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Identification of larvae and pupae

Community and ForumInsects identificationIdentification of larvae and pupae

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21.09.2008 18:45, akulich-sibiria

1 and 2 are similar to Melanchra persicariae.
5 - sawyer
6 - these images need to be cropped!

I totally agree with you....not my photos...they asked me to find out. Yes, the first two I found, they fully fit smile.gif

21.09.2008 21:46, VSB

picture: 232.jpgpicture: 00023.jpgpicture: 09091212.jpgA certain number of caterpillars have accumulated, which I would like to identify.Who knows, please tell me.All shot in Chelyabinsk this summer.

22.09.2008 7:39, gumenuk

Is this the Apatele auricoma caterpillar?
Filmed in the Moscow region in September. We were on a young growth of birches and aspens

This post was edited by gumenuk - 22.09.2008 07: 40

Pictures:
picture: G_1_007796.jpg
G_1_007796.jpg — (175.41к)

22.09.2008 8:00, okoem

Is this the Apatele auricoma caterpillar?
Filmed in the Moscow region in September. We were on a young growth of birches and aspens

Yes. Only I'm more used to the name Acronicta auricoma.
Likes: 1

22.09.2008 19:36, AntSkr

This weekend I found a lot of bear caterpillars in the burdock thicket, what kind of species can it be?
Variants: either P. fuliginosa or D. mendica (too late), others seem to
be different...

Pictures:
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picture: 9a89e4b950065ae094.jpg
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picture: 82f73c12cd7617d463.jpg
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picture: e28fa58dd4c4982663.jpg
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22.09.2008 21:29, t00m

your animal is something like Spilosoma lubricipedum , and what am I? caught on September 21 on a broom tree. Penza region.

Pictures:
image: _____. jpg
_____.jpg — (87.14к)

22.09.2008 21:30, AntSkr

your animal is something like Spilosoma lubricipedum , and what am I? caught on September 21 on a broom tree. Penza region.

Acronicta rumicis

23.09.2008 12:20, mhs555

Hello!
Please, if you can help identify this caterpillar. We had an outbreak of it this year. Pupae hibernate underground up to 10 cm. It is found in many places of Azerbaijan, mainly in meadows, feeding on various grasses.
Thank you in advance
fig. 1 (photo030.jpg. фото031.јрд) younger age of caterpillars
fig. 2 (222.jpg; 11.jpg)older age

Pictures:
picture: 11.jpg
11.jpg — (12.32к)

picture: 222.jpg
222.jpg — (15.98к)

picture: ____030.jpg
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picture: ____031.jpg
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23.09.2008 17:05, Sungaya

Who is it??
September 22, 08, Moscow region, Mytishchi

Isn't it dromedarius?
But if so, where are the horns??

This post was edited by Sungaya - 23.09.2008 21: 35

Pictures:
picture: dr.jpg
dr.jpg — (79.05к)

23.09.2008 18:39, okoem

Pupae hibernate underground up to 10 cm. It is found in many places of Azerbaijan, mainly in meadows, feeding on various grasses.

Caterpillar in the photo 11.jpg very similar to Lasiocampa trifolii. The description of biology is also similar, except that the pupae do not overwinter.
Unfortunately, very small photos, it is impossible to see anything.

24.09.2008 13:44, mhs555

Caterpillar in the photo 11.jpg very similar to Lasiocampa trifolii. The description of biology is also similar, except that the pupae do not overwinter.
Unfortunately, very small photos, it is impossible to see anything.


Hello! I want to give more information about this project.
They give 1 generation per year. Younger age caterpillars feed in the web on mixed grasses. The average age of the caterpillars was found in April. In July, they pupate in the soil (up to 10 cm). Hibernate (exactly!) pupae. Don't see it in trees and shrubs. They meet only in meadows and feed on various grasses.
I send a photo of pupae and caterpillars-younger and older.
Thank you in advance.

Pictures:
picture: 222_1.jpg
222_1.jpg — (135.41к)

picture: 11_1.jpg
11_1.jpg — (138.92к)

picture: ____030.jpg
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picture: ____031.jpg
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picture: _______3_002.jpg
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picture: _______3_002.jpg
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24.09.2008 16:10, okoem

I send a photo of pupae and caterpillars-younger and older.

In my opinion, something from cocoonworms, it seems that it is related to K. cloverleaf. I can assume that some non-European view.

24.09.2008 17:38, AntSkr

Why didn't they take it out? if there are pupae, wait for the butterflies...

25.09.2008 7:24, mhs555

In my opinion, something from cocoonworms, it seems that it is related to K. cloverleaf. I can assume that some non-European species.


