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Identification of larvae and pupae

Community and ForumInsects identificationIdentification of larvae and pupae

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21.07.2012 17:51, Andrey Ponomarev

Hello everyone.
a few larvae and caterpillars.
1. Platforma Nerskaya metro station.12.07.2012, on the birch tree
picture: IMG_6464.jpg
Now she's like this
picture: IMG_8740.jpg
2 m. O., Poplar found on the alder, but did not eat it,eats birch willingly.
picture: IMG_5740.jpg
3rd place the same 04.07.2012 crawled on the old board from zobor.
picture: IMG_2940.jpg
picture: IMG_2941.jpg
4 some kind of cimbex,29.06.2012, on an aspen tree.It eats aspen mostly at night, sometimes during the day.
picture: 2.jpg
picture: 4.jpg
picture: 5.jpg

21.07.2012 18:00, Aaata

[quote=Gennadich,21.07.2012 18: 51]
Likes: 1

22.07.2012 9:33, Deeman12

help me identify the caterpillars.. found it on cabbage, Kemerovo region.

Pictures:
picture: P1000347.jpg
P1000347.jpg — (122.08к)

picture: P1000348.jpg
P1000348.jpg — (94.47к)

22.07.2012 12:55, Svetlana1973

Oops... I picked up caterpillars (there were just a myriad of them on the nettle). I was sure it was hives. They fattened up and started pupating. Do I understand correctly that these are not hives at all, but daytime peacock's eye? shuffle.gif
user posted image
And a caterpillar. I didn't dare take it for fattening. I was sitting on hops, and I have no place to get it (hops) in the city... frown.gif
Arkhangelsk region, Kargopol district, July 15.
user posted image
user posted image

22.07.2012 19:11, bials

Oops... I picked up caterpillars (there were just a myriad of them on the nettle). I was sure it was hives. They fattened up and started pupating. Do I understand correctly that these are not hives at all, but daytime peacock's eye? shuffle.gif

1. most likely (if the tracks are black with a white dot)
2. Anguloptera C-white (Polygonia c-album L.) in principle, it eats both nettles and willow.
Likes: 1

22.07.2012 19:59, Svetlana1973

1. most likely (if the tracks are black with a white dot)
2. Anguloptera C-white (Polygonia c-album L.) in principle, it eats both nettles and willow.

1. Yes... She looked at the remaining un-pupated ones. Peacock's eye... And I brought them north to the White Sea. They won't survive frown.gif
2. Yeah, I already found it myself, thank you. It turns out that I also had her pupae. Gone already smile.gif
user posted image

22.07.2012 20:13, bials

Is it possible to identify this moth caterpillar. I think it's the same thing.
Taken in July, one (1) in Moscow, the other (2) in Odintsovo district. Both of them are sitting on a willow tree.

Since I didn't get an answer, I continued my search and found a similar caterpillar on ukleps, and it was on willow - Paradarisa consonaria (Smoky birch moth).
sungaya confirmed my guess:http://sungaya.narod.ru/hete/geo/par_con.htm It
is noteworthy that on the Polish site lepidoptera.pl willow is not listed among the food plants of Paradarisa consonaria, although in many photos it is sitting on a willow in a characteristic pose (stretched out and pressed against a twig).

This post was edited by bials-22.07.2012 20: 16

22.07.2012 21:10, okoem

It is noteworthy that on the Polish site lepidoptera.pl willow is not listed among forage plants

Alas, the base of forage plants there is very incomplete...

22.07.2012 22:24, Несси

Crawling along the path, like a leatherworm larva, only bigger.
Moscow, 22.07.12.
If you don't mind, please help me determine.

Pictures:
picture: DSC_5163.JPG
DSC_5163.JPG — (200.57к)

picture: DSC_5165.JPG
DSC_5165.JPG — (249.63к)

picture: DSC_5166.JPG
DSC_5166.JPG — (134.36к)

22.07.2012 22:28, Triplaxxx

The larva of some Dermestes.

23.07.2012 4:47, bials

Alas, the base of forage plants there is very incomplete...

Despite the fact that many others do not have it at all.. wink.gif

23.07.2012 9:25, Deeman12

Can't you tell that way? they burrowed into the ground to pupate.. not scoops?

23.07.2012 14:16, okoem

Despite the fact that many others do not have it at all.. wink.gif

...so thank you for what you have as well wink.gif

Can't you tell that way? they burrowed into the ground to pupate.. not scoops?

