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Identification of larvae and pupae

Community and ForumInsects identificationIdentification of larvae and pupae

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28.02.2014 0:28, Пензуит

Can you tell me which butterflies have caterpillars? (Penza neighborhood, September 2013)

On the left, it seems to be a village bear (Epicallia villica), and on the right?

This post was edited by Penzuit - 28.02.2014 00: 38

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28.02.2014 0:37, Пензуит

Can you tell me whose small caterpillar this is? (Penza neighborhood, June 2013)

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28.02.2014 4:59, TEMPUS

Can you tell me which butterflies have caterpillars? (Penza neighborhood, September 2013)

On the left, it seems to be a village bear (Epicallia villica), and on the right?

No. Left - Phragmatobia fuliginosa, right-Acronicta auricoma.
Likes: 1

01.03.2014 0:11, Пензуит

On the left - Phragmatobia fuliginosa, on the right - Acronicta auricoma.


Thank you very much! Can you tell me more about these guys?
The first is probably the Bear Kaya (Arctia caja), and the second?
Both were filmed on June 23 in the vicinity of Penza.

And another question - and where can you identify dragonflies, erectus, hymenoptera, etc.? Here, or in another topic?

Thank you in advance.

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01.03.2014 0:43, Nick444444

Please help me identify the types of caterpillars and pupae!!!!))))) Thank you in advance!!!)))
1) The photo was taken on May 11, in Kharkiv.
2) The photo was taken on September 15 in the forest, near the oak grove. (Kharkiv)
3) The photo was taken on September 21 in the forest, near the oak grove. (Kharkiv)
4) The photo was taken on September 21 in the forest, near the oak grove. (Kharkiv)
5) The photo was taken on September 29 in the forest, near the oak grove. (Kharkiv)
6) The photo was taken on October 1 in the forest, near the oak grove. (Kharkiv)
7) The photo was taken on October 19 in the forest, on the nettle. (Kharkiv)
8) The photo was taken on October 30 in the forest, on an oak tree. (Kharkiv)
9) The photo was taken on November 2 in the forest, near the oak grove. (Kharkiv)
10) The photo was taken on January 13, near the oak grove. (Kharkiv)

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01.03.2014 5:07, TEMPUS

Thank you very much! Can you tell me more about these guys?
The first is probably the Bear Kaya (Arctia caja), and the second?
Both were filmed on June 23 in the vicinity of Penza.

And another question - and where can you identify dragonflies, erectus, hymenoptera, etc.? Here, or in another topic?

Thank you in advance.

The first one is correct, Arctia caja.

The second is a caterpillar of some kind of scooper (Noctuidae). There are a lot of species with a similar color of caterpillars, it is very difficult to determine, almost impossible. In this case, to find out the species, you need to collect the caterpillar and display it.

It is possible to identify dragonflies, erectus, hymenoptera on this forum, for each of these groups there is a separate topic:
"Definition of dragonflies" http://molbiol.ru/forums/index.php?showtopic=170973&st=1250
"Definition of straight-winged birds (grasshoppers, crickets, etc.)" http://molbiol.ru/forums/index.php?showtopic=133669&st=2800
"Definition of hymenoptera (wasps, bees, ants)" http://molbiol.ru/forums/index.php?showtopic=133599&st=5100
There are also topics for identifying bedbugs, butterflies (imagos, not caterpillars!), spiders and ticks, beetles, diptera (flies, mosquitoes), and the so-called "Who is this? Definition " for identifying various other insects that do not belong to the above groups.

In general, read this first: http://molbiol.ru/forums/index.php?showtopic=534552
Likes: 1

01.03.2014 5:37, TEMPUS

Please help me identify the types of caterpillars and pupae!!!!))))) Thank you in advance!!!)))
1) The photo was taken on May 11, in Kharkiv.
2) The photo was taken on September 15 in the forest, near the oak grove. (Kharkiv)
3) The photo was taken on September 21 in the forest, near the oak grove. (Kharkiv)
4) The photo was taken on September 21 in the forest, near the oak grove. (Kharkiv)
5) The photo was taken on September 29 in the forest, near the oak grove. (Kharkiv)
6) The photo was taken on October 1 in the forest, near the oak grove. (Kharkiv)
7) The photo was taken on October 19 in the forest, on the nettle. (Kharkiv)
8) The photo was taken on October 30 in the forest, on an oak tree. (Kharkiv)
9) The photo was taken on November 2 in the forest, near the oak grove. (Kharkiv)
10) The photo was taken on January 13, near the oak grove. (Kharkiv)

