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Identification of larvae and pupae

Community and ForumInsects identificationIdentification of larvae and pupae

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04.05.2008 23:33, t00m

One of the draughtsmen - Melitaea, Mellicta sp.


the second one is very similar to false chicken pox.

04.05.2008 23:48, t00m

that's right, I have the same animals that Miki calls an unpaired silkworm in miniature(only of the next age), I refuse to believe it, it's not for nothing that I brought this brood for 100 versts with me) who will solve the situation?

05.05.2008 0:43, okoem

Medium - Ethmia sp.

It is very likely that this is Ethmia candidella.
Likes: 1

05.05.2008 5:44, Konung

05.05.2008 22:56, Sungaya

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...

Tell me, can't Aporia crataegi save the father of Russian democracy? smile.gif

http://www.ukbutterflies.co.uk/species.php...-Veined%20White

This post was edited by Sungaya - 05.05.2008 23: 12

06.05.2008 10:37, entomolog

Colleagues, please tell me who it is?

Pictures:
picture: ________03.05.08_007_1.jpg
________03.05.08_007_1.jpg — (128.62к)

06.05.2008 10:52, Vlad Proklov

Colleagues, please tell me who it is?

In my opinion, this is a peacock's eye (Inachis io) .

06.05.2008 10:58, entomolog

In my opinion, this is the peacock's eye (Inachis io).

I also thought so, but this creature refuses to eat nettles.
ZY. Picked it up on the path in the pine forest.

06.05.2008 11:48, mikee

Tell me, can't Aporia crataegi save the father of Russian democracy? smile.gif

I'm afraid there's no smile.gifReason:
1. this nest is located on grass, and I have never seen hawthorn nests all my life only on trees and never even met references to the possibility of development on cereals;
2.at the initial discovery, the caterpillars were 2 mm at most, now they are 15 mm, but the hawthorns should fly in a couple of weeks.

Although, of course, the caterpillars are similar...

06.05.2008 13:46, okoem

I thought so too, but this thing refuses to eat nettles.

Maybe some kind of shashechnitsa or mother-of-pearl? Try to give plantain, violet... what else do nymphalids eat? ...

06.05.2008 17:55, t00m

perhaps he (Peacock's eye) does not feed before molting, or is infected and preparing to go to a better world.=) but this is 99% him =)

06.05.2008 19:15, Zhuk

In my opinion, this is the peacock's eye (Inachis io).

No, it's definitely not him. Most likely something from mother-of-pearl (maybe Clossiana some thread?)

06.05.2008 21:22, Sungaya

Colleagues, please tell me who it is?

similar to Euphydryas aurinia

11.05.2008 19:05, AntSkr

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...


Although the caterpillars are different, something suggests to me that it is Malacosoma castrense... try, after all, to display them.

11.05.2008 19:55, okoem

Although the caterpillars are different, something suggests to me that it is Malacosoma castrense... try, after all, to withdraw them.

Why are they different? Young Malacosoma castrense-one to one.
But I do not know, maybe in the Moscow region and what is similar...

11.05.2008 21:35, NicoSander

Please help me identify the cocoonworm mol.gif. I found it yesterday on blueberries. Offered bird cherry, birch, mountain ash, willow does not eat. I dug out a bush of blueberries, but it won't last long. Maybe someone can advise what else she can eat...

Pictures:
picture: DSC07074.jpg
DSC07074.jpg — (74.09к)

picture: DSC07075.jpg
DSC07075.jpg — (75.59к)

11.05.2008 21:53, Vabrus

to NicoSander-IMHO L. quercus
Likes: 1

11.05.2008 23:32, Guest

Yeah, we don't have anything like that. oak. here is a modest list of plants for this "monophage": :Betula, Alnus, Salix, Populus tremula, Ribes, Rubus, Spiraea, Malus, Sorbus, Prunus, Trifolium, Calluna vulgaris, Vaccinium, Andromeda polifolia, Ledum palustre, Syringa, Lonicera xylosteum, Larix sibirica

I am now a specialist in Cocoonworms in general=) I myself identified my cocoonworm (it is also Miki's "non-partner") after the next molt. Malacosoma castrense (Linnaeus, 1758) (http://sungaya.narod.ru/hete/las/mal_cas.htm)

good luck to all!

12.05.2008 7:52, Vabrus

to NicoSander
Hmm, the oak cocoonworm has never been smile.gifa monophagus There are a lot of trees and shrubs in the diet, so it seems that nothing prevents it from eating blueberry smile.gifbushes as well
Likes: 1

12.05.2008 19:35, okoem

 
+
under the nettles I found the pupa of a daytime butterfly

I also found such a pupa not so long ago. Alas, everything turned out to be simple - not a butterfly came out of the pupa at all, but a long-legged mosquitoshuffle.gif. I think that the larva next to the photo is also his.