I am very grateful for your information. Another question if possible: Does the pupal stage of the Cocoonworm clover occur in the soil?
They have pupae in my house (in a glass jar) in the soil happened. And in July I collected them in meadows in the soil up to 10 cm. If they are the same species, when does their imago come out?

25.09.2008 8:45, Notodonta

Хто ето??! confused.gif What to feed??! confused.gif

Pictures:
picture: _________.jpg
_________.jpg — (1.72 mb)

25.09.2008 9:08, bials

I know it's probably hopeless, but maybe someone knows...
All tracks are from MO., Odintsovo and Ramenskiy districts.
Time, August-September.
1. This moth was sitting on a wild raspberry tree in a pine forest
picture: __________________1_1.jpg picture: __________________1_2.jpg
2. This one is the same, but on a shrub similar to honeysuckle (I don't understand it well eek.gif
picture: __________________2.1.jpg picture: __________________2.2.jpg
3. This scoop is like the first moth on a wild raspberry in a pine forest
picture: _______________7.jpg
4. This one is on some kind of creeper with small white flowers
picture: _______________2.1.jpg picture: _______________2.2.jpg
5. This one, as you can see, is on the quinoa flowers
picture: _______________5.1.jpg picture: _______________5.2.jpg
6. A small shrub in a spruce forest
picture: _______________8.1.jpg picture: _______________8.2.jpg
7. This plant, I do not know what it is called, but it is everywhere full
picture: _______________4.1.jpg picture: _______________4.2.jpg
8. Eta ate balsam Tibetan (such a big nedotroga, with large crimson and pink flowers)
picture: _______________1.1.jpg picture: _______________1.2.jpg

25.09.2008 10:16, okoem

Does the pupal stage of Cocoonworm clover occur in the soil?
They have pupae in my house (in a glass jar) in the soil happened. And in July I collected them in meadows in the soil up to 10 cm. If they are the same species, when does their imago come out?

The pupae of the clover cocoonworm are located in the soil. All that you have reported completely coincides with the biology of the clover cocoonworm, except that the butterflies of this species come out in August-September. Also, its adult caterpillar doesn't look exactly like yours.

2 bials
The caterpillars of many scoops look almost identical. Even if you find a picture of what would seem to be exactly the same ones somewhere, it's not a fact that they will be exactly the same views. The only way to determine them as reliably as possible would be for someone who has produced the same ones in your region.
If you have a great desire to try to determine it, try following the links to the caterpillar atlases that I gave above. I think there you can easily find images of the same appearance.

27.09.2008 17:08, gooroong

I was on a fishing trip. In search of a bark beetle, I gutted the stumps and found something big. The miracle had built its nest under the bark and was probably trying to sleep.
Pritaranil home to recognize. My hopes for Bram were dashed to smithereens and Google was involved, which brought me here.

Found the beast (for which the name Boris Nikolaevich is firmly rooted) right here right under the " + " in the center

Length 5-6 cm

Who is it?

picture: P9275436small.jpg

If it can hatch something beautiful, how can it hatch at home? :-)

27.09.2008 17:23, Vlad Proklov


Found the beast (for which the name Boris Nikolaevich is firmly rooted) right here right under the " + " in the center

Length 5-6 cm

Who is it?

Cossus cossus
Likes: 1

27.09.2008 19:45, VSB

(okoem): Thanks for the tip(on the scoop), I apologize for not thanking you right away, the computer was broken

29.09.2008 9:11, Anatol-08

Good day! Walking through the mountains covered with oak trees, near Goryachy Klyuch (Krasnodar Territory), this photo was taken... I don't know how to tell (maybe a larva). Length approx. 6cm. Please be kind! Can you tell me who it is?

Pictures:
picture: P1070329_01.jpg
P1070329_01.jpg — (133.17к)

29.09.2008 9:20, Bad Den

Good day! Walking through the mountains covered with oak trees, near Goryachy Klyuch (Krasnodar Territory), this photo was taken... I don't know how to tell (maybe a larva). Length approx. 6cm. Please be kind! Can you tell me who it is?

Butterfly caterpillar Cossus cossus
Likes: 1

29.09.2008 10:08, Anatol-08

thank you very much!

30.09.2008 14:46, Манор

Whose krasunya is this?

Pictures:
picture: 111.jpg
111.jpg — (426.91к)

30.09.2008 18:31, okoem

Whose krasunya is this?