1-Nymphalis polychloros
2-Noctuidae (Noctuidae) from the subfamily Heliothinae
3-Timandra
comae 4-sawfly, up to the species are not determined
5-caterpillar of the moth family of bagworms (Psychidae) in the cover, up to the species representatives of this family are not determined by the caterpillars
6 - larva of a beetle, maybe from the family of ground beetles (Carabidae)
7-Phragmatobia fuliginosa
8 - caterpillar of the scooper (Noctuidae)
9-it is impossible to determine not only the species, but also the group to which it belongs from this cocoon
10-caterpillar of the moth of the family of bagworms (Psychidae) in the cover
Likes: 1

01.03.2014 15:41, Nick444444

Please tell me how to take care of the Phragmatobia fuliginosa caterpillar. I fed her nettles and now she is in a state of diapause (in a cocoon) and is stored in the refrigerator.
How long do you need to wait until it comes out of this state? Should it pupate in the soil or not? Do I need to feed her after diapause?)))
Thank you in advance!!!))))

01.03.2014 16:34, TEMPUS

Please tell me how to take care of the Phragmatobia fuliginosa caterpillar. I fed her nettles and now she is in a state of diapause (in a cocoon) and is stored in the refrigerator.
How long do you need to wait until it comes out of this state? Should it pupate in the soil or not? Do I need to feed her after diapause?)))
Thank you in advance!!!))))

Well, how long do you keep it in a cocoon in the refrigerator? Probably dead by now. Phragmatobia fuliginosa caterpillars need to be taken care of quite differently. In nature, this species overwinters at the fifth instar caterpillar stage. In autumn, the adult caterpillar falls into diapause (without a cocoon!!!), in spring it wakes up and, without taking food, after a while builds a light cocoon and pupates in it (and not in the soil!!!). The butterfly appears two weeks after pupation. Thus, if, as you write, it is in a cocoon, then it has already prepared for pupation. And you put it in the refrigerator. In principle, if it was put away in the general compartment of the refrigerator, there is still a small chance that it is still alive. In this case, it must be removed immediately. But if it's in the freezer, then that's it, there's no chance, it's definitely dead.

This post was edited by TEMPUS - 01.03.2014 16: 37

01.03.2014 18:25, Nick444444

Well, how long do you keep it in a cocoon in the refrigerator? Probably dead by now. Phragmatobia fuliginosa caterpillars need to be taken care of quite differently. In nature, this species overwinters at the fifth instar caterpillar stage. In autumn, the adult caterpillar falls into diapause (without a cocoon!!!), in spring it wakes up and, without taking food, after a while builds a light cocoon and pupates in it (and not in the soil!!!). The butterfly appears two weeks after pupation. Thus, if, as you write, it is in a cocoon, then it has already prepared for pupation. And you put it in the refrigerator. In principle, if it was put away in the general compartment of the refrigerator, there is still a small chance that it is still alive. In this case, it must be removed immediately. But if it's in the freezer, then that's it, there's no chance, it's definitely dead.

Here are the photos:

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01.03.2014 18:51, TEMPUS

Here are the photos:

I was going to pupate. I built a cocoon. Whether it's alive or not is unclear. You need to get it out of the refrigerator and watch.

This post was edited by TEMPUS - 01.03.2014 18: 52
Likes: 1

01.03.2014 18:59, Nick444444

I was going to pupate. I built a cocoon. Whether it's alive or not is unclear. You need to get it out of the refrigerator and watch.

I don't even know if she's alive or not, she's in the same position as she was a couple of months ago. I kept it in the common compartment of the refrigerator. She doesn't move. frown.gif

This post was edited by Nick444444 - 01.03.2014 19: 01

02.03.2014 20:25, John-ST

Please help me identify the types of caterpillars and pupae!!!!))))) Thank you in advance!!!)))

6) The photo was taken on October 1 in the forest, near the oak grove. (Kharkiv)

8) The photo was taken on October 30 in the forest, on an oak tree. (Kharkiv)




1 - Nymphalis polychloros

6-larva of a beetle, possibly from the family of ground beetles (Carabidae)

8-Caterpillar Scoops (Noctuidae)



6-larva of softwort (Cantharidae)
8-Pseudoips prasinana (Linnaeus, 1758) fam. Nolidae
Likes: 1

03.03.2014 21:24, vafdog

is it a camel larva?
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03.03.2014 23:20, Triplaxxx

Yes, it is.
Likes: 1

04.03.2014 12:10, blackhole


3 - Timandra comae

Eupithecia virgaureata
Likes: 1

04.03.2014 13:34, maik

Good afternoon. Can you tell me this Noctua pronuba ? Today under a rock in the garden. Stavropol.
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04.03.2014 16:49, TEMPUS

Good afternoon. Can you tell me this Noctua pronuba ?

