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Identification of larvae and pupae

Community and ForumInsects identificationIdentification of larvae and pupae

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14.04.2010 19:17, evk

Tenebrio molitor Linnaeus, 1758 in my opinion confused.gif
Except that's not where you posted it.

I confirm it!
Likes: 2

14.04.2010 19:24, KingSnake

Tenebrio molitor Linnaeus, 1758 in my opinion confused.gif
Except that's not where you posted it.

Thank you for the definition. What do you mean you posted it wrong? If you mean the topic "Larvae and pupae", then it seems that only caterpillars are defined there. Or so it seemed to me.

15.04.2010 12:31, А вот эта, на фото

Who is she? Here in this photo:
http://fotki.yandex.ru/users/karasechka/view/175571/?page=0

I had the same instance on a plot in the Leningrad region. dimensions-unreal, centimeters 8...9

15.04.2010 16:25, Evgenich

Odorous woodpecker-Cossus cossus

17.04.2010 11:39, barry

14.04.2010, Kharkiv region, Krasnokutsk.
Under the bark of a birch tree.

Pictures:
picture: IMG_2089_1.jpg
IMG_2089_1.jpg — (190.07к)

17.04.2010 12:30, okoem

14.04.2010, Kharkiv region, Krasnokutsk.
Under the bark of a birch tree.

Something dipterous, I think.
Likes: 1

17.04.2010 12:44, barry

Something dipterous, I think.

Yes, I also immediately had the idea that most likely from this opera.

18.04.2010 14:47, Arikain

Please take a look at my caterpillars from Karelia.
- on a blackberry bush
picture: SANY1539.JPGpicture: SANY1540.JPG
"there was a whole nest of caterpillars in the nettles
picture: Изображение_098.јрд

picture: Изображение_438.јрдpicture: Изображение_439.јрд

picture: Изображение_524.јрд

picture: SANY1303.JPG

18.04.2010 17:33, Kharkovbut

Please take a look at my caterpillars from Karelia.
"there was a whole nest of caterpillars in the nettles
Polygonia c-album.
Likes: 1

18.04.2010 17:41, vasiliy-feoktistov

Please take a look at my caterpillars from Karelia.
- on a blackberry bush

Acronicta rumicis Linnaeus, 1758
Likes: 1

18.04.2010 19:12, Evgenich

Please take a look at my caterpillars from Karelia.
- on a blackberry bush

6-Hole silver-Phalera bucephala (Linnaeus, 1758)
Likes: 1

18.04.2010 19:23, vasiliy-feoktistov

6-Hole silver-Phalera bucephala (Linnaeus, 1758)

Young probably, something hairy hurts (I also thought, but did not dare to write)?

18.04.2010 19:25, Evgenich

vasiliy-feoktistov
Young and there is! I once bred a lot of them (raised) to butterflies.
Likes: 1

18.04.2010 19:35, vasiliy-feoktistov

  vasiliy-feoktistov
Young and there is! I once bred a lot of them (raised) to butterflies.

I understand, I once posted an adult here: http://molbiol.ru/forums/index.php?showtopic=184446&st=500 (I did this just in case) rolleyes.gif Post # 542

This post was edited by vasiliy-feoktistov - 18.04.2010 19: 37
Likes: 1

18.04.2010 19:38, Vorona

Good afternoon, can you tell me whose larva it is?:
picture: 147.jpg
picture: 0089.jpg
Murmansk region, found in fixed flowers of palpatocorynica. I'm sorry - the quality is disgusting. you can't shoot well with binoculars. There are suggestions, but I'd rather keep quiet teapot.gif

19.04.2010 0:15, Bad Den

Vorona, I think it's trips
Likes: 1

19.04.2010 18:37, Sungaya

  
4. Scoop? On the hogweed
picture: lar08303.jpg


Lacanobia contigua
Likes: 1

19.04.2010 21:50, Sungaya

Who could it be?
(Mozhaisk district, August 29, 2009)

Pictures:
picture: 1.jpg
1.jpg — (56.48к)

20.04.2010 21:11, Sungaya

I came to the conclusion that this is a young Orgyia recens.
What do you say?

21.04.2010 8:25, bials

I came to the conclusion that this is a young Orgyia recens.
What do you say?

I think it's the same one.
Likes: 1

21.04.2010 18:35, akulich-sibiria

Good afternoon, can you tell me whose larva this is?
[attachmentid()=87078]
[attachmentid()=87079]
Murmansk region, found in fixed flowers of palpatocorynica. I'm sorry - the quality is disgusting. you can't shoot well with binoculars. I have some suggestions, but I'd rather keep quiet teapot.gif


this is a thrips larva
Likes: 1

21.04.2010 20:32, okoem

Please take a look at my caterpillars from Karelia.
[attachmentid()=87070]
[attachmentid()=87071]

[attachmentid()=87073]

"The bear. Possibly S. lutea.
- Shovel-metallovidka. Possible A. gamma
Likes: 1

21.04.2010 22:11, Gregori48

Baltic States, Lithuania,and Klaipeda.On a vine branch.Who is it?

