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Notodontidae from the Moscow region

Community and ForumInsects imagesNotodontidae from the Moscow region

Pavel Morozov, 30.07.2007 22:25

Here are some Moscow region tufts.
1-Phalera bucephala (full face)
2 - Pterostoma palpinum
3 - Odonthosia carmelita
4 - Stauropus fagi
5 - Drymonia ruficormis
6 - Drymonia dodonaea

This post was edited by Morozzz - 30.07.2007 23: 16

Pictures:
picture: Notodontdae3_copy.jpg
Notodontdae3_copy.jpg — (483.38к)

Comments

30.07.2007 22:28, Zhuk

Cool, cool, cool!:). I love crested women. Where 3,5,6 were photographed?

30.07.2007 22:30, Pavel Morozov

1-Phalera bucephala (profile)
2 - Clostera curtula
3 - Clostera anachoreta
4 - Clostera pigra
5 - Gluphisia crenata

This post was edited by Morozzz - 30.07.2007 23: 15

Pictures:
picture: Notodontdae5_copy.jpg
Notodontdae5_copy.jpg — (301.53к)

Likes: 4

30.07.2007 22:31, Pavel Morozov

Cool, cool, cool!:). I love crested women. Where 3,5,6 were photographed?

At the dacha. No. 2 photographed at the Omar dacha near Beloyomut (there are a lot of them there)

30.07.2007 22:32, Zhuk

Here's a banal shark I can't catch. Previously caught, but now the couple is gone.

30.07.2007 22:35, Pavel Morozov

1-Pheosia tremula
2-Notodonta dromedarius
3-Peridea anceps (battered, true)
4 - Pheosia gnoma
5 - Notodonta torva
6 - Notodonta ziczac

Uv. and Dor. Forum participants! please add photos of other crested cats. I'd appreciate it.

Pictures:
picture: Notodontdae4_copy.jpg
Notodontdae4_copy.jpg — (472.14к)

Likes: 3

30.07.2007 22:36, Zhuk

At the dacha. No. 2 photographed at the Omar dacha near Beloyomut (there are a lot of them there)

I also had enough of Pterostoma palpinum this year. I caught a female for the first time. But Drymonia ruficormis, dodonaea and curtula finally no frown.gif

30.07.2007 22:38, Pavel Morozov

to Zhuk: Thank you for your feedback. I myself adore crested women (I am most actively engaged in them). In general, I consider them the standard of moths: excessive volostaost, excellent patronizing coloration and excellent indicators of "arrival" to the light.
Likes: 2

30.07.2007 22:40, Zhuk

That's for sure! Still volnyanki on this place pritenduyut smile.gif.
Have you ever caught Leucodonta bicoloria in the MO?

30.07.2007 22:42, Pavel Morozov

I also had enough of Pterostoma palpinum this year. I caught a female for the first time. But Drymonia ruficormis, dodonaea and curtula are not present yet frown.gif

I also thought so, until I started using a normal lamp to catch it. By the way, if you catch on two lamps of different power (250 and 150 W), including them alternately (see the features of fishing for light), it is the crested ones that fly better, even better, than on the split DRL.
Likes: 1

30.07.2007 22:44, Pavel Morozov

There will also be waves.
Leucodonta bicoloria came across me at my dacha in June 2003 (a dacha near Zvenigorod). This butterfly loves birch trees.
Likes: 1

30.07.2007 22:47, Zhuk

Soon in the photos of collections I will post photos of my khokhlatok, volnyanok and something else. Now I'm gradually restoring them.

30.07.2007 22:48, Pavel Morozov

It all depends on the choice of place where you are going to catch. Turn on a light bulb in a birch tree at the right time, and it will be swarmed by heaps of Furcula and Leucodonta. Ptilodon capucina and Peridea anceps will obviously be abundant in the oak forests, and there is a chance for Harpyia milhauseri.
And if some butterfly does not fly nifiga or once or twice caught, in the right place it will arrive in a herd.

30.07.2007 22:50, Pavel Morozov

In fact, in the Moscow region, only one crested bird is not the most common - this is Harpyia milhauseri.
Likes: 1

30.07.2007 23:02, Pavel Morozov

The crested family is not very extensive, but about thirty species live in the Moscow region.
In Primorye - about ninety! What can we say about this, when last year (just exactly a year ago we arrived) we collected 16 species in a week not in the best place at the end of July: Rhabtala cristata, Rhabtala splendida, Phalera assimilis, Peridea oberthuri, Peridea lativitta, Peridea jankovskii, Peridea graeseri, Semidonta biloba, Fentonia ocypete, Suzukiana cinerea, Allodonta plebeja, hemifentonia mandschurica, Harpyia umbrosa, Ptilodon hoegei, Spatalia plusiotis, Gonoclostera timoniorum.

31.07.2007 8:33, omar

What is the difference between a tremula and a gnome?

31.07.2007 13:40, Ilia Ustiantcev

Can they fly to summer villages? And then I at myself at the dacha in MO for all life saw two tufts: "dnyuyushchy" cerura vinula and arrived on light of Pterostoma palpinum.

31.07.2007 15:48, Pavel Morozov

What is the difference between a tremula and a gnome?

Now I'll post a comparative photo.

31.07.2007 15:49, Pavel Morozov

Can they fly to summer villages? And then I have at my dacha in MO in my whole life I have seen two tufts: "dnyuyuschuyu" cerura vinula and arrived at the light of Pterostoma palpinum.

