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Identification of larvae and pupae

Community and ForumInsects identificationIdentification of larvae and pupae

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24.08.2009 8:01, Ruslan2

Please help me identify the caterpillar.

The lower reaches of the Dnieper.
It severely damaged Lavater of Thuringia.
It may also damage other malvaceae.
During the day, the caterpillars were hidden in an envelope made of a sheet bent in half.
On 1 plant there were 6 caterpillars of different ages at once.

Pictures:
picture: P8209205_w.jpg
P8209205_w.jpg — (88.85к)

24.08.2009 8:05, Ekos

Dina is a caterpillar of the highest moth of the family of Slugs (Limacodidae) - Monema flavescens. This species is widely distributed in the south of the Russian Far East. It is better not to touch the caterpillars with your hands, spikes can cause burns.

24.08.2009 8:49, TANIA89

Tanya tell me what kind of food plants are there, if you know? The first one looks like some kind of polka dots?

Yes, the first(small-somewhere 1.5 cm) sat on a mouse pea, and the second(4 cm long) crawled on the ground-right now in the bank cocoon weaves

24.08.2009 9:47, Динусик

Dina is a caterpillar of the highest moth of the family of Slugs (Limacodidae) - Monema flavescens. This species is widely distributed in the south of the Russian Far East. It is better not to touch the caterpillars with your hands, the spikes can cause burns.


Yeah, I already know about the burnslol.gif, she didn't want to change the leaf for more beauty of the frame! Zhenya thank you for the definition!

24.08.2009 10:33, Dr. Niko

Help me identify the beast. Photographed today in the birch forest of the ROC. Blagoveshchensk, Amur region.

By the way, these caterpillars are parasitized by the glistening wasp Praestochrysis shanghaiensis. True, you don't have it, it's in Japan, Korea, and China.

This post was edited by Dr. Niko - 08/24/2009 10: 34

24.08.2009 13:55, Dr. Niko

Good afternoon, Dear forumchane! I want to know whose caterpillar it is. Photo taken in Namibia.
user posted image

As Schalk Lau wrote to me (see his scoop on Butterflies), this is GonimbrasiaCramer 1776 (Saturniidae), although after Googling it became clear that it is very similar to another species of the same genus - Gonimbrasia belinaWestwood 1849. Caterpillars of the latter are an important source of protein for indigenous South African peoples. Very interesting article http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gonimbrasia_belina smile.gif
Likes: 1

24.08.2009 14:30, ezdok

As Schalk Lau wrote to me (see his scoop on Butterflies), this is GonimbrasiaCramer 1776 (Saturniidae), although after Googling it became clear that it is very similar to another species of the same genus - Gonimbrasia belinaWestwood 1849. Caterpillars of the latter are an important source of protein for indigenous South African peoples. Very interesting article http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gonimbrasia_belina  smile.gif

Thank you so much! I am extremely grateful....I even have pictures of this food somewhere....Straight from the market...

This post was edited by ezdok - 24.08.2009 14: 32
Likes: 1

24.08.2009 14:50, Dr. Niko

Thank you so much! I am extremely grateful....I even have pictures of this food somewhere....Straight from the market...

Yes, this is not me thank you, I'm just an intermediary, this is the professor respect and respect wink.gif smile.gif

24.08.2009 15:25, Konung

Tell me what kind of tracks?
1picture: DSC00952.JPG
2picture: DSC00965.JPG

The first one seems to be Ceramica pisi (Noctuidae), but the second one looks like my similar one, which I don't know either. Please help!
August 24, 2009, Omsk.
picture: IMG_3662s.jpg
Likes: 1

24.08.2009 15:26, ezdok

Yes, this is not thanks to me, I'm just an intermediary, this is respect and respect for the professor wink.gif  smile.gif

Many thanks to him! I sent you a letter in PM. Please see when the time is....

24.08.2009 15:41, Ilia Ustiantcev

It is similar to Cucullia umbratica.
Likes: 1

25.08.2009 15:23, vasiliy-feoktistov

Good afternoon, dear friends. Please help me identify 2 caterpillars from the Moscow region: the first on nettle, the second on mullein (dates at the bottom of the pictures). Thank you in advance!

25.08.2009 15:27, vasiliy-feoktistov

Good afternoon, dear friends. Please help me identify 2 caterpillars from the Moscow region: the first on nettle, the second on mullein (dates at the bottom of the pictures). Thank you in advance!

Sorry I made a little mistake(this is how it loaded) The first one is on mullein, and the second one is on nettle, respectively.

25.08.2009 18:00, vasiliy-feoktistov

oh thank you so much!
and how and with what to eat it ? )
what to feed, how and how much ?
what can I do with it ?
does it bite ? does he eat meat ?
we called it Megatron ! )

It lives in trees, willow, aspen, poplar, etc. In your case, apparently going to pupate. Just put it on the ground, preferably sprinkle with finely torn toilet paper.

