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A butterfly with yellow slime on it

Community and ForumInsects breedingA butterfly with yellow slime on it

Tyomochkin, 08.05.2006 11:03

People I have a butterfly out! It's got kakayata slime on it! What should I do with it? Yellow stuff! Please respond!

Comments

08.05.2006 14:04, RippeR

What's a butterfly to start with?? How does the mucus spread, all over the body, on the wings, or just on the abdomen? Did you spread your wings at least, or are they also covered with what?

08.05.2006 17:03, Tyomochkin

People, I brought out a wine hawk moth from its chrysalis, I suffered... The butterfly spread its wings, and hcij... I tore off her paw and yellow mucus is leaking out of her mouth! I'm in a panic! Will she survive these symptoms? Don't know?

09.05.2006 21:12, RippeR

1) Who was brought out of the hawk moth pupa-flies or wasps? lol.gif (just kidding)
2) Why do you need a live hawk moth, while it is whole-better.. Even though it's none of my business..
3) Where is her mouth?? Or do you mean the proboscis? Then she vomits, she ate something wrong.. smile.gif And in general I do not know what it zheltoslizit..
4) And from the torn off paw it will not be very bad.. There is a paw - no, it does not even think about it.. Her main goal is to devour, to make offspring..well, then plant a tree, build a house, well, like everyone smile.gifelse

10.05.2006 11:04, Tigran Oganesov

Photos would, of course. Maybe it's a hemolymph.

10.05.2006 15:21, Helene

eek.gif I've never seen anything like it... I didn't even hear it confused.gif
Maybe a virus of some kind-a thread?
Photos to the studio! umnik.gif

10.05.2006 18:27, Tyomochkin

It was most likely some remnants of the chrysalis. And the butterfly (wine hawk moth) died! She didn't survive. I almost cried frown.gif frown.gif frown.gif frown.gif frown.gif frown.gif

This post was edited by Tyomochin - 05/10/2006 18: 27

10.05.2006 21:17, Ju-lia

Don't worry. It can now be straightened.
The main thing is that you brought it out. And the first pancake is always lumpy.

10.05.2006 21:26, Tyomochkin

So that's the point! This yellow slime (((((((my friends drove it into my head that this slime she may need)))))))) withered and"""" corroded """" wing!
I wrote somewhere on the forum-she spread and dried her wings, and then flew into the mirror and the paw came off! But it will go to the amateur collection! There will be a memory of the first bred butterfly! smile.gif smile.gif smile.gif lol.gif
And you don't know anything about the topic (below this - cocoons).

This post was edited by Tyomochin - 05/10/2006 21: 27

12.05.2006 11:50, Helene

It was most likely some remnants of the chrysalis. And the butterfly (wine hawk moth) died! She didn't survive. I almost cried frown.gif  frown.gif  frown.gif  frown.gif  frown.gif  frown.gif

Look, it really looks like a disease... Interestingly, by the way: I've never really heard that the symptoms appear in adults immediately after leaving the pupa (as a rule, the caterpillars become infected and soon die).
Tyomochin, please take a picture of your butterfly with a "corroded" wing. And then, maybe, we can transfer it to a place where virologists will see?

12.05.2006 15:57, Nilson

Brazhnikovsky flu!!! Photos, pliz.

12.05.2006 17:36, Tyomochkin

I took a picture of a butterfly, including this yellow fentiflya. Well, that's unrealistic! On the same day, the camera broke!

15.05.2006 1:01, taler

Interesnaya tema...Izvini,no tozhe pomo4 ne mogu-ni razu ne stalkivalsya.Zato teper budu znat,4to takoe slu4aetsya i 4to s etim dolgo ne zhivut umnik.gif

15.05.2006 19:31, Катя Л.

Yeah, bad luck to you...the butterfly probably looks like this:user posted image?
Sorry...But I can't help you.

