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Identification of larvae and pupae

Community and ForumInsects identificationIdentification of larvae and pupae

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21.02.2013 10:24, Bad Den

Maybe someone was in Thailand and saw these cute guys? Taken in early December. I think it's some kind of dipper.
Thank you.

user posted image
2 bear caterpillars on a vine — Photos by evelinasokol on Rambler-Photo
These were sitting in a crowd on a vine in the Khao Yai National Park. A vine without flowers, but probably poisonous.
azmer (my finger is visible at the bottom).
Phuket, near Katu Waterfall.

I think I saw something similar, but I can't say anything definite.
Likes: 1

21.02.2013 17:47, maik

Today in the Tatar forest g .Stavropol 15 mm. Can't you get a better photo, a quick infection
of Melitaea cinxia (Linnaeus, 1758)? What else can you feed other than plantain and yastebink
picture: 21.02.13____________.JPG

This post was edited by maik - 02/21/2013 17: 53

21.02.2013 18:41, dim-va

This Melitaea cinxia is called Pseudopestrox scots Syntomis nigricornis. Eats everything. Even meat.
Likes: 1

21.02.2013 18:42, dim-va

Maybe someone was in Thailand and saw these cute guys?

user posted image
Ursa Major — Photos by evelinasokol on Rambler-Photo
The oldest of these caterpillars was impressive in size (my finger is visible at the bottom).
Phuket, near Katu Waterfall.


It's not a bear. This is a Eupterotid. Most likely, the genus Apha is Apha. The butterflies are beautiful.
Likes: 1

23.02.2013 18:58, Konung

Tell me, what kind of caterpillars? at least a family.
In spider webs on kermek flowers in the steppe. small, about 1 cm. very active, feed at dusk, while crawling from one spider nest to another within the same plant.
[attachmentid()=150656]
[attachmentid()=150657]

a butterfly hatched today, so the mystery is solved: http://molbiol.ru/forums/index.php?showtop...dpost&p=1389320
Likes: 1

24.02.2013 13:58, Коллекционер

perhaps a mayfly at least up to the family or genus?
size ~1cm, in the hole at the key
picture: P1000069.JPG

28.02.2013 18:45, IchMan

If possible, help us identify the following animals (all in South Karelia):
22.07
picture: pupa_DSC_0861.jpg

21.06
picture: caterpillar_DSC_0135.jpg

23.06
picture: caterpillar_DSC_0499.jpg

25.06
picture: caterpillar_DSC_0718.jpg

27.06 (dragged by Ammophila)
picture: caterpillar_DSC_1194.jpg

This post was edited by IchMan - 02/28/2013 18: 49

28.02.2013 21:29, евгений1

Friends, who knows what these insects are? they swim along streams along the road, sit on ice, in some places create clusters in the form of a film on the water, the photos are not high-quality, because the object is very small, but who knows, they will probably be able to identify it:

Pictures:
__________________IMG_1387.JPG
__________________IMG_1387.JPG — (678.96к)

__________________IMG_1384.JPG
__________________IMG_1384.JPG — (873.58к)

28.02.2013 22:12, Коллекционер

 
23.06

Euthrix potatori?
Likes: 1

02.03.2013 0:49, IchMan

Euthrix potatori?

There was such a variant (E. potatoria). There is no complete certainty without knowing the intraspecific variability. The length of the caterpillar is about 7 cm
At the expense of the caterpillar from 25.06 the question is removed, this is without the Euroctis similis variants.
Can anyone help with the rest of the photos?

02.03.2013 1:11, okoem

 
Can anyone help with the rest of the photos?

Maybe. smile.gif
Here's your pupa
http://www.lepiforum.de/cgi-bin/lepiwiki.p...nepteryx_Rhamni
The green caterpillar is here somewhere
http://www.lepiforum.de/cgi-bin/lepiwiki.p...e_Gesamt_Raupen
Likes: 1

02.03.2013 5:20, bials

  

27.06 (dragged by Ammophila)
[attachmentid()=166882]


Cottonwort (Clostera anastomosis L.)
Likes: 1

03.03.2013 16:04, Коллекционер

Friends, who knows what these insects are? they swim along streams along the road, sit on ice, in some places create clusters in the form of a film on the water, the photos are not high-quality, because the object is very small, but who knows, they will probably be able to identify it:

Collembola

05.03.2013 15:33, IchMan

Maybe. smile.gif
Here's your pupa
http://www.lepiforum.de/cgi-bin/lepiwiki.p...nepteryx_Rhamni
The green caterpillar is here somewhere
http://www.lepiforum.de/cgi-bin/lepiwiki.p...e_Gesamt_Raupen

Thanks for the help. Yes, I had blunted something with the lemongrass, I didn't remember what it looked like, and the color completely disoriented me...
But as for the green caterpillar, I wouldn't have thought of it! Camilla - in Karelia!? something is clearly wrong with our climate. Global - not global, but local warming is definitely there, judging by the mass of fresh finds. Recently, for the second time, after ~a hundred years, Apatura iris was marked, for the first time Apatura ilia, now camilla, which in Fennoscandia is marked only in the southernmost parts (in Finland, 4 points). And the situation in the region is similar with other detachments. True, it is the southernmost part of Karelia, south of Ladoga, but still...
picture: camilla.jpg
Likes: 1

07.03.2013 19:39, NakaRB

Help with the moth, plz...