Scoops of some kind. If they go out, we'll find wink.gifout

24.07.2012 23:15, Gansucha

Ukraine, Rivne region, June 3.
Is it possible to say something about these caterpillars (as far as I understand, scoops):
Orthosia incerta ?
user posted image
user posted image

25.07.2012 18:45, Kopay

Hello, dear hosts and guests of the forum!
I just registered to ask you to help me identify this caterpillar. Photos taken the day before yesterday and today. These are two different instances. The first one was photographed in the office, where it was most likely brought with flowers of willow-tea. And the second one was shot in its thickets, like in the place of habitation.
The caterpillar is about 6 – 8 cm long, very similar to the one on the first page of this topic. That is, it's kind of like it http://tpittaway.tripod.com/sphinx/h_gal.htm. The following is confusing: I took these photos in Vorkuta. I've never seen anything like this in our area before. Bedstraw hawk moth can be found in the Arctic Circle? Or is it something else? I would like to hear what the experts think.
picture: IMAGE_919.jpg
picture: IMAGE_926.jpg

25.07.2012 19:07, Елизавета Рысенкова

Hello!
Please help me identify the caterpillars.
Found in the Torzhoksky district of the Tver region.
1. 22.08.2008 on red currant.
picture: 024__2_.jpg
2. 22.08.2008
picture: 025.jpg
confused.gif

25.07.2012 20:35, Зеленый Кошак

Hello! This is what I caught today on the asphalt in St. Petersburg. Apparently, he crawled to pupate - being planted in a jar, he began to weave intensively. Please help with the definition and advise what is better to put/pour in a jar for pupation and how to store the pupa. Unfortunately, there are no photos in the best quality. Thank you in advance.

Pictures:
picture: SP_A0056.jpg
SP_A0056.jpg — (31.97к)

picture: SP_A0058.jpg
SP_A0058.jpg — (27.8к)

picture: SP_A0057.jpg
SP_A0057.jpg — (25.65к)

25.07.2012 20:42, Victor Titov

Hello! This is what I caught today on the asphalt in St. Petersburg. Apparently, he crawled to pupate - being planted in a jar, he began to weave intensively. Please help with the definition and advise what is better to put/pour in a jar for pupation and how to store the pupa. Unfortunately, there are no photos in the best quality. Thank you in advance.

Caterpillar of the odorous woodworm (Cossus cossus).

25.07.2012 21:08, vasiliy-feoktistov

Hello, dear hosts and guests of the forum!
I just registered to ask you to help me identify this caterpillar. Photos taken the day before yesterday and today. These are two different instances. The first one was photographed in the office, where it was most likely brought with flowers of willow-tea. And the second one was shot in its thickets, like in the place of habitation.
The caterpillar is about 6 – 8 cm long, very similar to the one on the first page of this topic. That is, it's kind of like it http://tpittaway.tripod.com/sphinx/h_gal.htm. The following is confusing: I took these photos in Vorkuta. I've never seen anything like this in our area before. Bedstraw hawk moth can be found in the Arctic Circle? Or is it something else? I would like to hear what the experts think.

Podmarennikovy and is without questions: http://lepidoptera.ru/taxonomy/2827
Its range is wide and the butterfly migrates: I think it can easily reach you......

25.07.2012 21:18, bials

Bedstraw hawk moth can be found in the Arctic Circle? Or is it something else? I would like to hear what the experts think.


Well, as you can see, it can. Now all sorts of "miracles" are happening. "The end of the world" is close! lol.gif

25.07.2012 21:24, vasiliy-feoktistov

Well, as you can see, it can. Now all sorts of "miracles" are happening. "The end of the world" is close! lol.gif

I read somewhere a long time ago that it flies beyond the Arctic circle. There is no end of the world here: this is a fairly common occurrence smile.gif

25.07.2012 21:26, bials

I have a mutant again! confused.gif
It seems like a moth, but I didn't find it anywhere on the sites. Yes, and the moth is strange - three pairs of pseudopods (although I'm not sure about the "tail" ones). And she didn't behave like a typical moth. When touched, it instantly curled up into a ball and fell off the leaf. I have seen two such pieces.
S. Chulkovo, Ramenskiy district of the Moscow region.
Maybe someone knows what it is?
a. picture: ___________01.1.JPG
b. picture: ___________01.2.JPG

25.07.2012 21:29, bials

I read somewhere a long time ago that it flies beyond the Arctic circle. There is no end of the world here: this is a fairly common occurrence smile.gif

Well. You can't even make a joke anymore! weep.gif
What learned crackers you all are. wink.gif
Likes: 1