Pictures:
picture: DSCF6535.JPG
DSCF6535.JPG — (270.03к)

21.04.2010 22:17, Sungaya

Please tell me what kind of a speck this is.
Found on 13.06.09 in the Chekhov district of the Moscow region on krasnaya currant, quite large
[attachmentid ()=80452]

Apocheima pilosaria

21.04.2010 22:23, Sungaya

Baltic States, Lithuania,and Klaipeda.On a vine branch.Who is it?

Deilephila elpenor
Likes: 1

23.04.2010 15:01, Andrey Ponomarev

mol.gif Help identify the caterpillar. M. O. Zhukovsky bank of the Moscow river 07 April 2010.It looks like it's overwintered.

Pictures:
picture: IMG_9902.jpg
IMG_9902.jpg — (168.56к)

picture: IMG_9900.jpg
IMG_9900.jpg — (160.56к)

24.04.2010 7:26, vasiliy-feoktistov

Isn't it Arctia caja?

24.04.2010 10:23, Andrey Ponomarev

Isn't it Arctia caja?
No, it's not hers. no.gif

24.04.2010 10:48, vasiliy-feoktistov

No, it's not hers. no.gif

Well then: Phragmatobia fuliginosa Linnaeus, 1758 (nothing else comes to mindwall.gif) .

24.04.2010 11:06, Andrey Ponomarev

Well, then: Phragmatobia fuliginosa Linnaeus, 1758 (nothing else comes to mind wall.gif).
And M. b is Arctia villicia or Diaphora mendica, looked here http://www.leps.it/indexjs.htm?Home.htm
Likes: 1

24.04.2010 11:11, vasiliy-feoktistov

And M. b is Arctia villicia or Diaphora mendica, looked here http://www.leps.it/indexjs.htm?Home.htm

A. villica is unlikely, but D. mendica or Spilosoma lutea may be.
Likes: 1

24.04.2010 16:34, Andrey Ponomarev

A. villica is unlikely, but D. mendica or Spilosoma lutea may be.
Probably still more like Diaphora mendica, although I may be wrong.

24.04.2010 19:38, Sungaya

As far as I understand, Spilosoma lutea, S. lubricipeda, S. urticae, Diaphora mendica-all of them overwinter at the pupal stage (correct if I'm wrong)
Only Phragmatobia fuliginosa remains. Who else besides her from similar to her runs to pupate in early spring?
Likes: 4

24.04.2010 19:46, vasiliy-feoktistov

As far as I understand, Spilosoma lutea, S. lubricipeda, S. urticae, Diaphora mendica-all of them overwinter at the pupal stage (correct if I'm wrong)
Only Phragmatobia fuliginosa remains. Who else besides her from similar to her runs to pupate in early spring?

Thank you: based on this, it turns out that I was right in my post # 1603.
Likes: 1

24.04.2010 20:30, Sungaya

Thank you: based on this, it turns out that I was right in my post # 1603.

probably Vasya...
unless there are similar wintering ones
Likes: 1

24.04.2010 21:02, vasiliy-feoktistov

probably Vasya...
unless there are wintering animals like it

Yes, I don't think I know any more of them here. By the way: S. lubricipeda and S. urticae can also be brushed off (by the color of the caterpillar).

27.04.2010 10:15, Arikain

Another caterpillar from Karelia, please take a look. On a mountain ash tree.
picture: caterpillar.jpg

27.04.2010 10:19, Vlad Proklov

Another caterpillar from Karelia, please take a look. On a mountain ash tree.

Acronicta psi
Likes: 1

03.05.2010 8:38, Andrey Ponomarev

mol.gif Help with the definition of. M.O. 28. 04. 2010

Pictures:
picture: IMG_1459.jpg
IMG_1459.jpg — (328.61к)

03.05.2010 12:51, CJW

Hello!
Please help! Very urgent!!!
We found something in the far corner of the kitchen cabinet:
user posted image
Found on 02.05.10, Almaty, Kazakhstan


The fact is that we live in a rented apartment, and on that shelf is the owner's dishes. We have never looked there in 2 years. And then we decided to take that shelf apart to make room for ourselves, and we came across it! The back wall of the cabinet just in this corner moves away a little, there is a gap.
And we don't know, first of all, what is it? And secondly , how long has it been there? Is there anyone alive in there? Maybe "it" has been there for two years, or maybe quite recently.
We assumed that it might be a bumblebee nest, but we never noticed bumblebees in the apartment.

Tell me, please, and then somehow it's not easy to live next to something unknown!

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