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Identification of larvae and pupae

Community and ForumInsects identificationIdentification of larvae and pupae

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13.02.2014 18:00, TEMPUS

Please help me determine what kind of caterpillar it is.
Found in the office on the table a little more than a week ago (maybe crawled out of the flowers, maybe from somewhere else)
Eats apples and a dry rose))
Thank you in advance for your feedback!

Helicoverpa armigera

13.02.2014 21:53, vafdog

I hope at least to the family.
Kiev region 25.07.2013-caterpillar (I didn't have time to take a picture) 26.07. - pupated.
cocoon wove from their own hairs
picture: DSC_0116.JPG
picture: DSC_0118.JPG
picture: DSC_0122.JPG
picture: DSC_0123.JPG
picture: DSC_0124.JPG
picture: DSC_0129.JPG

14.02.2014 10:41, Andrey Ponomarev

I hope at least to the family.
Kiev region 25.07.2013-caterpillar (I didn't have time to take a picture) 26.07. - pupated.
cocoon wove from their own hairs
picture: DSC_0116.JPG
picture: DSC_0118.JPG
picture: DSC_0122.JPG
picture: DSC_0123.JPG
picture: DSC_0124.JPG
picture: DSC_0129.JPG

If the caterpillar looked something like this
http://www.lepiforum.de/lepiwiki.pl?Diaphora_Mendica
Then it's Diaphora mendica

This post was edited by Gennadich - 02/14/2014 10: 43

14.02.2014 11:16, vafdog

If the caterpillar looked something like this
http://www.lepiforum.de/lepiwiki.pl?Diaphora_Mendica
Then it's Diaphora mendica

yes, it is quite pohzha, if you do not take into account the color of the hair. Thank you. Still, I will look forward to imago with hope.

14.02.2014 13:35, TatianaH

If your office is located in Eurasia, then probably Helicoverpa armigera.

Thanks!

14.02.2014 13:36, TatianaH

Helicoverpa armigera

Thanks!

14.02.2014 13:37, Woodmen

Surroundings of Kirovo-Chepetsk, Kirov region. August 5.
What kind of sawfly is lozhnogusenitsa?

user posted image user posted image

14.02.2014 14:05, TEMPUS

Surroundings of Kirovo-Chepetsk, Kirov region. August 5.
What kind of sawfly is lozhnogusenitsa?

Here is the site: http://insectamo.ru/sawfly

Read the last sentence in the text: "Unfortunately, the identification of most species is no more than conjectural, as the identification of sawfly larvae from photographs is difficult, and in many cases impossible at all."

Personally, I believe that "identification of sawfly larvae from photographs" is not just difficult, but generally impossible. For this is in fact not much different from fortune-telling on coffee grounds.
Likes: 1

14.02.2014 21:56, Jaguar paw

Georgia, Telavi. May. On a lime tree (?)
I apologize for the quality of the image.

user posted image

14.02.2014 22:12, Sungaya

  ...

Personally, I believe that "identification of sawfly larvae from photographs" is not just difficult, but generally impossible. For this is in fact not much different from fortune-telling on coffee grounds.

That's right: those sawfly larvae on the site that have signatures were identified by Western specialists with varying degrees of probability.
Only a small part can be identified from the photo; most-alas, no.
Likes: 2

14.02.2014 23:21, KM2200

Georgia, Telavi. May. On a lime tree (?)

This is by no means a fake. Similar to hornbeam.
Likes: 1

15.02.2014 9:24, кай-я

I hope at least to the family.
Kiev region 25.07.2013-caterpillar (I didn't have time to take a picture) 26.07. - pupated.
cocoon wove from their own hairs


The variant with Diaphora mendica cannot be excluded, but according to the cocoon shape and hair color, it can also be Phragmatobia luctifera, Spilosoma lubricipeda. Look at their tracks here, maybe you'll recognize them
http://www.lepiforum.de/lepiwiki.pl?Epatolmis_Luctifera
http://www.lepiforum.de/lepiwiki.pl?Spilosoma_Lubricipeda
If an imago is released, please write the view. Very interesting.