They fly very well. The main thing is that the lamp should be visible far away.

31.07.2007 16:00, Pavel Morozov

Please, both types. Top is P. tremula (t), bottom is P. gnoma (G).

Pictures:
picture: tremula_gnoma.jpg
tremula_gnoma.jpg — (95.35к)

Likes: 1

31.07.2007 16:03, Zhuk

Here are 2 more pictures of gnomes from last weekend:
user posted image
user posted image
Likes: 4

13.08.2007 15:09, AntSkr

Does the Cerura vinula fly in the second generation? I haven't heard it anywhere, but I saw it myself last year, and it was born at the end of August.
And whether it is possible to find out the deadlines for the summer of crested women in all generations in the Moscow region.

This post was edited by AntSkr - 08/13/2007 15: 53

13.08.2007 15:18, Ilia Ustiantcev

This was the beginning of the craziness of the year... Like red peacock eyes in the Tambov region in August.
Likes: 1

13.08.2007 17:16, PG18

Uv. and Dor. Forum participants! please add photos of other crested cats. I'd appreciate it.


We persuadedsmile.gif them to send me a few missing items that are very rare in the MO (not counting the last one):
1. Pygaera timon
2. Cerura erminea
3. Furcula furcula
4. Furcula bifida (just don't ask me how it differs from prev.smile.gif Although if there are doubts about the definition, I will be glad to make corrections...)
5. Odontosia sieversii
6. Ptilodon capucina
7. Notodota tritopha
8. Pterostoma palpina

Pictures:
picture: 49_Pygaera_timon_DSC_0279_____________.jpg
49_Pygaera_timon_DSC_0279_____________.jpg — (60.53к)

picture: 49_Cerura_erminea_0478_______________.jpg
49_Cerura_erminea_0478_______________.jpg — (43.32к)

picture: 49_FURCULA_FURCULA_DSC_0210_.jpg
49_FURCULA_FURCULA_DSC_0210_.jpg — (36.76к)

picture: 49_Furcula_bifida_0039_______2.jpg
49_Furcula_bifida_0039_______2.jpg — (56.75 k)

picture: 49_Odontosia_sieversii_DSC_0069.jpg
49_Odontosia_sieversii_DSC_0069.jpg — (30.03к)

картинка: 49_PTILODON_CAPUCINA_DSC_0174_Snezhinsk.jpg
49_PTILODON_CAPUCINA_DSC_0174_Snezhinsk.jpg — (42.36к)

picture: 49_Pterostoma_palpina_0114__________.jpg
49_Pterostoma_palpina_0114__________.jpg — (51.25к)

Likes: 7

13.08.2007 17:32, svm2

If anyone wants to ask the differences, let them look here
http://www.lepiforum.de/cgi-bin/forum.pl?read=34288
Likes: 2

13.08.2007 17:47, PG18

If anyone wants to ask the differences, let them look here
http://www.lepiforum.de/cgi-bin/forum.pl?read=34288

If these illustrations are enough for you, please state the key, at least for these two (and preferably all three) types. I'd really appreciate it.

13.08.2007 17:52, PG18

And some people also highlight the interlude eek.gif

Pictures:
picture: 49_FURCULA_intermedia_0098__________.jpg
49_FURCULA_intermedia_0098__________.jpg — (58.45к)

Likes: 7

13.08.2007 19:07, AntSkr

I can post later (most likely in September) a photo of a straightened Notodota tritophus (now it is being straightened), caught on August 8. For a long time, the tufts on the straighteners dry... not like scoops...

13.08.2007 20:23, PG18

I can post later (most likely in September) a photo of a straightened Notodota tritophus (now it is being straightened), caught on August 8. For a long time, the tufts on the straighteners dry... not like scoops...


Oh, didn't I put her out? Here:

Pictures:
picture: 49__Notodota_tritopha_0305_______0.jpg
49__Notodota_tritopha_0305_______0.jpg — (42.3к)

Likes: 2

13.08.2007 20:33, AntSkr

I noticed that Notodota tritophus is the most variable of all the Notodota species. In all the photos, they are different... PG18, you, for example, have very light wings in the photo. Usually only the middle field is light, the rest of the wing is almost black... Or it depends on the temperature in which the pupa was...

13.08.2007 21:17, PG18

I noticed that Notodota tritophus is the most variable of all the Notodota species. In all the photos, they are different... PG18, you, for example, have very light wings in the photo. Usually only the middle field is light, the rest of the wing is almost black... Or it depends on the temperature in which the pupa was...

I don't know... I'm still quite new to this (Heterocera) front. I can only specify that this is a FEMALE of the FIRST generation.

13.08.2007 21:35, AntSkr

I didn't see any females of the first generations. Only the second one. In general, they are rare in the Moscow region. Especially females. Mostly males come to the world, females are much less common.

03.09.2007 20:06, AntSkr

Morozzz, could you post photos of straightened tufts (a similar question for seaside tufts in the next topic).

03.09.2007 20:10, Pavel Morozov

Well, they will be a separate topic, both Moscow and Primorye.

16.06.2015 14:50, Alexander73

Notodonta tritopha, ♀
Moscow region, Domodedovo district, pos. Vostryakovo, June 15, on the light.

Pictures:
picture: P1120725.JPG
P1120725.JPG — (299.77к)

Likes: 1

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