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Identification of larvae and pupae

Community and ForumInsects identificationIdentification of larvae and pupae

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17.09.2013 14:58, KM2200

Kursk, Russia

Here, I also found it (I found it on the asphalt,so I don't know what kind of leaves to give)

What kind of view? What to feed?
It looks like a linden hawk moth.
But they seem to be long overdue to pupate and sit in the ground confused.gif

17.09.2013 15:25, Madara

I upload a better photo. Three at once. Found under rocks in the Maikop wound.
Are these all May days?

Pictures:
picture: IMAG1812.jpg
IMAG1812.jpg — (147.65к)

17.09.2013 16:14, king13

Help us determine what kind of view it is.
Tambov region, Petrovsky district, 15.09.2013, apple tree branch

Pictures:
picture: IMG_7564.JPG
IMG_7564.JPG — (136.93к)

17.09.2013 16:53, Andrey Ponomarev

Help us determine what kind of view it is.
Tambov region, Petrovsky district, 15.09.2013, apple tree branch

Calliteara pudibunda
Likes: 1

18.09.2013 8:40, Gansucha

Ukraine, Rivne region, September 12.

If possible, before the family, I'll try to find it, the view seems to be noticeable smile.gif.
user posted image

It's harder with a sawfly:
user posted image
user posted image

This post was edited by Gansucha - 18.09.2013 08: 53

18.09.2013 9:45, Andrey Ponomarev

Ukraine, Rivne region, September 12.

It's harder with a sawfly:
user posted image
user posted image

This is not a sawfly, this is Pseudoips prasinanus
Likes: 1

18.09.2013 11:43, VikaR

Comrades! Tell me some good definitions for larvae. Useful for all sorts of pests of stocks and forest pests and all sorts of others. At us on zppas in existence only Zhantiev on sem Kozheedy. The situation with the forest is slightly better... although of course not much is Mamaev "Determinant of insects by larvae"and Ilinsky" Determinant of forest pests "

18.09.2013 11:45, VikaR

Help us determine what kind of view it is.
Tambov region, Petrovsky district, 15.09.2013, apple tree branch

Calliteara pudibunda (Linnaeus, 1758)Is a shy woolpaw?
Likes: 2

18.09.2013 13:32, Shamil Murtazin

Goose found in the ground. Southern Urals, Bashkortostan.
[attachmentid()=182061]
[attachmentid()=182062]
[attachmentid()=182063]

18.09.2013 15:04, KM2200

Kursk, Russia

Here, I also found it (I found it on the asphalt,so I don't know what kind of leaves to give)

What kind of view? What to feed?

It looks like a linden hawk moth.
But they seem to be long overdue to pupate and sit in the ground confused.gif

Something experts are silent... I will correct myself, linden of course is unlikely, it can be eye-shaped, poplar or oak, I can't say more precisely.

18.09.2013 15:28, okoem

Goose found in the ground. Southern Urals, Bashkortostan.
Probably Lacanobia oleracea.
Likes: 1

18.09.2013 15:39, Коллекционер

I upload a better photo. Three at once. Found under rocks in the Maikop wound.
Are these all May days?

well, such photos are small..
1,3-possibly Dorcus, maybe parallelipipedus
2-similar to Melolontha sp.

This post was edited by Collector - 18.09.2013 19: 55

18.09.2013 18:09, Gansucha

18.09.2013 19:54, Sungaya

Goose found in the ground. Southern Urals, Bashkortostan.



It seems to me that this is L. suasa
... although, L. oleracea is also an option.
Likes: 1

18.09.2013 19:55, Sungaya

Thank you very much! I wouldn't have thought to look among them.
which is still true: Pseudoips prasinanus or Pseudoips prasinana ?


Valid names can be found here:
http://www.faunaeur.org/full_results.php?id=447140
Likes: 1

19.09.2013 7:13, Shamil Murtazin

It seems to me that this is L. suasa
... although, L. oleracea is also an option.

Where can I read how it feeds and hibernates in general?..

19.09.2013 9:16, аруд

A grass cocoonworm??? Bryansk Forest, Sept. Thank you.

Pictures:
picture: 51.jpg
51.jpg — (148.81 k)

19.09.2013 9:25, аруд

And here's another caterpillar, pliz. in the same place. Thank you.

Pictures:
picture: 52.jpg
52.jpg — (153.76 k)

19.09.2013 16:13, bina-9

I saw a caterpillar. It is interesting to know its name.
http://fotki.yandex.ru/users/bina-9/view/708135?page=1

19.09.2013 16:37, Victor Titov

I saw a caterpillar. It is interesting to know its name.
http://fotki.yandex.ru/users/bina-9/view/708135?page=1

The picture is not very informative, but I think it's not a caterpillar, but a beetle larva. It wasn't taken on the bank of a pond? And what is its size?

19.09.2013 21:05, Achtung

Good day!
Help me determine it .
September,Moscow region, rosehip leaf.
Thank you in advance.
Another short video. http://youtu.be/3TOht5HbVtQ

Pictures:
picture: 20.jpg
20.jpg — (99.54к)

picture: 201.jpg
201.jpg — (84.67к)

19.09.2013 21:51, Achtung

It looks like a Great Dane with a double sausage!!))

19.09.2013 21:58, Sungaya

Good day!
Help me determine it .
September,Moscow region, rosehip leaf.
Thank you in advance.
Another short video. http://youtu.be/3TOht5HbVtQ

This is, like, something fly.

19.09.2013 22:00, Sungaya

A grass cocoonworm??? Bryansk Forest, Sept. Thank you.

yes

And here's another caterpillar, pliz. in the same place. Thank you.


sawfly Craesus septentrionalis
Likes: 1

19.09.2013 22:09, Sungaya

Where can I read how it feeds and hibernates in general?..


