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Identification of larvae and pupae

Community and ForumInsects identificationIdentification of larvae and pupae

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14.04.2008 22:33, bials

mol.gif Whose caterpillar is this? Moscow oblast.
picture: DSCF1880.JPG

15.04.2008 0:10, okoem

Does anyone know whose tracks these are? All crawled at night on the asphalt, in Moscow, obviously overwintered. Size from 6 to 15 mm. The bigger it is, the lighter it is.

It looks like some kind of fire.

18.04.2008 21:18, bials

Tell me whose? Like a scoop from Agrotis, but what is it? I thought (puta),
but it doesn't seem to be found in Moscow and the region.
picture: __________________Agrotis_puta_.jpg
picture: __________________Agrotis_puta_2.jpg

18.04.2008 21:33, Sungaya

I assume it is Agrotis segetum
Likes: 1

19.04.2008 16:20, mems

I found a goose in the woods.
Bindweed, parsley, and nettle plants grew all around smile.gif
+
under the nettles, I found the pupa of a day butterfly and the larva of a beetle.

This post was edited by mems - 19.04.2008 16: 22

Pictures:
picture: PICT3786.jpg
PICT3786.jpg — (44.6к)

picture: PICT3803.jpg
PICT3803.jpg — (64.6к)

20.04.2008 19:37, okoem

Under the nettles, I found a day moth pupa and a beetle larva.

This pupa is not a day butterfly, it is something from the lower raznoustykh.

20.04.2008 20:03, Filin

Guys!
What kind of animals are these? Today I took a picture in a pine forest on a clearing.

user posted image
This is probably not Babochkin's" farm", I wonder whose?

And this is probably from the" company " of bears?

user posted image user posted image

All shot in the Kirovograd region. near the city of Svetlovodsk.

This post was edited by Filin - 24.04.2008 10: 22

20.04.2008 20:15, Sungaya

Guys!
What kind of animals are these? Today I took a picture in a pine forest on a clearing.

user posted image
This is probably not Babochkin's" farm", I wonder whose?




Someone from checkers-Melitaea, Mellicta sp.

23.04.2008 9:55, Filin

One of the draughtsmen - Melitaea, Mellicta sp.

Thanks!
And you can't determine the exact type before?
And whose second caterpillar?

23.04.2008 10:09, okoem

And whose second caterpillar?

The second is false chickenpox Amata sp.

23.04.2008 14:05, Guest

Vladimir thank you!
Can't get to the view with the definition?

23.04.2008 19:31, okoem

Vladimir thank you!
Can't get to the view with the definition?

According to my data, there are three species of the genus Amata (=Syntomis) in your area - Amata nigricornis, Amata kruegeri, and Amata phegea. The caterpillars of Amata nigricornis IMHO are more fluffy, so probably you have Amata kruegeri, or Amata phegea.

update
As far as I can tell, the draughtsman is Melitaea trivia.
http://www.lepiforum.de/cgi-bin/lepiwiki.pl?Melitaea_Trivia

This post was edited by okoem - 04/23/2008 20: 34

23.04.2008 20:36, bials

Help with the definition! mol.gif Young caterpillar, approximately 10 mm long, on nettles, Moscow Region.
toppicture: _________01.jpg
sidepicture: _________02.jpg

23.04.2008 21:05, Vabrus

It looks like some dipper smile.gif

23.04.2008 22:42, Grigory Grigoryev

I would call it caja.
Likes: 1

24.04.2008 10:32, Filin

okoem
Vladimir!
Thanks!
I looked at your link and found another very similar caterpillar, here:

http://www.lepiforum.de/cgi-bin/lepiwiki.pl?Melitaea_Didyma

This one seems to be even more plodding. In Melitaea trivia, the caterpillars are plump, like sausages, but this one is more elongated and the pattern is more similar. In my opinion - Didyma.

24.04.2008 11:17, okoem

  
I looked at your link and found another very similar caterpillar, here:
This one seems to be even more plodding. In Melitaea trivia, the caterpillars are plump, like sausages, but this one is more elongated and the pattern is more similar. In my opinion - Didyma.

I would say that all the same trivia is more similar. Your caterpillar has white spikes and a white background. And this one has red spikes and a black background. Mellicta britomartis also looks like yours. But IMHO, trivia is still bigger.
Long because it's stretched - thick because it's shrunk. This is not a sign. A caterpillar is not a beetle or grasshopper, it does not have a rigid skeleton.

This post was edited by okoem - 04/24/2008 11: 37

24.04.2008 19:09, guest: гость

help me determine-what kind of insects are they?