18.05.2008 8:58, Ilia Ustiantcev

A pair of caterpillars. Pyadenitsa already exposed, the second found today (tolstogolovka)?
picture: IMG_1549.jpg
picture: ___________.jpg

18.05.2008 10:06, okoem

A pair of caterpillars. Pyadenitsa already exposed, the second found today (tolstogolovka)?

Ilya, do not forget to specify the details - the length of the caterpillar, on which plant it was.
About the moth - something that develops on conifers, I can assume that it is Bupalus piniaria.
About "tolstogolovka" - this is not it, but ognevka or listoverka.
Likes: 1

18.05.2008 10:29, Ilia Ustiantcev

With fodder plants bummer: I found both on the fence!
The caterpillar is hardly a pine tree: I planted it there. I found it on a plot where there is nothing but fruit trees within a radius of 100 meters. I threw her various herbs, it is not visible that she ate something, but she has been living for a week! I think it's Sterrhinae.
Both are small: 1-32mm, the second one is one and a half times smaller

19.05.2008 12:09, REDBOOK

user posted image
Chelyabinsk region, L=2.8 cm. In bulk, on the ground and at the base of cereals.

Further tracks from the Mangystau region of Kazakhstan
user posted image

user posted image

user posted image

user posted image

19.05.2008 21:26, Guest

1-nymphalida (I think it is impossible to determine more precisely)
2 - some cool stuff, I would not refuse to grow it.
3-Tyria jacobaeae (Linnaeus, 1758)
4-some kind
of owlet 5-cocoonworm

19.05.2008 22:14, Vlad Proklov


Chelyabinsk region, L=2.8 cm. In bulk, on the ground and at the base of cereals.

In my opinion, this is false chickenpox.
Likes: 1

20.05.2008 7:30, REDBOOK

 
3 - Tyria jacobaeae (Linnaeus, 1758)

And Tyria jacobaeae caterpillar can be exclusively on milkweed?

20.05.2008 7:37, Pavel Morozov

No, on krestovnik, at least in the European part

This post was edited by Morozzz - 05/20/2008 07: 38

20.05.2008 7:44, Vabrus

And Tyria jacobaeae caterpillar can be exclusively on milkweed?

Absolutely not. It should only be on the crossberry Senecio jacobaeae. So it's definitely not her smile.gif

21.05.2008 11:32, bials

Does anyone know whose pupa it is? And then she has been calling my eyes since July 2005.
picture: ________01.jpg

21.05.2008 12:52, Bad Den

bials, this is some kind of Nymphalidae

21.05.2008 13:22, svm2

Absolutely not. It should only be on the crossberry Senecio jacobaeae. So it's definitely not her smile.gif


It looks like Simyra dentinosa, if it flies there, at least something from Acronictinae seems to me

This post was edited by svm2-05/21/2008 13: 26
Likes: 1

21.05.2008 13:51, entomolog

Does anyone know whose pupa it is? It's been bugging my eyes since July 2005.
picture: ________01.jpg

Inachis io.

21.05.2008 14:12, svm2

It looks like Simyra dentinosa, if it flies there, at least something from Acronictinae seems to me


I'm pretty sure she's
http://zipcodezoo.com/Animals/S/Simyra_dentinosa.asp

This post was edited by svm2-05/21/2008 14: 13
Likes: 1

21.05.2008 17:55, mems

People! there is no camera
and the goose is annoyingsmile.gif
maybe someone can determine by the description:

I found a gosling on the wall of a house near a maple and poplar tree, size 15mm, body color and going up to dark gray, and it is all covered with short bunches of black coarse hairs.

This post was edited by mems - 05/21/2008 17: 56

21.05.2008 18:18, bials

Inachis io.

entomolog, it doesn't look like a Peacock's Eye. The size is smaller and the color is not the same. I brought out a whole bunch of peacock's eyes, its pupae are greenish with a metallic sheen.

21.05.2008 21:35, Иван М

Met in Moscow on April 14, 2008. On the trunk crawl on the mushroom...
user posted image

21.05.2008 22:06, mikee

entomolog, it doesn't look like a Peacock's Eye. The size is smaller and the color is not the same. I brought out a whole bunch of peacock's eyes, its pupae are greenish with a metallic sheen.

Polygonia c-album. I judge by the characteristic spots-there are from white to golden in color.
Likes: 1

29.05.2008 7:27, akulich-sibiria

hello..please tell me what kind of species can live in a common pine and leave such traces...presumably the genus Dioctria..I can't seem to get out...maybe something else from the sprouts...the caterpillar is in the shoot..making a move inside it..the top of the last year's shoot is drying up..there's a lot of excrement around.The picture was taken in July

This post was edited by akulich-sibiria - 05/29/2008 07: 30

Pictures:
picture: Dioryctria.jpg
Dioryctria.jpg — (142.47к)

29.05.2008 7:32, akulich-sibiria

A different view..approximately Diorictria splendidella..the caterpillar grows in places where branches of the first order branch off..on the cedar tree..such formations are formed on the tree

Pictures:
picture: Dioryctria_splendidella_3.jpg
Dioryctria_splendidella_3.jpg — (203.35к)

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