1-8, 10-D. New items-Begichevo, Serpukhov district, Moscow region, June 2012
9-The village's surroundings Gorki-10, Moscow region, June 2012

1. Ectropis crepuscularia?
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2.
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3.
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4.
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5.
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6. Lycia hirtaria?
user posted image
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7.
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8.
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9.
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10. oak tree
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08.03.2013 17:35, maik

6 - да
Likes: 1

09.03.2013 17:28, егр

please tell me whose caterpillars they are and what to feed them?

Pictures:
picture: DSCN9883.JPG
DSCN9883.JPG — (183.29к)

picture: DSCN9861.JPG
DSCN9861.JPG — (106.78к)

09.03.2013 17:55, dim-va

9883 - Syntomis. You can have 4 types of them. But polyphages, that is, eat everything. Then it will be interesting to find out what kind of species will hatch out of it - only the drawing of the rear wing is important, remember this when photographing!

09.03.2013 19:26, егр

1 is this pseudopestrox vulgaris 2 ?

09.03.2013 22:10, dim-va

em... probably her. Only... Who's that?" Phegea? or nigricornis?

10.03.2013 5:49, maik

Nigricornis we have them in the summer flies like mosquitoes in the forest. My caterpillar flatly refused to eat. I had to make a scarecrow out of it as they say

This post was edited by maik - 10.03.2013 05: 55

10.03.2013 8:41, егр

and what to feed the second one? confused.gif

10.03.2013 14:47, John-ST

9883 - Syntomis. You can have 4 types of them. But polyphages, that is, eat everything. Then it will be interesting to find out what kind of species will hatch out of it - only the drawing of the rear wing is important, remember this when photographing!



1 is this pseudopestrox vulgaris 2 ?



Nigricornis we have them in the summer flies like mosquitoes in the forest. My caterpillar flatly refused to eat. I had to make a scarecrow out of it as they say


According to the " Review of False Finches (Lepidoptera: Syntomidae) Russia and adjacent territories. Part 1. The genus Syntomis Ochsenheimer, 1808", in the vicinity of Stavropol, there is a reliable occurrence of common pseudopotamus Syntomis nigricornis and possible pseudopotamus Caspian-Syntomis caspia (known from neighboring territories), as well as theoretically possible pseudopotamus Kruger - S. kruegeri and pseudopotamus transcaspica - S. transcaspica, for the latter two types of data is insufficient.
Likes: 1

10.03.2013 14:54, John-ST

and what to feed the second one? confused.gif

2. Nymphalida, most likely some kind of mother-of-pearl eat various violets, in addition to violets, try to give nettles. willow, poplar, aspen (if not mother-of-pearl can eat)

10.03.2013 16:06, maik

According to the " Review of False Finches (Lepidoptera: Syntomidae) Russia and adjacent territories. Part 1. The genus Syntomis Ochsenheimer, 1808", in the vicinity of Stavropol, there is a reliable occurrence of common pseudopotamus Syntomis nigricornis and possible pseudopotamus Caspian-Syntomis caspia (known from neighboring territories), as well as theoretically possible pseudopotamus Kruger - S. kruegeri and pseudopotamus transcaspica - S. transcaspica, for the latter two types of data is insufficient.

Well, I can't say anything about the last two
until we met, but Dysauxes punctata (Fabricius, 1781) is exactly last season I collected them myself and there were relatively many in the steppe

This post was edited by maik - 10.03.2013 16: 32

10.03.2013 20:30, NakaRB

11-15, 17-20 - D. New items-Begichevo, Serpukhovsky district, Moscow region
16-Vicinity of the village. Gorki-10, Moscow region

11. 02.06.2012, on the trunk of an aspen tree
user posted image
user posted image

12. 02.06.2012, on the trunk of a pine tree
user posted image

13. 02.06.2012, on the trunk of a pine tree
user posted image

14. 06.05.2012, willow
user posted image

15. 29.04.2012
user posted image

16. 22.04.2012
user posted image

17. 27.08.2011, willow
user posted image

18. 27.08.2011, aspen
user posted image

19. 24.06.2011
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20. 21.05.2011, aspen
user posted image

11.03.2013 0:20, John-ST

Well, I can't say anything about the last two
until we met, but Dysauxes punctata (Fabricius, 1781) is exactly last season I collected them myself and there were relatively many in the steppe

The question was in particular about the caterpillar in the photo. Dysauxes is part 2, visually both caterpillars and butterflies are well distinguished from Syntomis, Dysauxes punctata is quite common in the south of eastern Russia. Dysauxes famula is known from the Krasnodar Territory from the Abrau Peninsula, from Dagestan, Georgia, Armenia, Azerbaijan and Transcaucasia. Dysauxes ancilla is known from the Rostov and Volgograd regions.
Likes: 1

11.03.2013 19:27, Sungaya

Help with the moth, plz...

