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Identification of larvae and pupae

Community and ForumInsects identificationIdentification of larvae and pupae

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15.08.2008 14:44, MSveta

Oh, thank you!
Calmed me down... I'm already sorry I let you go... I had to see how it would turn out...the beauty is this wink.gif

16.08.2008 13:33, DIMID

Bring more sand,maybe you'll be lucky?And the butterfly is one of the most beautiful!!!

18.08.2008 21:02, andros

help me determine it.Still it is desirable to learn its suddu, it seemed to me is ill?

Pictures:
picture: DSCN1168.JPG
DSCN1168.JPG — (137.34к)

18.08.2008 21:27, Grigory Grigoryev

Very similar to gus. poplar hawk moth. And at the expense of health-confuses darkening around the head, I can't say more. Watch it grow and grow.

18.08.2008 22:06, andros

She seems to have tried the apple tree, isn't it harmful?

18.08.2008 22:14, Grigory Grigoryev

The apple tree is usually consumed by the ocular hawk moth, look at the head - if it has yellow bumps-warts, then the ocular moth, if the head is smooth. then poplar. And spots on the sides occur in both species.

19.08.2008 3:36, Raptor

Similar to the poplar head and body shape.The ocular one is slimmer.And the pink spots directly knock down the whole picture,once they were not seen in these caterpillars.But most importantly, it makes sense to check her front part of the body for small black spots from injections.it looks like it's infected with parasites.I don't like the front of it very much.

MSveta-Damn lucky you!I just dream of having such a beast!And you just so and razdovit wanted more.

By the way, tell your grandmother that the larva of a bear is indistinguishable from an adult, it's just that there are no wings.and in general takayazhe medvedka.

19.08.2008 5:43, andros

I'll try to grow it, he eats poplar leaves.Only here the darkening confuses, li7

20.08.2008 4:15, Raptor

I think about whether you will survive or not you will find out only before pupation.internal parasites.and yet it seems that they are present.painfully bad darkening.Although I recently had one of the 4 infected successfully turned into a milkweed hawk moth.and the rest, alas, became food for the tahini flies.and there were also darkenings.

23.08.2008 8:59, Ilia Ustiantcev

The caterpillar was found in the forest in the Orekhovo-Zuyevsky district of the Moscow Region, either on an ash tree, or on snyti!
user posted imageuser posted imageuser posted image

23.08.2008 11:50, guest: Sungaya

The caterpillar was found in the forest in the Orekhovo-Zuyevsky district of the Moscow Region, either on an ash tree, or on snyti!

looks like thyatira batis
Likes: 1

23.08.2008 16:01, Guest

I can't upload a photo.I found a gray-green hawk moth caterpillar with four black spots on the chub part.the head part is slightly expanded slightly lighter.found in coniferous forest.tell me the name and what to feed.

23.08.2008 16:16, Vabrus

This is the caterpillar of the wine hawk moth Deilephila elpenor. It is easy to feed it with ivan tea. Good luck.
Likes: 1

23.08.2008 20:08, andros

Here is this caterpillar.Is this a wine hawk moth?

Pictures:
picture: DSCN1179.JPG
DSCN1179.JPG — (140.58 k)

23.08.2008 20:23, guest: Don

Yes

23.08.2008 21:07, andros

Can you feed this one?"What's it called?

Pictures:
picture: DSCN1180.JPG
DSCN1180.JPG — (156.82к)

24.08.2008 9:11, guest: Don

Found it where?

24.08.2008 10:33, Grigory Grigoryev

In my opinion, this is a common raspberry cocoonworm (rubi), it will thrive - this species has already been talked about a lot before.

24.08.2008 11:27, guest: Don

cajarc, I agree with you. I also believe that rubi. But isn't it a little dark in color? It would be necessary to find out on what plant they found it, in order to dispel all doubts. If raspberry, then you can feed it with blackberries, raspberries, oak leaves.
Likes: 1

24.08.2008 12:10, Grigory Grigoryev

It's just that the picture is so dark. I looked again in Photoshop - exactly rubi, there are no other such gus in our area. .

24.08.2008 17:15, Kno

There is a goose, found in the forest on a walnut tree. Well, of course, they put it in a jar, we think to bring out a beautiful butterfly from it. We can't find who she is on the Internet. Help!
picture: IMG_3936.jpg

24.08.2008 17:24, RippeR

this is a volnyanochki goose, most likely from the Orgya genus,
they usually do not make the most beautiful babuski, and the females are generally wingless, they look like worms smile.gif

feed them with fresh nutty leaves. It will pupate somewhere in a jar, they don't need soil or anything else. Only then put a twig so that if the samechik is hatched, there is somewhere to spread the wings.

