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Identification of larvae and pupae

Community and ForumInsects identificationIdentification of larvae and pupae

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11.01.2007 5:18, Dmitrii Musolin

and by what determinant did you determine?

Sawflies are very good! I love you!

11.01.2007 10:38, Bad Den


And another beast... Not defined. I thought it was a pine hawk moth...
(July, North Karelia, 2005)

This is the caterpillar of the crested bird Cerura sp. (Notodontidae), Cerura vinula most likely.
Likes: 1

12.01.2007 2:41, Lenkins

and by what determinant did you determine?

Used Plavilshchikova. So these are definitely sawflies?

Sawflies are very good! I love you!
[/quote]

12.01.2007 5:20, Dmitrii Musolin

Tochto is a sawfly - this is absolutely certain! The question is what kind of view.

For larvae, you can try to determine by some Gusev determinant. There were several of them in the post-war decades (first editions-with Rimsky-Korsakov). Here's what I got right away:

Gusev V. I. Determinant of damage to forest, ornamental and fruit trees and shrubs. - Moscow: Lesn. prom-st, 1984.
http://ecoclub.nsu.ru/books/Obr3-4/7.htm

http://1945.bookchamber.ru/description106822.htm

http://www.biblus.ru/Default.aspx?book=58q0a09v0
Valentin Ivanovich Gusev. Determinant of damage to trees and shrubs used in green construction. Handbook / V. I. Gusev. 207, [1] p. ill. 22 cm
m. Agropromizdat 1989

---- according to one of the links - an article and there is more information about sawflies in the Literature.
Likes: 1

20.03.2007 9:59, nk-

Please tell me whose caterpillar it is.
Murmansk region, Kandalaksha district, on the shore of the lake, on blueberries; August.

Regards,
Nick

Pictures:
picture: larv_.jpg
larv_.jpg — (295.56к)

20.03.2007 10:03, omar

Cool find! Almost certainly minor Saturnia.

20.03.2007 10:08, omar

And beyond the Arctic circle....Have you even taken it for yourself?

20.03.2007 10:41, nk-

No, I didn't take it.
I do beetles, I don't like butterflies smile.gif

It seems to me that for this region, the species can be reliably determined from the photo (this is not a different trifle, and we don't have many large butterflies smile.gif

P.S.
If you are interested , please specify the local area-okr. pos. Kolvitsa, s-z ber. lake Domashnaya Lambina
03.08.2006
coordinates WGS84: 67grad 04 '07,5" N, 32grad 57' 14.7 " E

Regards,
Nick

This post was edited by nk_-03/20/2007 15: 46
Likes: 1

20.03.2007 12:14, omar

To be honest, I also study beetles, but I don't know much about butterflies. The fact that this is Saturnia is for sure, I'm not sure about malaya smile.gifIn any case, this is a good rarity. Let's wait for some butterfly specialists to tell us what they have to say about pavonia's habitats. This is, of course, our northernmost view, but I'm not sure if it goes beyond the Arctic Circle.

20.03.2007 13:35, nk-

Well, for the northern Arctic Circle, this is approximately 55 km in a straight smile.gifline (the other side of the Kandalaksha Bay).
So if it is in the North. Karelia why doesn't it fly to the other side?

20.03.2007 14:11, omar

Just clarified it. Malaya pavlinoglazka really goes beyond the Arctic Circle and reaches all the way to the forest tundra of the Kola Peninsula. But still the butterfly is zykaya smile.gif
Likes: 1

20.03.2007 15:15, nk-

Thanks!
user posted image

Nick

02.04.2007 18:02, Sv Kononova

I have more banal images - all from the Moscow region smile.gif
Please help me determine who these tracks belong to?
I tried, but got tangled up in moth and whiteflies frown.gif

user posted image
figure 1

user posted image
figure 3

user posted image
figure 5

user posted image
figure 6

user posted image
Figure 7

Thanks!

This post was edited by Sv_Kononova - 04/06/2007 09: 18

02.04.2007 19:22, omar

Fig. 1 ringed cocoonworm
Fig. 7 linden hawk moth
fig. 5 sawfly's false caterpillar
fig. 6 kokonpryad too, but what, I do not know.
I apologize for my lack of Latin, but I'm working on beetles. But I'm sure of what I said.
Likes: 1

02.04.2007 19:47, RippeR

3-golubyanka or Zygaena?
Likes: 1

02.04.2007 20:19, Sv Kononova

Thank you very much, dear Omar and RippeR!

There are still unidentified objects in the pictures numbered 2, 4 and 8 smile.gif
And then I'll ask you a few more questions if I can't figure it out myself.