1-8, 10-D. New items-Begichevo, Serpukhov district, Moscow region, June 2012
9-The village's surroundings Gorki-10, Moscow region, June 2012
...


1. Ectropis crepuscularia
2. perhaps Paradarisa consonaria
3, 5, 7, 8, 10 - it seems that all this is Biston strataria
4. Lycia sp.
9. Cleora cinctaria
Likes: 1

11.03.2013 20:13, Sungaya

11-15, 17-20 - D. New items-Begichevo, Serpukhovsky district, Moscow region
16-Vicinity of the village. Gorki-10, Moscow region

...


11, 12 - Lycia sp.

14-possibly Hemithea aestivaria


17-possibly Ematurga atomaria
18-some Cyclophora

20 - ? Epirrita autumnata
Likes: 1

12.03.2013 21:14, NakaRB

Well, different mounds

1. Novoki-Begichevo village, Serpukhov district, Moscow region, 02.06.2012
user posted image

2. Moscow, Bitsevsky forest Park, aspen, 06.06.2012. I suspect that some of the red ribbons
user posted image
user posted image
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3. Novoki-Begichevo village, Serpukhov district, Moscow region, 17.06.2012
user posted image

4. Novoki-Begichevo village, Serpukhov district, Moscow region, 29.04.2012
user posted image

5. Novoki-Begichevo village, Serpukhov district, Moscow region, 17-23. 06. 2012
user posted image
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6. Novoki-Begichevo village, Serpukhov district, Moscow region, 02.06.2012
user posted image

7. Novoki-Begichevo village, Serpukhov district, Moscow region, 27.08.2011
user posted image

8. Neighborhood of the village. Gorki-10, Moscow region, 14.04.2012
user posted image

9. Novoki-Begichevo village, Serpukhov district, Moscow region, 01.05.2012
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10. Novoki-Begichevo village, Serpukhov district, Moscow region, 03.05.2012
user posted image

12.03.2013 21:40, vasiliy-feoktistov

 

2. Moscow, Bitsevsky forest Park, aspen, 06.06.2012. I suspect that some of the red ribbons

You suspect correctly smile.gif
Catocala nupta vestimo (she loves aspen here).
Likes: 1

14.03.2013 17:39, Sungaya

Well, different mounds
...

1-possibly Cosmia trapezina

3- Orthosia incerta
4- Arctia caja
5- Phragmatobia fuliginosa
6- Brenthis ino или daphne
Likes: 1

20.03.2013 13:21, maik

please tell me whose caterpillars they are and what to feed them?

Nigricornis try feeding moss from trees

20.03.2013 18:38, maik

Found today on a tree trunk in the Tatar forest of Stavropol 1.5 cm wall.gif
picture: DSCF8051.JPG
picture: DSCF8060.JPG

20.03.2013 19:29, okoem

Well, different mounds

I think it's best to show the baggies to Y. Lovtsova.
http://entomology.ru/main_menu/persons/pages/lovtsova.htm

Found today on a tree trunk in the Tatar forest of Stavropol 1.5 cm wall.gif

Similar to Eilema lurideola
Likes: 2

22.03.2013 18:36, maik

Who can tell you how to distinguish the caterpillar Syntomis caspia Staudinger, 1877 from Syntomis transcaspica (Obraztosov, 1941) or from Amata nigricornis (Alpheraky, 1883) or if anyone has a photo of these caterpillars throw in the PM
picture: DSCF8075.JPG
picture: DSCF8074.JPG

22.03.2013 19:48, Valentinus

Who can tell you how to distinguish the caterpillar Syntomis caspia Staudinger, 1877 from Syntomis transcaspica (Obraztosov, 1941) or from Amata nigricornis (Alpheraky, 1883)

I think that you have only nigricornis on the Stavropol upland. S. caspia lives to the east on the Caspian lowland in tamarix thickets. I haven't seen any caterpillars, but they probably look very similar.
Likes: 1

23.03.2013 8:06, dim-va

To maik,
take a better picture of this beauty of yours, including the head and abdominal legs, and grow it up - it will eventually be clear what kind of appearance will be the beginning of such a photo library on syntomis.
Likes: 1

23.03.2013 8:19, maik

To maik,
take a better picture of this beauty of yours, including the head and abdominal legs, and grow it up - it will eventually be clear what kind of appearance will be the beginning of such a photo library on syntomis.

11 pieces sitting in jars trying to grow and there as it turns
out If I'm not mistaken this is a pupa Pararge aegeria (Linnaeus, 1758) Kraeglazka Egeria
picture: DSCF8068.JPG
picture: Pararge_aegeria__Linnaeus__1758___3_.JPG

This post was edited by maik - 23.03.2013 08: 29

23.03.2013 12:05, Valentinus

11 pieces sitting in jars trying to grow and there as it turns
out If I'm not mistaken this is a pupa Pararge aegeria (Linnaeus, 1758) Kraeglazka Egeria

No mistake smile.gif
Likes: 1

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