16.05.2006 0:45, RippeR

They scoffed and ran away lol.gif
And the guy suffered smile.gif

This is actually the fault of pesticides-the caterpillar got drunk on leaves with muck, and then it threw up how much (I can only imagine how it turned up right while it was in the pupa. Vyrotoit turns up, but can not turn smile.gifout )
Oh, these butterflies - like little children-put all sorts of nasty things in their mouths.. not edible after lol.gifall

16.05.2006 12:03, Helene

I took a picture of a butterfly, including this yellow fentiflya. Well, that's unrealistic! On the same day, the camera broke!

Yes really unlucky so unlucky! frown.gif
Let's at least verbally make a specific description of the phenomenon?
Here are some clarifying questions, so that there is something to talk about on occasion with specialists:
1. The butterfly was bred from a caterpillar taken from nature. Was the caterpillar normal? No strange behavior in the late stages such as lethargy, including during pupation?
2. Was the pupa normal (color, movement...)?
3. Did you see the process of exiting the pupa? If so, did it come out easily?
4. Next, the dry residue of your description of the " medical history "(correct if something is wrong): from the natural holes of the butterfly, the same yellow substance of the "mucus" type was released, while the butterfly flew, when it hit the mirror, the paw came off, and again it flowed out of the fragment. By the way, for your information: from healthy butterflies, when hitting the glass, the limbs do not fall off.
5. How long did she live? A day, two?
6. What exactly happened to the wing: how did it get so corroded? A hole, perhaps?

16.05.2006 17:00, sealor

I want to tell you this: when I hatched a bindweed hawk moth, the pupa, which remained standing upright, was filled along the edges with a cloudy yellowish liquid with a viscosity like water. The butterfly came out normally, healthy and viable.

16.05.2006 21:15, Tyomochkin

The pupa was normal, apart from very high activity during the first three days. I saw the end of the process. Everything went fine. She got out, there was slime on her, the butterfly dried up and the slime merged into drops, they dried up, turned black, and then fell off along with the part of the wing on which they were. Lived for 2 days. And I do not know about the falling off of the limbs.

This post was edited by Tyomochin - 05/16/2006 21: 17
Likes: 1

17.05.2006 13:24, Helene

About falling off the limbs here is your post:

So that's the point! This yellow slime (((((((my friends drove it into my head that this slime she may need)))))))) withered and"""" corroded """" wing!
I wrote somewhere on the forum-she spread and dried her wings, and then flew into the mirror and the paw came off! But it will go to the amateur collection! There will be a memory of the first bred butterfly! smile.gif  smile.gif  smile.gif  lol.gif
And you don't know anything about the topic (below this - cocoons).

17.05.2006 13:25, Helene

And here - about the release of mucus from the inside:

People, I brought out a wine hawk moth from its chrysalis, I suffered... The butterfly spread its wings, and hcij... I tore off her paw and yellow mucus is leaking out of her mouth! I'm in a panic! Will she survive these symptoms? Don't know?

17.05.2006 19:20, guest: а

Yes cho you just scare each other with a butterfly gripe. They simply tore off the butterfly's leg, and since it is young, it died from loss of blood, which all flowed out and stuck to the wing. Molting butterflies should not be touched in any case, until they get stronger, a few days.

17.05.2006 21:20, Tyomochkin

At the expense of slime, it's a virus, sort of. I've heard this from my friends. And at the expense of the paw:
It's my fault I didn't figure out about the mirror. Figurative expression.

18.05.2006 11:31, Helene

At the expense of slime, it's a virus, sort of. I've heard this from my friends. And at the expense of the paw:
It's my fault I didn't figure out about the mirror. Figurative expression.

No one is accusing you of anything! smile.gif It's just strange that the foot fell off from hitting the glass: usually the legs are stronger, the butterfly is more likely to break the edge of the wings or erase the pubescence on the back.
In general, if you keep live butterflies at home, especially such flyers as hawkmoth, such things should be provided for - they fight against anything. But I don't know how to foresee it. At the Department of Entomology of Moscow State University, there are guys who grow hawk moth. You can consult them.

23.12.2006 0:02, Tyomochkin

And here's the damage. The same ones on the second wing, in the middle.

File/s:



___________.bmp

size: 777.71 k
number of downloads: 16
22.12.2006-05.01.2007







___________2.bmp

size: 158.18 k
number of downloads: 14
22.12.2006-05.01.2007




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