27.08.2009 14:12, TANIA89

It is similar to Cucullia umbratica.

Thanks! Rummaged in the Internet, and the truth is similar..well, she pupated safely. smile.gif

27.08.2009 14:17, TANIA89

The first one seems to be Ceramica pisi (Noctuidae), but the second one looks like my similar one, which I don't know either. Please help!
August 24, 2009, Omsk.

Thank you! Only with this Ceramica pisi (Noctuidae)(if it's her) something strange - such a thing came out of her skin-it looks like a maggot confused.gifsomehow moves inadequately and does not crawl properly. Who is it?
picture: DSC00988.JPG

This post was edited by TANIA89 - 08/27/2009 14: 18

27.08.2009 14:23, guest: Vabrus

Well, Tanya, this means that the caterpillar's life was interrupted smile.gifand some wonderful parasite developed inside it.

27.08.2009 16:39, Ilia Ustiantcev

Please help me identify several caterpillars and pupae. Moscow region, Odintsovo district, second half of August.
1.user posted imageuser posted image
This bear looks suspiciously similar to Phragmatobia luctifera. If so, then I am UG, because I opened the cocoon ahead of time and ruined it.
2.user posted imagePeacock's eye?
3.user posted imageThyatira batis?
4.user posted imageFound it on a lime tree, so...?
5.user posted imageAlso on linden
6.user posted image
This pupa is slightly smaller than a wren's. Found it on iris! Who could it be? Do not look under the wings - there are tahins or other "pleasant" creatures.
7.user posted imageDiaphora mendica or Spilosoma lubricipeda?
8.user posted imageIs this by any chance Ceramica pisi? Found it on horsetail(!)

27.08.2009 18:41, okoem

Please help me identify the caterpillar.

Thick-headed Carcharodus alceae.

Please help me identify 2 tracks from the Moscow region:

One is a sawfly. The other is some kind of bear.
Likes: 1

27.08.2009 18:58, okoem

This pupa is slightly smaller than a wren's. Found it on iris! Who could it be?

Pieris sp.
Likes: 1

28.08.2009 8:18, VSB

Or a caterpillar with a tail, or a fluffy larva, I don't know. I'd like to know.Can someone tell me, sho tse take? Taken in Chelyabinsk two days ago.

Pictures:
picture: ____________..jpg
____________..jpg — (271.68к)

picture: ________2_____..jpg
________2_____..jpg — (249.08к)

28.08.2009 10:10, vasiliy-feoktistov

Thick-headed Carcharodus alceae.
One is a sawfly. The other is some kind of bear.

Thanks! As for the first one, I myself suspected that it was a false caterpillar, and I'm going to dig bears in the network right now.

28.08.2009 14:35, vasiliy-feoktistov

Please help me identify several caterpillars and pupae. Moscow region, Odintsovo district, second half of August.
1.user posted imageuser posted image
This bear looks suspiciously similar to Phragmatobia luctifera. If so, then I am UG, because I opened the cocoon ahead of time and ruined it.
2.user posted imagePeacock's eye?
3.user posted imageThyatira batis?
4.user posted imageFound it on a lime tree, so...?
5.user posted imageAlso on linden
6.user posted image
This pupa is slightly smaller than a wren's. Found it on iris! Who could it be? Do not look under the wings - there are tahins or other "pleasant" creatures.
7.user posted imageDiaphora mendica or Spilosoma lubricipeda?
8.user posted imageIs this by any chance Ceramica pisi? Found it on horsetail(!)

1.Spilosoma lubricipeda
5.Most likely Laothoe populi (linden horn is blue)
8. Diaphora mendica
9. Ceramica pisi (sometimes brown)
With the rest I find it difficult.
Likes: 1

28.08.2009 21:40, okoem

Or a caterpillar with a tail, or a fluffy larva, I don't know. I'd like to know.Can someone tell me, sho tse take? Taken in Chelyabinsk two days ago.
Caterpillar of Calliteara pudibunda.
Likes: 1

30.08.2009 6:13, VSB

A certain number of undefined tracks have accumulated, so please help me identify them.Unfortunately, I don't have any track identifiers. Do they even exist?

Pictures:
picture: 01.jpg
01.jpg — (224.14 k)

picture: 02.jpg
02.jpg — (325.02к)

picture: 03.jpg
03.jpg — (374.42к)

picture: 04.jpg
04.jpg — (266.01к)

picture: 05.jpg
05.jpg — (202.27к)

30.08.2009 15:20, Yanich

??? Caterpillars from the Stavropol Territory.

Pictures:
picture: IMG_6262.jpg
IMG_6262.jpg — (501.81к)

picture: ______________________21.05.2008_003.jpg
______________________21.05.2008_003.jpg — (116.56к)

picture: IMG_3473.jpg
IMG_3473.jpg — (490.77к)

30.08.2009 18:52, Ilia Ustiantcev

Now I accidentally found it on the Net: in the last photo - Simyra dentinosa caterpillars. I thought it was the Krestovnik dipper... Are they not on milkweed?

