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Identification of larvae and pupae

Community and ForumInsects identificationIdentification of larvae and pupae

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17.07.2013 15:45, alyena

Tell me, please, whose nest is this? Tightly glued to the board, inside the board is eaten out and the surface is glued from sawdust.

Pictures:
picture: ________________.JPG
________________.JPG — (234.63к)

17.07.2013 17:42, okoem

Tell me, please, whose nest is this? Tightly glued to the board, inside the board is eaten out and the surface is glued from sawdust.

IMHO, a cocoon of Harpyia milhauseri or someone close.

17.07.2013 19:22, Woodmen

They are similar, but they are not from the Plusiinae.
I agree that it's Heliothinae, but I don't think it's delphinii.
For Pyrrhia exprimens. IMHO, this is it.

By breeding-the Heliothinae scoop is not too easy to remove. It is necessary to keep them one at a time, otherwise they can eat each other. It is advisable to cover the cage with a metal mesh, because the fabric can be chewed through and leave.

Thank you so much! This time - to the point! One head is good, but three is better! smile.gif
So do the Finns on Aconitum

I dug up a photo from the archives from 2008: 06: 16. Is this by any chance Pyrrhia exprimens?

user posted image

PS In the photo, apparently, Pyrrhia umbra?

This post was edited by Woodmen - 17.07.2013 19: 32

18.07.2013 19:28, Wave Storm

Today, 18.07.2013, Kherson region, outskirts of the city of N. Kakhovka, sandy steppe.

picture: 3_IMG_2676.jpg
picture: 2_IMG_2674.jpg
picture: 1_IMG_2671.jpg

and also on this plant (some kind of Mordovian)
picture: 5_IMG_2703.jpg
picture: 4_IMG_2699.jpg

?

18.07.2013 19:41, okoem

Today, 18.07.2013, Kherson region, outskirts of the city of N. Kakhovka, sandy steppe.

All - H. armigera.
Likes: 1

18.07.2013 21:47, Transilvania

19.07.2013 13:34, Sasha.

user posted imageuser posted imageuser posted image

21.07.2013 15:38, bials

But smile.gifI only saw them as adults, and somehow I didn't expect to find a whole gang of little ones. Wow - I haven't seen them for a long time, they're rare steel here. We should look for a cocoon in this place.

Or even better, grow and pupate it yourself. For example, I did so. And I have captured all the stages of the gosling, cocoon, pupa and released imago.

21.07.2013 22:35, vahemart

Help me identify the tracks

Pictures:
picture: Caterpilar__Goravan__2013.06.18.jpg
Caterpilar__Goravan__2013.06.18.jpg — (199.87к)

picture: Caterpilar__Vedi__2013.06.28.jpg
Caterpilar__Vedi__2013.06.28.jpg — (203.4к)

22.07.2013 9:27, Woodmen

Surroundings of Kirovo-Chepetsk, Kirov region. July 16.
On Centaurea scabiosa.
Geese appeared.
Whose ones? What to feed?

user posted image

22.07.2013 9:36, Valentinus

Help me identify the tracks

1. It looks like it's a barred Hawk moth-Hyles livornica

I have similar photos from Azerbaijan.
picture: DSC01327_a.jpg

22.07.2013 9:40, vahemart

1. It looks like a barred Hawk moth - Hyles livornica
<noindex><a href='http://tpittaway.tripod.com/sphinx/h_liv.htm' target= '_blank' ></a>< / noindex>
I have similar images from Azerbaijan.
picture: DSC01327_a.jpg

Yes, it looks like it. They're right where I shot them.
Thanks!

This post was edited by vahemart - 07/22/2013 09: 44

22.07.2013 11:40, svm2

Help me identify the tracks

2-similar to Orgyia dubia

22.07.2013 20:48, bials

Help with pyadenichka mol.gif
On the birch, M. O. Ramenskiy district. july 2014
1. picture: Cabera_pusaria_14.jpg
2. picture: Cabera_pusaria_17.jpg

23.07.2013 10:55, svm2

Similar to Cabera pusaria
Likes: 1

23.07.2013 11:17, bials

Similar to Cabera pusaria

Thanks! I was leaning towards the same version, but I decided to ask the opinion of forumchan.

23.07.2013 20:45, цверг

Good afternoon!
Tell me, please-what kind of butterfly is this caterpillar?
July 23, 2013, Krasnoyarsk
user posted image

user posted image

24.07.2013 0:42, okoem

  user posted imageuser posted imageuser posted image

Hawk moth Acherontia atropos

On Centaurea scabiosa.
...
Whose? What to feed?

"They look like moth eggs."
- Well, Centaurea scabiosa and feed. Why not? smile.gif

24.07.2013 8:59, Woodmen

  
"They look like moth eggs."
- Well, Centaurea scabiosa and feed. Why not? smile.gif


And geese don't look like moths.
I tried to feed them, but for some reason they didn't want to. frown.gif

user posted image

user posted image user posted image

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This post was edited by Woodmen - 24.07.2013 08: 59

24.07.2013 11:26, Andrey Ponomarev

I'm confused.Is it Acronicta euphorbiae or Acronicta Cinerea?
M. O., Orekhovo-Zuyevsky district, platforma Nerskaya, na rakitnik,7.07.2013
picture: IMG_5789.jpg
picture: IMG_5808.jpg

24.07.2013 11:28, Andrey Ponomarev

And geese don't look like moths.
I tried to feed them, but for some reason they didn't want to. frown.gif

user posted image

user posted image user posted image

user posted image user posted image

They look like young hawthorn caterpillars.