This post was edited by kai-ya - 02/15/2014 09: 26

15.02.2014 13:21, guest: AlisaInAsia

thailand, 15.02.2014
I understand that the photo on the mobile phone is terrible, but maybe someone will find out.
It looks like a redtail: http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Cal....jpg?uselang=ru
But! there is no red tail, there is a clot of hairs of the same pale color. Fluffier than the wiki photo. The black spots when arching are exactly the same. The head is large, wider than the body

What to feed? I found it on the road

user posted image

15.02.2014 13:23, vafdog

The variant with Diaphora mendica cannot be excluded, but according to the cocoon shape and hair color, it can also be Phragmatobia luctifera, Spilosoma lubricipeda. Look at their tracks here, maybe you'll recognize them
http://www.lepiforum.de/lepiwiki.pl?Epatolmis_Luctifera
http://www.lepiforum.de/lepiwiki.pl?Spilosoma_Lubricipeda
If an imago is released, please write the view. Very interesting.

Thank you. of these three, it seems to me the most similar to Spilosoma lubricipeda. about imago yes, I will inform you.
Likes: 1

15.02.2014 14:11, TEMPUS

thailand, 15.02.2014
I understand that the photo on the mobile phone is terrible, but maybe someone will find out.
It looks like a redtail: http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Cal....jpg?uselang=ru
But! there is no red tail, there is a clot of hairs of the same pale color. Fluffier than the wiki photo. The black spots when arching are exactly the same. The head is large, wider than the body

What to feed? I found it on the road

It can be anything but a redtail (Calliteara pudibunda). Calliteara pudibunda is hardly found in Thailand. It is extremely difficult to determine the type of this caterpillar, and even from such a photo. After all, this is Thailand, not the European part of Russia.

16.02.2014 9:32, Andrey Ponomarev

M. O., Orekhovo-Zuyevsky district, Nerskaya station, on polevoy wormwood 7.08.2013
picture: IMG_3003.jpg
picture: IMG_3001.jpg

16.02.2014 11:46, Woodmen

Surroundings of Kirovo-Chepetsk, Kirov region. August 5.
On the line.

user posted image user posted image

16.02.2014 20:31, Oleg Nikolsky

This winter, the weather is really bad all the time. Now another long thaw, +1 degree, sometimes higher. Every thaw comes across live moving insects and spiders in the snow. Yesterday, a caterpillar crawled through the snow. What is this species? Filming in the vicinity of Bryansk.

Pictures:
picture: IMG_3616.JPG
IMG_3616.JPG — (72.54к)

picture: IMG_3621.JPG
IMG_3621.JPG — (129.54к)

17.02.2014 0:30, Oleg Nikolsky

To the previous post-the length of the caterpillar is approximately 2.5 cm.

17.02.2014 6:10, TEMPUS

This winter, the weather is really bad all the time. Now another long thaw, +1 degree, sometimes higher. Every thaw comes across live moving insects and spiders in the snow. Yesterday, a caterpillar crawled through the snow. What is this species? Filming in the vicinity of Bryansk.



To the previous post-the length of the caterpillar is approximately 2.5 cm.

Xestia c-nigrum
Likes: 1

18.02.2014 19:59, Baralgin

Help me determine it. There is a version that it is Apoda limacodes, but it is too flat smile.gif
Filmed in the Ruzsky district of the Moscow region in the summer.user posted image

Pictures:
picture: 2013_06_23_17.04.43.jpg
2013_06_23_17.04.43.jpg — (297.05к)

19.02.2014 13:36, Коллекционер

Help me determine it. There is a version that it is Apoda limacodes, but it is too flat smile.gif
Filmed in the Ruzsky district of the Moscow region in the summer.user posted image

it's not Apoda limacodes exactly.
I generally think that this is a fly, is there any other angles?

This post was edited by Collector - 19.02.2014 13: 37

19.02.2014 14:45, Baralgin

any other angles?

Yes, but the quality of the photo is depressing. It was taken on the phone. eek.gif Posting it.