She is.

15.03.2014 16:03, RoPro

Please tell me whose larva it is. Found in the Moscow region on March 10 under the bark of a tree (if I remember correctly, then birch).

This post was edited by RoPro-03/15/2014 16: 05

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16.03.2014 1:13, John-ST

Please tell me whose larva it is. Found in the Moscow region on March 10 under the bark of a tree (if I remember correctly, then birch).

The fact that the bug is for sure. I think some nutcracker

16.03.2014 10:08, RoPro

The fact that the bug is for sure. Some nutcracker, I think

It's clear. Thank you.

22.03.2014 19:15, Woodmen

Surroundings of Kirovo-Chepetsk, Kirov region. July.

user posted image user posted image

23.03.2014 20:22, RoPro

Please tell me whose larvae they are. They were found on 23.03.2014 in the Moscow region.

This post was edited by RoPro - 23.03.2014 20: 22

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23.03.2014 22:14, okoem

Surroundings of Kirovo-Chepetsk, Kirov region. July.

Zygaena sp.?
Likes: 1

23.03.2014 22:57, John-ST

Please tell me whose larvae they are. They were found on 23.03.2014 in the Moscow region.

1. Cantharidae
2. Elateridae

23.03.2014 23:06, Woodmen

Zygaena sp.?

Thanks!
It looks like it.
http://www.pyrgus.de/Zygaena_anthyllidis_en.html

24.03.2014 9:28, Коллекционер

is this all Prionus coriarius or can there be variants? in one stump. Voronezh outskirts

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24.03.2014 19:22, RoPro

1. Cantharidae
2. Elateridae

Thank you very much!

25.03.2014 16:50, Коллекционер

what's the nutcracker on the left? 3,5 cm, Voronezh, in the horses of a dead birch

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06.04.2014 17:34, RoPro

Whose larva is this ? It was in some kind of slimy capsule. I tried to pull out this "kit" with a stick on a leaf, but the "worm" fell into the water. However, then, folding in half first in one direction, then in the other, he rose to the surface of the water, where I caught him. Here is a photo of a worm without a capsule, a photo of a capsule without a worm. And here is a video of a worm in a capsule. The length of the "green" is about a centimeter. It was found today, 06.04.2014, in a forest puddle in the Moscow region.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=c6g3w2l6Swg...wVUpGBCaTqhoHGg

This post was edited by RoPro-07.04.2014 19: 39

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10.04.2014 19:27, Gurza

Hello, dear colleagues. Help us identify these caterpillars. Found on a birch tree in the Irkutsk region.

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10.04.2014 19:38, Gurza

Hello, dear colleagues. Help identify the caterpillars. Found on a birch tree in the Irkutsk region. Four tracks identified, please confirm if you are correct.

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10.04.2014 23:47, John-ST

1. Brachionycha nubeculosa
2. I think Amphipyra pyramidea
3. Achlya flavicornis

Dates of capture would not be bad to specify

There is a corresponding theme for caterpillars. no need to create new ones
http://molbiol.ru/forums/index.php?showtopic=180650&st=4900

11.04.2014 0:07, vafdog

There is a corresponding theme for caterpillars. no need to create new ones
http://molbiol.ru/forums/index.php?showtopic=180650&st=4900

confused.gif http://molbiol.ru/forums/index.php?showtop...34#entry1471834

12.04.2014 19:58, RoPro

Tell me, is this the larva of a floating beetle? It was found in a forest puddle on 12.04.2014 in the Moscow region.

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12.04.2014 21:30, TEMPUS

Tell me, is this the larva of a floating beetle? It was found in a forest puddle on 12.04.2014 in the Moscow region.

Да.

13.04.2014 19:36, RoPro

Tell me. whose face is this ? It reminds me of a firefly. Do they really exist in the Moscow region ? Taken on 13.04.2014. The creation size is about 5 mm.

This post was edited by RoPro-13.04.2014 19: 36

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13.04.2014 19:55, AGG

Endomychus coccineus http://molbiol.ru/forums/index.php?showtop...dpost&p=1479109

This post was edited by AGG-13.04.2014 20: 01
Likes: 1

14.04.2014 0:37, John-ST

Tell me. whose face is this ? It reminds me of a firefly. Do they really exist in the Moscow region ? Taken on 13.04.2014. The creation size is about 5 mm.

By the way, we have fireflies, of course, not like, for example, in the Caucasus, when at night all the bushes are in the "constellations", but I got a couple of times

14.04.2014 19:57, RoPro

Endomychus coccineus http://molbiol.ru/forums/index.php?showtop...dpost&p=1479109

Thank you for your help.

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