24.07.2013 13:34, Woodmen

They look like young hawthorn caterpillars.

Hawthorn eggs are completely different, and geese appear more progonisty. Somewhere there are photos of this season of those and others, but it takes a long time to search.

P.S. Here I found a photo of egg laying and hawthorn caterpillars:

user posted image user posted image

This post was edited by Woodmen - 24.07.2013 14: 02

24.07.2013 13:41, vahemart

Thanks!!!
2-similar to Orgyia dubia

24.07.2013 14:17, Andrey Ponomarev

Hawthorn eggs are completely different, and geese appear more progonisty. Somewhere there are photos of this season of those and others, but it takes a long time to search.

P.S. Here I found a photo of egg laying and hawthorn caterpillars:

user posted image user posted image

Then feed them and wait until they grow up.

24.07.2013 15:01, Woodmen

Then feed them and wait until they grow up.

So there is no one else to feed frown.gif

24.07.2013 15:37, AGG

Good afternoon!
Tell me, please-what kind of butterfly is this caterpillar?
July 23, 2013, Krasnoyarsk


Aglia tau (LINNAEUS, 1758)
Likes: 1

24.07.2013 17:36, цверг

Thank you, AGG!

Today here is such a bug met
user posted image

user posted image

A settled slope.
Size approx. 1cm. Runs quite fast.
23.07.13 Krasnoyarsk.
Who will it be?

24.07.2013 18:08, Sergey Rybalkin

I brought 4 caterpillars from Chukotka, collected them on a dwarf willow tree, our willow is also eaten normally. Body length 32-35 mm
Is it dipper or volnyanka?

Pictures:
picture: DSC06338.JPG
DSC06338.JPG — (200.36к)

picture: DSC06343.JPG
DSC06343.JPG — (188.63к)

24.07.2013 18:11, AGG

Thank you, AGG!

Today here is such a bug met
user posted image

user posted image

A settled slope.
Size approx. 1cm. Runs quite fast.
23.07.13 Krasnoyarsk.
Who will it be?

skin-eating beetle larva (Dermestidae)
Likes: 1

25.07.2013 19:46, flora32

Today my wife found this, in the moss, length about 8 cm, diameter 1 cm. Bryansk region.
picture: IMG_3582.jpg

This post was edited by flora32-25.07.2013 19: 46

25.07.2013 19:55, okoem

Today my wife found this, in the moss, length about 8 cm, diameter 1 cm. Bryansk region.

http://www.lepiforum.de/lepiwiki.pl?Deilephila_Elpenor

26.07.2013 12:47, Wave Storm

Looking through my photos on 01.07.2013 in Shilova Balka, Kherson region (Otradokamenka-Tomarino village), I found a caterpillar that I did not notice on the spot, but only at home, in the photo.

picture: IMG_2200.JPG

[attachmentid()=178404]

Isn't that a steppe brushtail?

26.07.2013 13:03, кай-я

I brought 4 caterpillars from Chukotka, collected them on a dwarf willow tree, our willow is also eaten normally. Body length 32-35 mm
Is it dipper or volnyanka?


They are similar to caterpillars of the genus Amata (Syntominae). Dense bundles of soft hairs are viewed. If this is the case, then judging by their size, they should soon pupate.

26.07.2013 14:18, okoem

Looking through my photos on 01.07.2013 in Shilova Balka, Kherson region (Otradokamenka-Tomarino village), I found a caterpillar that I did not notice on the spot, but only at home, in the photo.

This is the scooper A. rumicis.
Likes: 1

26.07.2013 16:27, цверг

26.07.13 Krasnoyarsk
Caterpillar found on strawberries.
?
user posted image

user posted image

I think I found a similar one - Orgyia antiqua, but it has one white bunch and one black one on each side, and mine has one white and two black ones.

This post was edited by zverg - 26.07.2013 16: 39

27.07.2013 15:44, kolya0311

Please tell me who it might be.
Found in the ground, Karpaty, late June

Pictures:
picture: DSC05006.JPG
DSC05006.JPG — (172.18к)

picture: DSC05007.JPG
DSC05007.JPG — (132.3к)

picture: DSC05008.JPG
DSC05008.JPG — (147.18к)

27.07.2013 19:03, Коллекционер

Please tell me who it might be.
Found in the ground, Karpaty, late June

tipulidae?

28.07.2013 12:17, Sergey Titov

Help identify the crested caterpillar. 25.07.2013
Zhelezinka village, Pavlodar region, Kazakhstan. On a black poplar tree.

This post was edited by Sergey Titov - 28.07.2013 12: 18

Pictures:
picture: IMG_6381.jpg
IMG_6381.jpg — (174.24к)

28.07.2013 18:44, guest: cherepahovod

Help identify the hawk moth caterpillar and what to feed it.
Surgut, Khanty-Mansi Autonomous Okrug-Yugra, Russia. 4 centimeters long, crawling along the hose. Maybe it's time for her to pupate? Filled up the earth while crawling, a little chu burrows then crawls out.
user posted image

29.07.2013 1:16, Коллекционер

Help identify the crested caterpillar. 25.07.2013
Zhelezinka village, Pavlodar region, Kazakhstan. On a black poplar tree.

Notodonta ziczac?
Likes: 1

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