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Identification of Lepidoptera (Butterflies and Moths)

Community and ForumInsects identificationIdentification of Lepidoptera (Butterflies and Moths)

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10.10.2007 1:09, Juglans

Also the beginning of October, years on light, the south of Primorye. As I understand it, this is ognevka

Pictures:
picture: DSC_0312.jpg
DSC_0312.jpg — (91.47к)

Likes: 1

10.10.2007 1:15, Vlad Proklov

Also the beginning of October, years on light, the south of Primorye. As I understand it, this is ognevka

Palpita nigropunctalis
Likes: 1

10.10.2007 1:52, Vlad Proklov

Vlad, thank you! Yes,it was quite fresh. True in the singular.
There were still fresh nymphalids like Admiral and burdock. And here is such a satirida (photographed at night). Same vixen as Double A above?

It seems like a shrew - but in Sochi, maybe the mayors are bright? I do not know where to look...
Likes: 1

10.10.2007 14:57, Sv Kononova

Good afternoon!
Please help me with the definition.

user posted image
figure 1

user posted image
figure 2

user posted image
figure 3

user posted image
figure 4

user posted image
figure 5

user posted image
figure 6

user posted image
Figure 7

All the shots were taken in the summer of this year in the Moscow region.

Thanks!

10.10.2007 17:21, Vlad Proklov

Good afternoon!
Please help me with the definition.

Thanks!

1 - Noctua pronuba
2 - Oligia ?strigilis
3-Archips ?crataegana (or xylosteana?)

5 - Hedya ?pruniana
6 - Hedya ?nubiferana
7 - Syricoris ?lacunana
Likes: 1

10.10.2007 18:22, okoem

4-possibly Acleris rhombana (Denis & Schiffermuller, 1775)
Flat mesh leaf wrapper
Likes: 2

10.10.2007 19:02, Vlad Proklov

4-possibly Acleris rhombana (Denis & Schiffermuller, 1775)
Flat mesh sheet wrapper

Damn, that's right! This is it smile.gif

11.10.2007 13:32, Alexander Zarodov

Now the problem is more complicated...

1. Without a doubt, this is Pyrgus sp. And then there are the questions. Malvae, armoricanus, or whatever? How to distinguish them? Numerous butterfly in one meadow, in others I did not meet.

picture: mnlep15.jpg

2. This one, I think, might be Gegenes pumilio. Unfortunately, it was not possible to photograph her properly and she was caught only once.

picture: mnlep16.jpg

11.10.2007 18:13, PG18

Now the problem is more complicated...


If autumn Balkan, then most likely Pyrgus armaricanus & Gegenes pumilio.
Likes: 1

11.10.2007 18:19, PG18

Everything is right.
It is strange, Egeria there is more similar to the Northern European than to the Mediterranean (in Spain and Portugal they are completely red).

Brown nominative egeria only in the western Mediterranean. In the Balkans, the north and east of France, the Caucasus - tircis, as well as in the north.
Likes: 1

11.10.2007 18:36, Vlad Proklov

Brown nominative egeria only in the western Mediterranean. In the Balkans, the north and east of France, the Caucasus - tircis, as well as in the north.

So, in the west of the European Mediterranean smile.gif
In Israel, won, nominative form again.

11.10.2007 20:05, mikee

So, in the west of the European Mediterranean smile.gif
In Israel, won, nominative form again.

Vlad, pay attention to the URL under the photo on your link. Image taken in Portugal smile.gif

11.10.2007 20:14, Vlad Proklov

Vlad, pay attention to the URL under the photo on your link. The picture was taken in Portugal smile.gif

Yes, it's just that the authors of the site did not find their own photo-there are few places where it is (only in the Golan). But the local copies look the same, I looked in Benyamini's book [D. Benyamini, 2002].

12.10.2007 9:46, PG18

So, in the west of the European Mediterranean smile.gif
In Israel, won, nominative form again.

Exactly so. The border between tircis & aegeria in Fore Asia beautifully divides Turkey into northern and southern halves. smile.gif
Likes: 1

12.10.2007 13:48, Alexander Zarodov

The last batch of Montenegrin butterflies from late September to early October.

1. Rhodometra sacraria?

picture: mnlep21.jpg

2. Grammodes bifasciata?

picture: mnlep20.jpg

3. Scopula marginepunctata?

picture: mnlep17.jpg

4. ? little

picture: mnlep19.jpg
Likes: 1

12.10.2007 16:25, Vlad Proklov

The last batch of Montenegrin butterflies from late September to early October.

Shyert pobyery - I click to answer, and it clicked on the flower smile.gif
1 and 2 -- yes and yes again.
3 -- maybe, but... Can you imagine how many species there are in southern Europe?
4 -- Diasemiopsis ramburialis
Likes: 1

12.10.2007 16:33, Alexander Zarodov

3 -- maybe, but... Can you imagine how many species there are in southern Europe?


Thanks! I can't even imagine smile.gifit's small, with a wingspan of about 25 mm.
In general, I tried not to photograph outright small things, so as not to complicate the subsequent definition.

12.10.2007 22:04, beard

October 10, Chernihiv region (northern Ukraine).
Help with the caterpillar, I leave it to the pupa - that is, I am also interested in the butterfly.

Pictures:
picture: gus_1.jpg
gus_1.jpg — (26.51к)

picture: gus_2.jpg
gus_2.jpg — (76.27к)

picture: gus_3.jpg
gus_3.jpg — (43.98к)

12.10.2007 23:43, Pavel Morozov

Sort of like a raspberry cocoonworm (Macrothylacia rubi)

13.10.2007 0:34, Zhuk

He's the one.

