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Identification of Lepidoptera (Butterflies and Moths)

Community and ForumInsects identificationIdentification of Lepidoptera (Butterflies and Moths)

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24.08.2007 21:05, okoem

For what I bought on the website "Butterflies of the Crimea", for what I tried to sell smile.gif smile.gif smile.gif

This is where on my website Vlad is listed as the author of the list of Lepidoptera?!

24.08.2007 23:43, Ilia Ustiantcev

1 and 2, of course, are the same butterfly-Autographa gamma.
3-Amphipoea fucosa, but not sure.
Likes: 1

25.08.2007 0:06, Ilia Ustiantcev

Scoops are also difficult for me, I just had the same one two pages earlier. In general, during the day they like to fly scales more. smile.gif

25.08.2007 13:00, Ilia Ustiantcev

Please help me determine the chervonets. I already posted it, but I didn't understand who it is. MO.
picture: ____________________2.jpg

25.08.2007 13:03, Vlad Proklov

Please help me determine the chervonets. I already posted it, but I didn't understand who it was. mo.

I think it's a female hippotoe.

This post was edited by kotbegemot - 08/25/2007 13: 04
Likes: 1

25.08.2007 13:17, Ilia Ustiantcev

Yeah, thanks, but he was also called an alcifron to me...

25.08.2007 13:28, Vlad Proklov

Yeah, thanks, but he was also called an alcifron to me...

Maybe that's what I was calling you smile.gif
Alcifron is the second option. But the first one is still hippotoe.

25.08.2007 17:00, RippeR

still alcifron

25.08.2007 21:37, Sparrow

user posted image

What is the name of this creation?)

25.08.2007 21:48, Vlad Proklov

 
What is the name of this creation?)

I think it's one of the Oecophoridae - I don't know who. From Moscow?

25.08.2007 21:55, Sparrow

Ryazan. Spas-klepikovsky district. Meshchera. Into the light wink.gif

This post was edited by Sparrow - 25.08.2007 21: 56

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25.08.2007 22:02, Vlad Proklov

Ryazan. Spas-klepikovsky district. Meshchera. Into the light wink.gif

Or maybe caddisfly? I don't know them, maybe there are some with metallic?

25.08.2007 22:07, Sparrow

hmm... no, it's not a caddis fly, you take it in your hands the scales crumble very abundantly - there are a lot of these microbes crawling on the grass in the garden in the summer. Although I did not pick up this particular copy, I have seen many similar ones. If you take the MO, then near the Shatursky district-Meshchersky Reserve, respectively.

This post was edited by Sparrow - 08/25/2007 22: 08

25.08.2007 23:29, Bad Den

Ryazan. Spas-klepikovsky district. Meshchera. Into the light wink.gif

I have also met such people here

26.08.2007 11:54, PG18

Yeah, thanks, but he was also called an alcifron to me...

Yes, alcifron. In hippote, the postdiscal row of spots on the CRN is more evenly curved.
Likes: 1

26.08.2007 12:01, PG18

Ognevki, the curse of humanity... Help, someone, please.
Steppes of the Trans-Urals, August

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26.08.2007 12:36, Vlad Proklov

Ognevki, the curse of humanity... Help, someone, please.
Steppes of the Trans-Urals, August

What can I do...
3 - Pelochrista arabescana (Tortricidae)
4 - ?Pempelia palumbella (left)
13 - Ancylolomia palpella

11 -- Crambus sp., 6 -- Catoptria sp.

Update: yes, and the first and probably the twelfth are also leaf wrappers, from Cochylini.

This post was edited by kotbegemot - 08/26/2007 12: 40
Likes: 1

26.08.2007 13:39, PG18

What can I do...
3 - Pelochrista arabescana (Tortricidae)
4 - ?Pempelia palumbella (left)
13 - Ancylolomia palpella

11 -- Crambus sp., 6 -- Catoptria sp.

Update: yes, and the first and probably the twelfth are also leaf wrappers, from Cochylini.


Thank you very much! I'll send the rest to Finland.
And Bleszynski (1965), Microlepidoptera Palaearctica: Crambinae - seems pretty outdated... I didn't find any of this there. And Ancylolomia palpella is somewhat different there (with a much shorter light longitudinal stroke adjacent to the spring edge)...

26.08.2007 13:47, Vlad Proklov

Thank you very much! I'll send the rest to Finland.
And Bleszynski (1965), Microlepidoptera Palaearctica: Crambinae - seems pretty outdated... I didn't find any of this there. And Ancylolomia palpella is somewhat different there (with a much shorter light longitudinal stroke adjacent to the spring edge)...

Ahh! Perhaps there is something else in the Trans-Urals!
Just for the European part, only A. palpella and A. tentaculella are listed in Lepidoptera of Europe. Given that the gender isn't clearly Central Asian, I assumed you didn't have anything else-and I might have been mistaken.