24.08.2008 17:31, Ilia Ustiantcev

What color brushes? That's right, black. And this is the Calliteara pudibunda garden woolf. The females are normal.

24.08.2008 17:43, Vabrus

Yes, Ilya is absolutely right. But I didn't understand what the black tassels had to do with it.

Kno: you can not wait for a beautiful butterflysmile.gif It will be gray and boringsmile.gif

24.08.2008 18:12, Kno

Thank you to those who answered, really Calliteara pudibunda, one personsmile.gif, come on, what's not beautiful, the main thing is the process!

Last week we had a woodworm shoot from a jar (such a huge pink goose with a black head), they were looking for it under a table or chair... Gobble up everything nafig frown.gif

24.08.2008 18:37, Ilia Ustiantcev

Well, if the brushtail is a butterfly, then the hairs on the brush of the caterpillar are black, at least for those who have them. And it's also a mega-sign of woolpaw - those cute black cutouts.
Likes: 2

25.08.2008 0:40, Андреас

- Please tell me (as far as possible) the types of butterflies that these caterpillars belong to...

25.08.2008 7:55, Ilia Ustiantcev

1 - some kind of hoodess?
2-bloody bear Tyria jacobaeae
3-cocoonworm what? You never know what there is in the Caucasus.
Likes: 1

25.08.2008 8:37, AntSkr

In the Caucasus, mostly subspecies, I do not think that the cocoonworm...

25.08.2008 11:02, AntSkr

Apparently, a nymphalid, in my opinion, something from Nimphalis, there is no one else, since the pupa is quite large.

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25.08.2008 13:03, okoem

- Please tell me (as far as possible) the types of butterflies that these caterpillars belong to...

1. Xylena exsoleta
3. Eilema palliatella
Likes: 1

25.08.2008 15:24, Андреас

- Thank you very much, - Ilya and Vladimir! - I was not too lazy to immediately double-check the names on the Internet; - everything fits! - I wonder-do you use Mamaev at all (I only have this book on the definition of caterpillars) - or from other sources? - Although, I think, based on your experience, Vladimir , you can immediately identify such common types in the Crimea and in my CMS. mol.gif jump.gif

25.08.2008 15:30, Ilia Ustiantcev

There is such a site - www.leps.it
And also this - ukmoths.org
And especially this one http://www.kolumbus.fi/silvonen/lnel/species.htm

25.08.2008 17:46, okoem

at me on KMV types at once define.

Forgive my ignorance, but what is a CMS?
This is the first time I've heard about Mamaev. I use online sources, they are IMHO better and more complete than many atlases, especially old ones. I don't have any paper atlases of caterpillars.

Here is a good website on caterpillars (photo)
http://www.ukleps.org/ScientificNamesFamilyGroups.html
Here is an atlas of caterpillars (drawings)
http://caliban.mpiz-koeln.mpg.de/%7Estueber/spuler/raupen
Here you can download the atlas of caterpillars of Britain (photo)
http://natahaus.ifolder.ru/4499007
Cuckoo caterpillars (photo)
http://www.dr-beck.net/auszuege.htm
Likes: 2

25.08.2008 18:11, Vabrus

to okoem: Mamaev is a disgusting insect detector based on larvae. It is absolutely impossible to follow it even to the track that you know.
And KMV - Caucasian mineral waters.

to AntSkr: and you, IMHO, have an admiral smile.gif

This post was edited by Vabrus - 25.08.2008 19: 26
Likes: 1

25.08.2008 22:58, barry

Help me determine it... Crimea, August.
On the turn. Up to 10 mm.
Either a caterpillar, or something like a bug...

This post was edited by barry - 25.08.2008 23: 17

Pictures:
picture: IMG_6123.jpg
IMG_6123.jpg — (125.54к)

25.08.2008 23:23, Vabrus

to Barry:
this is what you were asked to do when you were very young smile.gif

This post was edited by Vabrus - 25.08.2008 23: 29
Likes: 1

25.08.2008 23:24, Kharkovbut

Help me determine it... Crimea, August.
On the turn. Up to 10 mm.
Either a caterpillar, or something like a bug...


I daresay this is a young podalirii. smile.gif
Likes: 1

26.08.2008 1:05, Tigran Oganesov

Az am submitted a request, without optionsumnik.gif, the age of the second approximately.
Likes: 1

26.08.2008 20:20, kut

Whose caterpillar is this? Moscow oblast. Lyuberetsky district. Sat on wormwood (Artemisia sp.) from Asteraceae. 25.8.8. Thank you.
picture: P8259965.JPG
picture: P8259967.JPG

This post was edited by kut - 26.08.2008 20: 21

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