pictures:
picture: pz.JPG
pz.JPG — (145.03 k)

20.05.2007 15:28, Zhuk

Boarmia roboraria, it now seems to be called something new.

1 - ?Nycteola sp. (Nolidae)

Nycteola revayana вроде
Likes: 1

22.05.2007 16:45, Alexander Zarodov

At the weekend, I clicked in pyadenits MO. We decided something like this:

1. Epirrhoe alternata
2. Chiasmia (Semiotisa) clathrata
3. Lomaspilis marginata
4. Scopula marginepunctata

Right?

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22.05.2007 16:59, Pavel Morozov

#4 - Serraca punctinalis
Likes: 1

22.05.2007 18:50, Pavel Morozov

But I can't pinpoint this butterfly yet. Date and place-Primorye, Kaimanovka, July ' 05, on light.
At first I thought-crested. I showed it to Vladimir Sergeyevich Murzin, who said that it was close to the genus Cerura. I showed Viktor Vasilyevich Sinyaev. He sent it to a German who was a great connoisseur of Ukrainian women. The German wrote to me that it was a panther owl (Noctuidae, Pantheinae). There is something similar on the Japanese site, but not the same. Sinyaev himself says that he collected a similar one in inner China.
These are the pies.

This post was edited by Morozzz - 05/22/2007 18: 56

Pictures:
picture: Panth.jpg
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22.05.2007 19:05, Zhuk

Did you show Sviridov Andrey Valentinovich from the zoo museum? He is one of the biggest experts on scoops. And he also once caught in Primorye, and sent a scoop from there to Moscow with vogons smile.gif. So I highly recommend it.

This post was edited by Zhuk - 05/22/2007 19: 07
Likes: 1

22.05.2007 22:43, RippeR

describe the new view

23.05.2007 11:39, BO.

Not a big butterfly, but it flew into the light. Astrakhan region.
Help me determine it.

Pictures:
picture: P1210714.jpg
P1210714.jpg — (117.24 k)

23.05.2007 11:45, Vlad Proklov

Not a big butterfly, but it flew into the light. Astrakhan region.
Help me determine it.

Eublemma purpurina (Erebidae).

23.05.2007 12:32, Сергей-Д

Here is such a fire, caught at the end of August. Is it possible to determine who it is?
picture: Paracorsia_repandalis_1_1________.jpg
picture: Paracorsia_repandalis_1_2________.jpg

23.05.2007 20:14, AntSkr

Is it a female Malacosoma castrense?
user posted image

23.05.2007 20:25, Pavel Morozov

Yes, it is Malacosoma castrense.

24.05.2007 12:48, svm2

But I can't pinpoint this butterfly yet. Date and place-Primorye, Kaimanovka, July ' 05, on light.
At first I thought-crested. I showed it to Vladimir Sergeyevich Murzin, who said that it was close to the genus Cerura. I showed Viktor Vasilyevich Sinyaev. He sent it to a German who was a great connoisseur of Ukrainian women. The German wrote to me that it was a panther owl (Noctuidae, Pantheinae). There is something similar on the Japanese site, but not the same. Sinyaev himself says that he collected a similar one in inner China.
These are the pies.


According to the list
http://www.zin.ru/BIODIV/fam_tr.asp?Node=C...de=C10035&Exp=Y

similar to Panthauma egregia, the image is on Korean sites,
Korean subspecies here
http://www2.nrm.se/en/lep_nrm/e/panthauma_...oreothauma.html

This post was edited by svm2 - 05/24/2007 13: 17
Likes: 1

24.05.2007 22:13, Pavel Morozov

It looks like I've seen this picture myself. But still, not that.

24.05.2007 23:39, Sungaya

But I can't pinpoint this butterfly yet. Date and place-Primorye, Kaimanovka, July ' 05, on light..
..

and here? http://www.nature.go.kr/insect/insectGuide...S0005&photo_no=

25.05.2007 0:43, nimu

Help plz pyadenits determine.
9 - Onega Lake, the rest of the Moscow region.

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25.05.2007 3:02, Vlad Proklov

Help plz pyadenits determine.
9 - Onega Lake, the rest of the Moscow region.

1 - Hemithea aestivaria
2 - Ectropis crepuscularia
3 - Chloroclysta ?truncata
4 - Operophthera brumata/fagata. Caught in the fall?
5 - Itame brunneata
6 - ?Rheumaptera cervinalis is, in general, a rarity - if that's what it is.
7 - Cleora cinctaria
8 - Epirrita ?autumnata
9 - ?Alcis repandata is torn.
10 - Cybosia mesomella (Arctiidae)

Somewhere like this, if anything-comrades will correct smile.gif
Likes: 1

25.05.2007 8:00, nimu

to kotbegemot;
4-autumn, 12.10.06
6-looked at the photos in Google, and did not understand Rheumaptera cervinalis or not, with regard to rarity, I looked at my "storerooms" there are 3 copies of all Mosk OBL( 1-2005, 2 - 2006).
9 - not torn, so worn a little smile.gif

25.05.2007 8:15, svm2

It looks like I've seen this picture myself. But still, not that.


On Korean sites
http://insect.ccbb.re.kr/renew/sub_db01_vi...d=LEP-060-00452
http://www.nature.go.kr/insect/specimen/re...%26start%3D1676

the Swedes have a darker subspecies, and even a female

This post was edited by svm2 - 25.05.2007 08: 20
Likes: 1

25.05.2007 21:20, Pavel Morozov

1 - Hemithea aestivaria
2 - Ectropis crepuscularia
3 - Chloroclysta ?truncata
4 - Operophthera brumata/fagata. Caught in the fall?
5 - Itame brunneata
6 - ?Rheumaptera cervinalis is, in general, a rarity - if that's what it is.
7 - Cleora cinctaria
8 - Epirrita ?autumnata
9 - ?Alcis repandata is torn.
10 - Cybosia mesomella (Arctiidae)

Somewhere like this, if anything-the comrades will correct it smile.gif

Rheumaptera cervinalis can be quite common where there is a barberry. My dacha (Chigasovo, Odintsovo district) and my mother-in-law's dacha (Poryadino, Naro-Fominsky district) flies in May.
If Moscow, then E. autumnata is accurate.
Operoptera exactly brumata
Alcis repandata also exactly.
C. truncata explicitly
Likes: 1

27.05.2007 1:33, Vlad Proklov

Help plz determine the leaflet (?).
Moscow Region, June 2006.

There was an old question, but I came across it by chance and remembered what was asked smile.gif
This is probably Lampronia sp. (Prodoxidae), possibly Lampronia rupella.
Likes: 1

27.05.2007 15:39, taler

Define the pozhailusta.
I apologize for the quality of the photo.The lower wings are yellow with black bands.Caught in Israel 16.05.07

28.05.2007 16:35, Dinusik

I tried to identify the butterflies, but I'm not sure if they're correct. Specialists, help!

Pictures:
picture: Roddia_l_album.JPG
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picture: Pieris_napi.JPG
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picture: Cyaniris_semiargus.JPG
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Picture: Cyaniris_semiargus_2.JPG
Cyaniris_semiargus_2.JPG — (175.94к)

picture: Nymphalis_xanthomelas.JPG
Nymphalis_xanthomelas.JPG — (232.08к)

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