25.07.2012 21:43, bials

These are two different instances. The first one was photographed in the office, where it was most likely brought with flowers of willow-tea. And the second one was shot in its thickets, like in the place of habitation

That's disgusting! wall.gif Already in the Arctic, Hyles gallii caterpillars are easily dragged into offices with ivan tea!
And I can't find their reptiles in the Moscow region for 8 years. mad.gif All kipreyniki and bedsteads in Chulkovo and Petelino climbed-no, for the life of you! There are a lot of medium-sized wines, even a toothwing was caught, but these ones don't seem to exist in nature. only yesterday in Chulkovo I found the first caterpillar, and not at all on cypress and bedstraw, but like on veronica (now I'm checking on the branch of botanists), which does not seem to be listed anywhere in its forage plants.
shuffle.gif Sorry for the offtop, but I really wanted to let off steam!

25.07.2012 21:52, Зеленый Кошак

Caterpillar of the odorous woodworm (Cossus cossus).

Thanks! I searched for information about him, but I didn't understand one thing. Will it first hibernate and then pupate, even if it is a caterpillar that has already survived one winter?

25.07.2012 21:56, bials

Thanks! I searched for information about him, but I didn't understand one thing. Will it first hibernate and then pupate, even if it is a caterpillar that has already survived one winter?

In fact, woodworms overwinter as a caterpillar for more than one winter...

25.07.2012 23:09, Sungaya

Hello everyone.
a few larvae and caterpillars.


1-like Hypomecis punctinalis
4-Cimbex luteus

25.07.2012 23:11, Sungaya

Hello!
Please help me identify the caterpillars.
Found in the Torzhoksky district of the Tver region.


sawfly Eriocampa dorpatica
Likes: 2

26.07.2012 8:19, svm2

I have a mutant again! confused.gif
It seems like a moth, but I didn't find it anywhere on the sites. Yes, and the moth is strange - three pairs of pseudopods (although I'm not sure about the "tail" ones). And she didn't behave like a typical moth. When touched, it instantly curled up into a ball and fell off the leaf. I have seen two such pieces.
S. Chulkovo, Ramenskiy district of the Moscow region.
Maybe someone knows what it is?

Search in Plusiinae or Actinae, trabealis is very similar

This post was edited by svm2 - 26.07.2012 09: 07
Likes: 2

26.07.2012 10:49, vasiliy-feoktistov

That's disgusting! wall.gif Already in the Arctic, Hyles gallii caterpillars are easily dragged into offices with ivan tea!
And I can't find their reptiles in the Moscow region for 8 years. mad.gif All kipreyniki and bedsteads in Chulkovo and Petelino climbed-no, for the life of you! There are a lot of medium-sized wines, even a toothwing was caught, but these ones don't seem to exist in nature. only yesterday in Chulkovo I found the first caterpillar, and not at all on cypress and bedstraw, but like on veronica (now I'm checking on the branch of botanists), which does not seem to be listed anywhere in its forage plants.
  shuffle.gif Sorry for the offtop, but I really wanted to let off steam!

Why should I look for them in the Moscow region? This year it is especially full (in the east and south, according to my observations). I saw the first one this year on May 16 in Beloomut and since then I have constantly seen imagos day and night confused.gif
Here is a photo of the ex. who complained about the light to my balcony in the center of Zheleznodorozhny on the night of June 19-20 of this year. A very common hawk moth.

Pictures:
picture: galii.jpg
galii.jpg — (123.52к)

26.07.2012 11:47, AGG

I have a mutant again! confused.gif
It seems like a moth, but I didn't find it anywhere on the sites. Yes, and the moth is strange - three pairs of pseudopods (although I'm not sure about the "tail" ones). And she didn't behave like a typical moth. When touched, it instantly curled up into a ball and fell off the leaf. I have seen two such pieces.
S. Chulkovo, Ramenskiy district of the Moscow region.
Maybe someone knows what it is?
a. picture: ___________01.1.JPG
b. picture: ___________01.2.JPG

? http://www.lepidoptera.pl/show.php?ID=820&country=RU

26.07.2012 14:21, OlgaC

Hello!
Yesterday we found on the grass a caterpillar of a linden hawk moth (south-west Lithuania), pink, with a purple stripe in spots, with a blue horn - in short, beautiful. Today we returned to the same place, did not find any, on the trees too, although I was wrong-I was looking for a pink one, they are probably still green there(I shook the branches, no one fell). Can you tell me where else you can find such people, based on your experience? Yes, near the place where they were released, I found a hole (after 10 minutes), with a suitable diameter, are they burrowing? Today is July 26, maybe it's not the season anymore? And yet, a month ago in the kindergarten room I saw a black fluffy caterpillar, 10-12 cm long, whose could it be, and where to look for such?(South-west of Lithuania)