I don't know about reading it. Both species overwinter with pupae. They both eat whatever they can find.
Currently I am raising a couple of dozen L. suasa on a birch tree. (From the female, from eggs). Caterpillars of various colors: brown, pink, green and very similar to L. oleracea.
Likes: 1

20.09.2013 9:38, Bad Den

This is, like, something fly.

yes.gif Syrphidae
Likes: 1

20.09.2013 11:20, Achtung

Thank You So Much.)

20.09.2013 14:39, Женя Афанасьева

Hello! You are my hope! Tell me, please, what kind of caterpillar is this? Photo - https://fbcdn-sphotos-d-a.akamaihd.net/hpho...974295880_n.jpg

I found her in pepper (usually sweet, bought in a store), in Moscow, made her a house (earth, wood filler, put her pepper there), she buried herself in the ground to the very bottom in a day, and after another two she turned brown and got fatter - here is a photo - https://fbcdn-sphotos-b-a.akamaihd.net/hpho...425141083_n.jpg

I don't know anything about caterpillars, but I want her to have a good winter and turn into what she's supposed to be. Can you tell me what kind of caterpillar it is and how to keep it now? What if she wakes up before the time when the heating is turned on in the apartment? In general, I'm worried, waiting for advice. Thanks!

This post was edited by Zhenya Afanasyeva - 09/20/2013 14: 40

20.09.2013 14:51, okoem

Can you tell me what kind of caterpillar it is and how to keep it now?

She is no longer a caterpillar, but a pupa. smile.gif This is H. armigera (cotton scooper).
Put the chrysalis in the refrigerator until spring. When it gets warm, you can take it to nature.
Only the refrigerator should be drip type (not NoFrost!).
Likes: 1

20.09.2013 15:02, Женя Афанасьева

She is no longer a caterpillar, but a pupa. smile.gif This is H. armigera (cotton scooper).
Put the chrysalis in the refrigerator until spring. When it gets warm, you can take it to nature.
Only the refrigerator should be drip type (not NoFrost!).



How is it drip-fed? Maybe just put it at the window to keep it cool?

20.09.2013 16:15, vasiliy-feoktistov

How is it drip-fed? Maybe just put it at the window to keep it cool?

Refrigerator without self-defrosting (such as those that were previously manually defrosted).
The pupa can also be put in the cellar, on the balcony: in short, as far as the imagination is enough. It is important that the temperature does not fall below approx. -10 degrees.
Likes: 1

22.09.2013 19:00, Woodmen

Surroundings of Kirovo-Chepetsk, Kirov region. September 9.
On Matricaria recutita.

user posted image user posted image user posted image

This post was edited by Woodmen - 09/22/2013 20: 25

22.09.2013 19:43, TEMPUS

Kursk, Russia

Here, I also found it (I found it on the asphalt,so I don't know what kind of leaves to give)

What kind of view? What to feed? user posted image
user posted image



It looks like a linden hawk moth.
But they seem to be long overdue to pupate and sit in the ground confused.gif



Something experts are silent... I will correct myself, linden of course is unlikely, it can be eye-shaped, poplar or oak, I can't say more precisely.


This is Laothoe populi (Linnaeus, 1758). Forage plants - various types of poplars and willows, aspen. But judging by the fact that she was found crawling on the asphalt, she will not eat, but will look for a suitable place to pupate. Plant it in a container with moist, slightly damp soil. She had to dig into it.

This post was edited by TEMPUS - 09/22/2013 19: 47

22.09.2013 20:44, TEMPUS

Please help me define the view.

Moscow region, Istra district, August 2012, leg. Lyutikov A. I.

picture: DSC04212.JPG

This post was edited by TEMPUS - 09/22/2013 20: 45

23.09.2013 8:24, кай-я

Please help me define the view.

Moscow region, Istra district, August 2012, leg. Lyutikov A. I.



It is a moth from the subfamily Heliothinae. It looks like Heliothis incarnata. Although the drawing is not quite the same. What kind of plant did she eat (or sit on)?
Likes: 1

23.09.2013 15:56, KM2200

This is Laothoe populi (Linnaeus, 1758). Forage plants - various types of poplars and willows, aspen. But judging by the fact that she was found crawling on the asphalt, she will not eat, but will look for a suitable place to pupate. Plant it in a container with moist, slightly damp soil. She had to dig into it.
Doesn't it change its color before it's buried?

23.09.2013 16:03, TEMPUS

Doesn't it change its color before it's buried?

Before pupation, the caterpillars of the poplar hawk moth do not change color at all, and the ocular hawk moth - almost do not change. Change the color of the linden hawk moth caterpillar.

23.09.2013 16:23, KM2200

It's clear. I've only ever seen linden alive.

23.09.2013 22:27, Guest

I know it's a bit off-topic, but still: I found a caterpillar, presumably a linden hawk moth, and the caterpillar pupated. Questions: does the light affect the pupa( do I need to hide it in the dark)? Should I leave it lying there as it pupated, or hang it on a stick? If so, what is the correct way to do it? user posted image
What temperature to maintain(it is clear,of course, that this is not a super-picky butterfly, but still)?

I found the caterpillar Macrothylacia rubi. Still not pupated, actively feeds. Is this normal? The caterpillar is in a glass jar. Do I need to transfer it to a special store? the cage?

23.09.2013 22:34, Guest

Sorry, not fake, but Laothoe populi. I can't go to the forum, see all the answers, for this reason I didn't give the caterpillar any land(however, this didn't prevent it from pupating). Is it still necessary to hide it in the ground?

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