Hyles hippophaes. Just for the left leaf? He also eats sea buckthorn.
Likes: 1

30.09.2008 22:22, Cerura

On cabbage

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P1020201.JPG — (28.37к)

01.10.2008 5:56, okoem

On cabbage

Pieris rapae or Pieris napi

01.10.2008 8:54, gumenuk

1. Help me determine. If there are difficulties, then I will be enough to indicate the family.

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07.10.2008 13:42, lfxybr

Leningrad region.
This "tadpole" has been appearing for two years now. Among the available plants, it parasitizes on PEAR, KARINKA, CHERRY, and HAWTHORN. It appears in late summer. It sucks all the juices out of the leaves. Only the grid remains.There's a suction cup on my head. The abdomen is yellow with caterpillar-like legs. The back is black. If you take it (the"tadpole") with your fingers, blackish mucus will remain on them. The drug "Iskra" is 80 percent effective. Follow this link to view photos http://foto.mail.ru/mail/gae12/173
What is this mess? Neither on gardening forums, nor when communicating with rural residents, the answer could not be obtained. No one had ever seen it before. There is a concern. They didn't bring in any foreign infection. Dacha on an island in the Gulf of Finland. The island is big. It shows a city, village, port, or military base. This "tadpole" is already found on different parts of the island. Maybe until it has settled it can be localized? I don't notice any natural enemies. Birds and ladybirds don't respond to it.

P.S. I was sent to you from the zoological forum. If you placed the topic in the wrong place, please move the moderator with a notification.

This post was edited by lfxybr - 07.10.2008 13: 43

07.10.2008 13:55, Dmitrii Musolin

this is a slimy sawfly, a fairly common pest for the NW of Russia. The type is not so to say, it is necessary to look at the determinants, starting from the feed breed.

it does not suck out the sap, this is so-called skeletonization-the larvae scrape off the leaf tissue, leaving a network of veins. Growing up, they already gnaw out larger areas.

There is no suction cup on the head smile.gif

I don't think it will be mass-produced...

07.10.2008 18:04, bials

What is this tuft? I initially thought of the Notodonta dromedarius color option, but it looks like it's something else. Ramenskiy district, mid-September, willow.
picture: __________________1.1.jpg

07.10.2008 18:28, AntSkr

What is this tuft? I initially thought of the Notodonta dromedarius color option, but it looks like it's something else. Ramenskiy district, mid-September, willow.
picture: __________________1.1.jpg

Mid-September, the last age - it would be possible to deduce... they would definitely know, otherwise it's difficult to guess from caterpillars of this kind...

07.10.2008 19:45, NicoSander

I found it on raspberries in August. At first I thought it was a sawfly... already pupated. it may turn out to grow, but, nevertheless, I would like to know what kind of butterfly. thank you in advance.

Pictures:
picture: DSC07417.jpg
DSC07417.jpg — (99.04к)

07.10.2008 19:55, NicoSander

To bials: 8 This one ate Tibetan balsam (such a big nedotroga, with large crimson and pink flowers)

It seems to be Euplexia lucipara

07.10.2008 21:11, okoem

I found it on raspberries in August. At first I thought it was a sawfly... already pupated. it may turn out to grow, but, nevertheless, I would like to know what kind of butterfly. thank you in advance.

Pyrgus sp.
Likes: 1

07.10.2008 21:24, okoem

What is this tuft? I initially thought of the Notodonta dromedarius color option, but it looks like it's something else. Ramenskiy district, mid-September, willow.

Notodonta ziczac or Notodonta torva. I'm leaning towards the former.

08.10.2008 8:58, bials

Notodonta ziczac or Notodonta torva. I'm leaning towards the former.

okoem, thank you! I also already defined it as Notodonta ziczac.

08.10.2008 9:10, bials

To bials: 8 This one ate Tibetan balsam (such a big nedotroga, with large crimson and pink flowers)

I think it's Euplexia lucipara

If you consider a characteristic feature, two larger white spots at the back, then it is very similar that it really is. Thanks!

This post was edited by bials-08.10.2008 09: 16

08.10.2008 9:29, bials

I found it on raspberries in August. At first I thought it was a sawfly... already pupated. it may turn out to grow, but, nevertheless, I would like to know what kind of butterfly. thank you in advance.

Possibly Pyrgus malvae. And if you pupated, then you can't show a photo of the pupa in two angles?

08.10.2008 9:36, bials

Who is it??
September 22, 08, Moscow region, Mytishchi

Isn't it dromedarius?
But if so, where are the horns??

I also came across this one and I also identified it as dromedarius (by its color and characteristic pattern). I didn't think to pupate it. But now I am inclined to think that this is what the dromedarus caterpillar looks like infected with rider larvae, which make it eat without measure and delay pupation.
Likes: 1

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