This post was edited by Ilya U - 30.08.2009 18: 52

30.08.2009 19:07, Yanich

On It itself))) What about the others?

30.08.2009 19:59, Ilia Ustiantcev

Don't know. The second is probably Malacosoma (castrense or neustria) The first one is a moth of some sort, I've only identified one moth caterpillar in my life...
Likes: 1

30.08.2009 20:04, okoem

Unfortunately, I don't have any track identifiers. Do they even exist?

I didn't see any track identifiers. I only know atlases. Look at my site sections " Links...", " Articles and books...".
1. Some kind of scoop. It should be displayed.
2. Vanessa cardui
3. Inachis io
4. Zygaena sp.
5. Acronicta psi

???Caterpillars from the Stavropol Territory.

1.Some kind of moth.
2. Malacosoma sp., possibly Malacosoma neustria.

This post was edited by okoem - 30.08.2009 20: 05

31.08.2009 8:32, bials

Good afternoon, dear friends. Please help me identify 2 caterpillars from the Moscow region: the first on nettle, the second on mullein (dates at the bottom of the pictures). Thank you in advance!

The second is probably a yellow bear (Spilarctia lubricipeda L.)

31.08.2009 8:44, bials

  
5. Most likely Laothoe populi (linden horn is blue)

Blue (light blue) horn of the ocular hawk moth, the main difference of the linden moth is a yellow spot under the horn, which has a blue top and a yellow bottom.
image: _____. jpg

This post was edited by bials - 08/31/2009 08: 44
Likes: 1

31.08.2009 9:48, Динусик

Please tell me what kind of animal? There is an assumption that it is one of the Limacodidae.

Pictures:
picture: P8310205.JPG
P8310205.JPG — (172.26к)

31.08.2009 22:37, vasiliy-feoktistov

Blue (light blue) horn of the ocular hawk moth, the main difference of the linden moth is a yellow spot under the horn, which has a blue top and a yellow bottom.
image: _____. jpg

Yes, this is me to the fact that poplar has a yellow horn (actually to the photo).

01.09.2009 23:54, kut

Help me determine it. West of the Moscow region. 1.9.9. Thank you!

1. On a squat Birch (Betula humilis)
picture: P9010951.JPG
picture: P9010952.JPG
2. On a squat Birch (Betula humilis)
picture: P9010988.JPG
3. I got on a backpack, from which I was hanging by a thread. Abraxas sylvata?
picture: P9011020.JPG

This post was edited by kut-02.09.2009 00: 02

02.09.2009 0:03, Ilia Ustiantcev

1 - Melanchra persicariae
Likes: 1

02.09.2009 0:30, Transilvania

Unfortunately, I don't have any track identifiers. Do they even exist?


http://www.photoweb.ru/prophoto/biblioteka...o/caterpillars/

http://fotki.yandex.ru/users/evelinalina/t...B8%D1%86%D1%8B/

http://fotki.yandex.ru/users/nakarb/album/45934?p=0

http://fotki.yandex.ru/users/rogatnykh/album/44503?p=3

Usually you just have to rummage through everything and-no, look at different albums, view different caterpillars on the Macro Club, etc.. And all the pages on this forum are also the spitting image of atlas of caterpillars, only, unfortunately, some photos no longer open.
And your fuzzy, by the way, I also have in the album - volnyanka. They just come in different colors-yellow, brownish, white.

02.09.2009 1:21, Ekos

Please tell me what kind of animal? There is an assumption that it is one of the Limacodidae.


A. Slug eyes again smile.gif
Dean, this is a caterpillar of the Palearchaearctic species Phrixolepia sericea Butler, 1877. According to A.V. Solovyov's report on limacodids of Russia (2008), this species is found in the south of Khabarovsk Krai and in Primorye. But on the map of the species ' range in the same paper, points from the EAO (Radde) and from the Amur Region (Blagoveshchensk) are indicated.
Likes: 1

02.09.2009 1:28, okoem

Help me determine it. West of the Moscow region.

A moth on a birch tree resembles Biston betularia, but it looks even more like something from the Geometrinae: Chlorissa sp., Hemithea sp., Thalera sp., or maybe something else.

This post was edited by okoem-02.09.2009 01: 29
Likes: 1

02.09.2009 5:44, Динусик

A. Slug eyes again smile.gif
Dean, this is a caterpillar of the Palearchaearctic species Phrixolepia sericea Butler, 1877. According to A.V. Solovyov's report on limacodids of Russia (2008), this species is found in the south of Khabarovsk Krai and in Primorye. But on the map of the species ' range in the same paper, points from the EAO (Radde) and from the Amur Region (Blagoveshchensk) are indicated.

Zhenya, thank you very much! mol.gif mol.gif mol.gif

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