13.10.2007 10:07, beard

Tell us about the view - whether it's normal for these places or not...
I don't know much about it, but this topic is very interesting.
Butterfly - like this one http://www.biopix.dk/Temp/Macrothylacia%20rubi%2000017.JPG ?

13.10.2007 11:37, lerth

What kind of whitewash is this:
http://cs78.vkontakte.ru/u1484070/882316/x_53af053bf1.jpg

can anyone suggest it?

This post was edited by lerth - 13.10.2007 11: 52

13.10.2007 16:13, Zhuk

What kind of whitewash is this:
http://cs78.vkontakte.ru/u1484070/882316/x_53af053bf1.jpg

can anyone suggest it?

Pieris rapae smile.gif
Likes: 1

13.10.2007 16:55, Ilia Ustiantcev

Help plz determine. Moscow.
1.picture: _________4.jpgOperophtera brumata?
2.picture: _____________3.jpgFinger-flies are very difficult, but they probably don't fly much in the fall...
3.picture: _________4.jpg
My raspberry silkworm is dead! Instead, I caught this. Abdominal legs in place, caught on a lighted wall. So in my opinion, scoops from Noctuinae do, so I identified the goose as Agrotis exclamationis. What to feed, if not her?

13.10.2007 17:20, Zhuk

Help plz determine. Moscow.

1 - Operophtera brumata
Likes: 1

14.10.2007 13:06, Zhuk

Tell us about the view - whether it's normal for these places or not...
I don't know much about it, but this topic is very interesting.
Butterfly - like this one http://www.biopix.dk/Temp/Macrothylacia%20rubi%2000017.JPG ?

For a place, a butterfly is common. Imago flies in May-July, at night. The caterpillar feeds on raspberries and blackberries. I don't even know what else to say.

14.10.2007 13:08, Zhuk

Likes: 1

14.10.2007 18:51, okoem

  
1. Without a doubt, this is Pyrgus sp. And then there are the questions. Malvae, armoricanus, or whatever? How to distinguish them?

Definitely not malvae. I agree with the definition of "P. armoricanus".
Mini-determinant of the genus Pyrgus is in the book by Nekrutenko -
http://salabs.narod.ru/

Likes: 1

14.10.2007 18:54, RippeR

Ust-Orda, Kuda River. 18.06.07
I myself assume that Plebejidea, but I'm confused between cyane and loewii. cyana is not very similar in color, and leui is not suitable for areas.. In general, no one is 100% like me until the end.. If there are any other suggestions..?

Pictures:
picture: DSC01056.JPG
DSC01056.JPG — (64.79к)

picture: DSC01059.JPG
DSC01059.JPG — (60.05к)

14.10.2007 19:07, Zhuk

Well, the genitals can be boiled...

14.10.2007 19:11, AntSkr

In my opinion, it looks more like cyane...
Likes: 1

14.10.2007 19:15, AntSkr

Ust-Orda is where approximately? It's just that the ranges of both species are different in Eastern Europe...
loewii flies in the central Caucasus, while cyane flies in the Lower and Middle Volga region, Southern Urals, Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan, Kyrgyzstan.

This post was edited by AntSkr - 10/14/2007 19: 27
Likes: 1

14.10.2007 20:17, Vlad Proklov

Help plz determine. Moscow.

1. Operophtera brumata
2. Emmelina monodactyla

Are you sure Malin's dead?" They hibernate at the caterpillar stage - maybe just hibernated?
Likes: 1

14.10.2007 20:25, Vlad Proklov

Ust-Orda is where approximately? It's just that the ranges of both species are different in Eastern Europe...
loewii flies in the central Caucasus, while cyane flies in the Lower and Middle Volga region, Southern Urals, Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan, Kyrgyzstan.

Obviously, the Baikal region. P. cyane, of course smile.gif

This post was edited by kotbegemot - 10/14/2007 20: 27
Likes: 1

15.10.2007 6:08, Ekos

Ust-Orda, Kuda River. 18.06.07
I myself assume that Plebejidea, but I'm confused between cyane and loewii. cyana is not very similar in color, and leui is not suitable for areas.. In general, no one is 100% like me until the end.. If there are any other suggestions..?


This is definitely Plebejidea cyane smile.gifI have exactly the same instances from almost the same places in the collection.

This post was edited by Ekos - 10/15/2007 06: 10
Likes: 1

15.10.2007 15:57, Ilia Ustiantcev

My raspberry cocoonworm is tall - not only has it shrunk in size and doesn't move, but the ground is sticking to it! definitely dead...

15.10.2007 16:06, okoem

My raspberry cocoonworm is tall - not only has it shrunk in size and doesn't move, but the ground is sticking to it! definitely dead...

I don't know about raspberries, but in general, size and land are not the main thing.
If the caterpillar is hard and elastic, it means it is alive. If it has become soft, then alas.
Likes: 1

15.10.2007 16:31, Ilia Ustiantcev

Greatly reduced... Bends at most 15 degrees. just found a worm on it! (legless) do they tolerate this kind of treatment?

15.10.2007 16:39, Vlad Proklov

Greatly reduced... Bends at most 15 degrees. just found a worm on it! (legless) do they tolerate this kind of treatment?

Ah! Well, it was the parasite that lived in it!
You can have a funeral smile.gifservice

15.10.2007 17:06, Ilia Ustiantcev

Not everything is so simple - the worm most likely got out of the ground, because I found it only right now, the caterpillar does not show signs of life for a week or two. But, indeed, there is an impression that, apart from the skin, there is little there. Considering the length of her body, like 3, 5 cm, probably really
Ah! Well
, you Can have a funeral service smile.gif

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