Pictures:
picture: 2013_06_23_17.06.02.jpg
2013_06_23_17.06.02.jpg — (276.82к)

picture: 2013_06_23_17.06.22.jpg
2013_06_23_17.06.22.jpg — (293.93к)

Likes: 1

19.02.2014 19:59, Andrey Ponomarev

Yes, but the quality of the photo is depressing. It was taken on the phone. eek.gif Posting it.

It looks like the larva of a babbling fly
post 472
http://molbiol.ru/forums/index.php?showtopic=104216&st=450

The post was edited by Gennadich - 19.02.2014 20: 02
Likes: 1

19.02.2014 20:18, Baralgin

It looks like the larva of a babbling fly

Looks like. And here it is indirectly confirmed http://www.diptera.info/forum/viewthread.p...=5453&pid=24426
Thank you.

19.02.2014 21:54, blackhole

Xestia c-nigrum

Noctua pronuba.
Likes: 1

20.02.2014 20:08, RoPro

Please tell me which butterfly caterpillar is in the picture.
It was found in the Moscow region on August 12.

Pictures:
picture: DSCN4087_1.jpg
DSCN4087_1.jpg — (164.91к)

21.02.2014 13:34, John-ST

Please tell me which butterfly caterpillar is in the picture.
It was found in the Moscow region on August 12.

Acronicta rumicus

21.02.2014 19:49, RoPro

Acronicta rumicus

Thank you for your help !

21.02.2014 20:04, RoPro

Tell me, please, is this the caterpillar of a butterfly ?
It was found in the Moscow region on July 9.

This post was edited by RoPro-02/21/2014 20: 06

Pictures:
picture: IMG_3360_1.jpg
IMG_3360_1.jpg — (345.02к)

21.02.2014 20:49, Igar

Tell me, please, is this the caterpillar of a butterfly ?
It was found in the Moscow region on July 9.


It seems to be Diaphora mendica

22.02.2014 15:17, RoPro

It seems to be Diaphora mendica

Thank you.

22.02.2014 15:19, RoPro

Please tell me what kind of caterpillar it is. It was found in the Moscow region on August 30. A dustpan, perhaps ?

Pictures:
picture: IMG_1606_2.jpg
IMG_1606_2.jpg — (193.19к)

24.02.2014 14:30, Коллекционер

whose larvae are these? Voronezh, under the bark of a pine tree

This post was edited by the Collector - 24.02.2014 14: 30

Pictures:
picture: IMG_0861.JPG
IMG_0861.JPG — (302.05к)

24.02.2014 14:45, Andrey Ponomarev

whose larvae are these? Voronezh, under the bark of a pine tree

The larvae in the upper left corner are similar to Boros schneideri

24.02.2014 19:44, RoPro

whose larvae are these? Voronezh, under the bark of a pine tree

From the larvae, as at the bottom left, I had a ragii barbel hatched.

24.02.2014 22:00, Коллекционер

I'm only interested in the circled ones

The larvae in the upper left corner are similar to Boros schneideri

No, one of them is this bug
picture: IMG_0887.JPG

From the larvae, as at the bottom left, I had a ragii barbel hatched.


yes, this is Rhagium inquisitor
Likes: 1

24.02.2014 22:20, vafdog

I'm only interested in the circled ones
No, one of them is this bug

this is Pytho depressus (Linnaeus, 1767)
Likes: 1

25.02.2014 22:18, IchMan

whose larvae are these? Voronezh, under the bark of a pine tree

1-possibly Acanthocinus aedilis
3-predatory larvae of Xylophagus sp. (Diptera)
Likes: 1

26.02.2014 16:21, Andrey Ponomarev

The dead man frown.gif
Moscow region, pos.Voinova gora 28.07.2013, on the oak tree
picture: IMG_0004.jpg
picture: IMG_0005.jpg
13.08.2013
picture: IMG_8713.jpg
22.08.2013
picture: IMG_8714.jpg
picture: IMG_8715.jpg
picture: IMG_8717.jpg

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