02.04.2007 23:00, RippeR

8 maybe some kind of whitewash.
2 and 4 possible scoops..
I just don't know much about tracks, so don't take too seriously smile.gif
Likes: 1

03.04.2007 11:32, Bad Den

Figure 3-Zygaena sp.
Figure 6-Euthrix potatoria (Lasiocampidae)
Likes: 1

03.04.2007 16:08, Sv Kononova

Thank you all very much! I have new riddles smile.gif

user posted image
Figure 9

user posted image
Figure 10

user posted image
Figure 11

user posted image
Figure 12

Help, please smile.gif

03.04.2007 16:20, omar

12-also sawfly
's false burr 10-alder strelchatka

This post was edited by omar - 03.04.2007 16: 22
Likes: 1

03.04.2007 17:45, Bad Den

9 and 11 - moths (Geometridae)
Likes: 1

03.04.2007 20:12, Sv Kononova

Thanks!

I have a few more objects smile.gif

user posted image
figure 15

This post was edited by Sv_Kononova - 04/06/2007 09: 19

04.04.2007 3:43, Dmitrii Musolin

15-sawfly's FALSE burr
Likes: 1

05.04.2007 6:17, Sv Kononova

And why are the sawflies so small and the false burrs so big?
I understand that the question is from the category of "children's", but still...
And is it possible that Figure 12 also shows a sawfly's false burr? She's so fat, so huge.. What kind of sawfly should it be?! ...

05.04.2007 8:11, omar

And why are the sawflies so small and the false burrs so big?
I understand that the question is from the category of "children's", but still...
And is it possible that Figure 12 also shows a sawfly's false burr? She's so fat, so huge.. What kind of sawfly should it be?!...
Cimbex femorata presumably. The head is not visible in the photo. Birches should grow nearby.

06.04.2007 9:00, Sv Kononova

06.04.2007 9:08, omar

yes.gif
Likes: 1

06.04.2007 9:17, Sv Kononova

Thanks!

Who's that?"

user posted image
figure 2

This post was edited by Sv_Kononova - 04/23/2007 11: 36

06.04.2007 9:57, Dmitrii Musolin

And why are the sawflies so small and the false burrs so big?
I understand that the question is from the category of "children's", but still...
And is it possible that Figure 12 also shows a sawfly's false burr? She's so fat, so huge.. What kind of sawfly should it be?!...


Cimbex imagos are quite large. Basically, I think, it remains so: large larvae - large imago.
Likes: 1

07.04.2007 6:07, Sv Kononova

Good afternoon!
I want to ask you about my unidentified friends again smile.gif
These "sticks" in Figures 2, 8, 13 and 14 can be identified by belonging to the corresponding adult Lepidoptera or not?

Thanks!

07.04.2007 6:13, Dmitrii Musolin

2 - I would say that a scoop, but with non-characteristic gooseflesh need a lot of experience to determine up to the species...
Likes: 1

08.04.2007 19:32, Pavel Morozov

Fig. 2-Caramica pisi
Likes: 1

11.04.2007 12:39, Aleksandr Ermakov

Tell me what kind of animal it is. July, Northern Urals, mountain tundra, on blueberries (also found on waterfowl)
I'd appreciate it.

This post was edited by scarabee - 11.04.2007 13: 56

Pictures:
picture: larva1.JPG
larva1.JPG — (135.67к)

11.04.2007 12:43, Aleksandr Ermakov

And here it is. In the same place, but in the mountain taiga.

Pictures:
picture: larva2.JPG
larva2.JPG — (39.17к)

11.04.2007 12:48, Aleksandr Ermakov

And here is this pyadennitsa on a winding birch tree in Krivolesye.

Pictures:
picture: larva3.JPG
larva3.JPG — (26.67к)

11.04.2007 12:52, Aleksandr Ermakov

And finally the last false caterpillar. Also on a winding birch tree. When you touch it, it bends like in the photo and "buzzes" smile.gif
Tell me, pliz.

Pictures:
picture: larva4.JPG
larva4.JPG — (21.93к)

11.04.2007 13:37, omar

The one that is on the blueberry, but not on the watermelon (the watermelon is completely different) - scoop.
Which is on the birch bark (?) - cocoonworm.
Likes: 1

11.04.2007 21:07, ERiNaCeUS

This animal was seen in the Khabarovsk Territory, halfway from Khabarovsk to Vanino. very interesting, what kind of view
picture: 0112_resize.jpgis

12.04.2007 5:45, Pavel Morozov

Actually, a female of the genus Calliteara.
Likes: 2

12.04.2007 22:18, Pavel Morozov

On the birch bark - pine cocoonworm Dendrolimus pini,
Moth caterpillar Cleorodes lichenaria.
Likes: 1

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