I, alas, have no Microlepidoptera Palearctica at home, but of course it is outdated - for so many years. I can't wait for the next Slam, as the herbs are being prepared for the exit.
Likes: 1

26.08.2007 14:21, PG18

Also, pj., a pair of moths (black-very fast running) and a finger-fly, with a very characteristic resting position.

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26.08.2007 15:09, Ilia Ustiantcev

Please help me identify the butterflies. Moscow.
Scoops.
1.picture: ______13.jpgNot exklaminations, not segetum, not ypsilon.
2.picture: ______12.jpgCaradrina sp.?
3.picture: ______11.jpgCaradrina clavipalpis?
4.picture: ______10.jpgMacdunnoughia confusa
5.picture: ______9.jpgXestia c-nigrum
-------------------------------
I've already posted this scoop, but it wasn't identified. I thought it might be Hydraecia?
6.picture: ______4.jpg
--------------------------------
I posted this scoop a long time ago, it was photographed in August last year. Can you define it now?
image: _____. jpg

26.08.2007 15:11, Ilia Ustiantcev

Leafroller. Quite large.
picture: ___________.jpg
Well, a butterfly from the zoo. About the size of a hive, I think it's a fathead.
image: _______. jpg

26.08.2007 17:20, Pavel Morozov

1-Agrotis segetum
2-Amphipyra tragopogonis
3-yes, clavipalpis
4-Mcdunnoughia confusa
5-Xestia c-nigrum
6-Hydraecia micacea
7-Eurois occulta
zoo butterfly-nymphalid Catonephele acontius (South America)
Likes: 1

26.08.2007 17:34, Ilia Ustiantcev

Thanks! I also thought about Eurois occulta, but I thought it was at least the size of Polia Nebulosa, bombycina, and it turned out to be slightly smaller than apamea monoglypha.

26.08.2007 19:40, Vlad Proklov

Also, pj., a pair of moths (black-very fast running) and a finger-fly, with a very characteristic resting position.

The first is the indented moth Hypatima rhomboidella - or something similar to you (very similar).
The fingerfly is from the genus Agdistis. Their wings are not divided into lobes, unlike other fingerflies.
I don't know the third frown.gifone
Likes: 1

26.08.2007 19:41, Vlad Proklov

Leafroller. Quite large.

Genus Pandemis. Now, it seems, only P. heparana flies...
Likes: 1

26.08.2007 19:51, Vlad Proklov

Thank you very much! I'll send the rest to Finland.
And Bleszynski (1965), Microlepidoptera Palaearctica: Crambinae - seems pretty outdated... I didn't find any of this there. And Ancylolomia palpella is somewhat different there (with a much shorter light longitudinal stroke adjacent to the spring edge)...

Oh, Pavel -- I'm sorry,
I wrote Catoptria there -- it's some kind of Agriphila, of course.

27.08.2007 7:38, aleko

This is where on my website Vlad is listed as the author of the list of Lepidoptera?!


Oh, and the truth is, the monkey has become weak-eyed in old age smile.gif
I've just looked at it, and it's clear that all the original data is specified. All I have left in my head is the last sentence: "The list was provided by Vlad Proklov." I beg your pardon smile.gif
Likes: 1

27.08.2007 13:35, Ilia Ustiantcev

Is this what I think it is?
picture: __________________.jpg

27.08.2007 14:28, Pavel Morozov

Maculinea alcon eggs, or what?

27.08.2007 14:31, Ilia Ustiantcev

Yeah...

27.08.2007 14:46, Pavel Morozov

And the place and date?

27.08.2007 14:51, Ilia Ustiantcev

Ozuyevsky district, Antsiferovo-Podosinki section, either July 10-15, or the first decade of August. When I edited the photo, the EXIF probably got lost. frown.gif

28.08.2007 11:59, Alexander Zarodov

Another batch of fire trucks, etc. from the west of the Moscow region.

1. Agonopterix conterminella?
picture: n0708251.jpg

2. Some Crambidae
picture: n0708252.jpg

3.Parapoynx stratiotata?
picture: n0708253.jpg

28.08.2007 15:05, Alexander Zarodov

3 more yolks from the same place. All hyale?

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28.08.2007 15:33, Zhuk

3 more yolks from the same place. All hyale?

All hiale.
Likes: 1

28.08.2007 17:16, PG18

Another batch of fire trucks, etc. from the west of the Moscow region.

1. Rather-A. ciliella
3. She!
Likes: 1

28.08.2007 20:45, Vlad Proklov

Another batch of fire trucks, etc. from the west of the Moscow region.

I will add that A. ciliella in the Moscow region is also a much more common species.

And the grass plant put me in a stupor. I'd like to see it straightened out...
Likes: 1

29.08.2007 11:09, Alexander Zarodov

30.08.2007 21:48, Vlad Proklov

This is Cirrhia togata Esp.?

Да!
Likes: 1

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