This post was edited by OlgaC - 26.07.2012 14: 58

26.07.2012 15:37, Victor Titov

Hello!
Yesterday we found on the grass a caterpillar of a linden hawk moth (south-west Lithuania), pink, with a purple stripe in spots, with a blue horn - in short, beautiful...next to the place where they were released, I found a hole (after 10 minutes), with a suitable diameter, are they burrowing?

Yes, hawk moth caterpillars pupate in the soil.

And yet, a month ago in the kindergarten room I saw a black fluffy caterpillar, 10-12 cm long, whose could it be, and where to look for such?(South-west of Lithuania)

Olga, are you serious or are you kidding me? Well, then... wink.gif A month ago, I saw a girl who was about 165-170 centimeters tall, with long black hair and fluffy eyelashes. Can you tell me whose it could be, where to look for such people? (South-west of the Yaroslavl region) shuffle.gif
Okay, no kidding, do some research on this site http://lepidoptera.ru/ in the caterpillars of cocoonworms, and "Google" for the same name. Maybe you'll get lucky. Here, for example: http://www.google.ru/search?q=%D0%B3%D1%83...iw=1247&bih=779

This post was edited by Dmitrich - 26.07.2012 15: 42

26.07.2012 16:50, OlgaC

Yes, hawk moth caterpillars pupate in the soil.

Olga, are you serious or are you kidding me? Well, then... wink.gif A month ago, I saw a girl who was about 165-170 centimeters tall, with long black hair and fluffy eyelashes. Can you tell me whose it could be, where to look for such people? (South-west of the Yaroslavl region) shuffle.gif


If I dig up a chrysalis and bring it home, how to store it, and how long it will take for the butterfly to hatch, can you tell me? smile.gif (Oh yes, at what approximate depth to look for? They are rare, in general, everything is so difficult... smile.gif)

Well, your girl is also quite bright, but the average height smile.gifis Still such a huge black hairy in the middle lane is not so much (caterpillars: D), I was hoping that someone would recognize... She was sitting in the seam of the skin in the dark (before pupation?), then disappeared, apparently the staff was repressing in horror.

26.07.2012 17:18, Gansucha

Ukraine, Rivne region, June 3.
An unidentified object (subject?) that attracted the ants ' attention:
user posted image
Likes: 1

26.07.2012 18:57, bials

  ? http://www.lepidoptera.pl/show.php?ID=820&country=RU

AGG thank you very much. I don't think it's Euclidia mi, but you gave me the idea to dig into the scoops for lepiforum.de and here's what I found there:
http://www.lepiforum.de/cgi-bin/lepiwiki.p...ontia_Trabealis
1st caterpillar in the last row, almost an exact copy of mine (only younger) - do you agree?

26.07.2012 19:04, bials

Search in Plusiinae or Actinae, trabealis is very similar

Vasiliy. Sorry, I didn't notice your post right away, because I was the first to come across Roman's post. But as you can see, I came to the same conclusion that you wrote. In my opinion, this is really a caterpillar of Acontia trabealis. Thank you so much for your help.

26.07.2012 19:07, bials

Why should I look for them in the Moscow region? This year it is especially full (in the east and south, according to my observations). I saw the first one this year on May 16 in Beloomut and since then I have constantly seen imagos day and night confused.gif
Here is a photo of the ex. who complained about the light to my balcony in the center of Zheleznodorozhny on the night of June 19-20 of this year. A very common hawk moth.

Vasily, the fact is that butterflies flew to my world in bulk. But with such an abundance of imagos, no matter how carefully I searched, I didn't find any caterpillars anywhere. That's the problem.

26.07.2012 20:45, Sungaya

Ukraine, Rivne region, June 3.
Is it possible to say something about these caterpillars (as far as I understand, scoops):
Orthosia incerta ?


Also as an option, O. gothica
Likes: 1

28.07.2012 19:33, Елизавета Рысенкова

Torzhoksky district, Tver region.
1. 12.07.2012 Tell me, please, what kind of "gluttons"? They ate all the shrubs.
picture: DSCN4681_.jpg
2. And whose caterpillar is this?
1.07.2009.
picture: IMGP3240_.jpg

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