24.04.2008 19:18, Guest

I don't understand how to put an image here...Both larva and pupa were taken by me from a Weimutow pine tree. It is very necessary to identify pests. Please help!

24.04.2008 19:21, Vlad Proklov

I don't understand how to put an image here...Both larva and pupa were taken by me from a Weimutow pine tree. It is very necessary to identify pests. Please help!

First you need to register.

24.04.2008 21:11, Filin

I would say that all the same trivia is more similar. Your caterpillar has white spikes and a white background. And this one has red spikes and a black background. Mellicta britomartis also looks like yours. But IMHO, trivia is still bigger.
Long because it's stretched - thick because it's shrunk. This is not a sign. A caterpillar is not a beetle or grasshopper, it does not have a rigid skeleton.


I take your side.
Thank you for your clarification.

24.04.2008 22:25, Sungaya

I would call it caja.

And why caja?
In my opinion, some kind of Spilosoma.

24.04.2008 22:36, Grigory Grigoryev

If it fades, it will look similar.
Likes: 1

25.04.2008 12:34, bials

I would call it caja.


cajarc, thank you very much. I also decided that this is a young caterpillar Kaya, I saw a similar one on the French site. but you can't see her side there. The adult caterpillar doesn't have a side red line, so I decided to check it out again.
Thank you again very much!
Likes: 1

04.05.2008 20:56, Filin

Guys!
Here are some tracks taken in the Poltava region.

user posted image

user posted image
These two tracks were removed last year in July.

This one was taken today in a clearing in a pine forest. In my opinion, this is the" economy " of some scoops. I may be wrong.
user posted image user posted image

04.05.2008 22:27, Konstantin Shorenko

Can you find these caterpillars tongue.gif? Thank you in advance

This post was edited by Dormidont - 05/04/2008 23: 00

04.05.2008 23:00, t00m

the average caterpillar is a bear.
bottom photo - the last age of Lasiocampa quercus-100% I collected them yesterday on the broom, they also eat mountain ash willingly... finally, polyphages.
Likes: 1

04.05.2008 23:00, Tigran Oganesov

Can you find caterpillars tongue.gif? Thank you in advance

2-Unpaired silkworm previously called Lymantria dispar, but now it seems to belong to another genus
5-Papilio machaon tongue.gif
Likes: 1

04.05.2008 23:01, t00m

my message, as understood, was addressed to Filin)

04.05.2008 23:03, Konstantin Shorenko

Thank you all, there were disagreements on the last photo. Any other opinions

04.05.2008 23:05, Konstantin Shorenko

And who is this, even up to the family

04.05.2008 23:05, Tigran Oganesov

Thank you all, there were disagreements on the last photo. Any other opinions

this applies to other caterpillars, the swallowtail is unambiguous wink.gifas well as the unpaired...
the average is also some banal
Likes: 1

04.05.2008 23:09, Konstantin Shorenko

Yes, I already realized that there is no disagreement swallowtail, so swallowtail smile.gif

04.05.2008 23:11, Vlad Proklov

Can you find these caterpillars tongue.gif? Thank you in advance

Medium -- Ethmia sp.
Likes: 1

04.05.2008 23:12, Vlad Proklov

And who is this, even before the family

Leaf Wrapper (?)
Likes: 1

04.05.2008 23:13, Vlad Proklov

Unpaired silkworm formerly called Lymantria dispar, but now it seems to belong to a different genus

Yes, to no one else, everything is correct, Lymantria dispar.
Likes: 1

04.05.2008 23:24, t00m

shche tse? they eat birch trees. ringed, bayarthorn, fluffy?or just pass it by? ))) in the last photo, a moth appears to the left of S. mirmidona.

Thank you in advance
Denis.

Pictures:
picture: IMG_1050.jpg
IMG_1050.jpg — (145.35к)

picture: IMG_1046.jpg
IMG_1046.jpg — (142.22к)

picture: IMG_1053.jpg
IMG_1053.jpg — (128.01к)

04.05.2008 23:26, mikee

We continue the topic http://molbiol.ru/forums/index.php?showtopic=180650&st=450# It took 3 weeks, the same nest and the same caterpillars, but they grew up every 10-15 times. Can we now define it more precisely? As they grow, they begin to resemble an unpaired silkworm in miniature...

04.05.2008 23:30, mikee

And whose tracks are these?

04.05.2008 23:31, Vlad Proklov

shche tse? they eat birch trees. ringed, bayarthorn, fluffy?or just pass it by? ))) in the last photo, a moth appears to the left of S. mirmidona.

Thank you in advance
Denis.

Moth -- Pseudoterpna pruinata.

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