Community and Forum → All comments feed
All the latest comments on topics, photos and species on the site in reverse chronological order.
Show: All comments in a row. All comments, except for the technical ones.
Pages: 1 ...91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99... 218
While there is this feature, I add here photo of its biotope. Biotope of this species is thinned pine plantings with some rare raspberries which had larvae concentrated in them.
This page is a duplicate of this here: http://lepidoptera.ru/taxonomy/7125 Reserves subject to immediate removal.
This page is a duplicate of this here: http://lepidoptera.ru/taxonomy/22421 Reserves must be removed.
Vasily, I see the ID is correct. Only this species has such outer margin whilst two others have a narrow dark sripe between the white band and the curved outer band. Here it's wide instead :)
:) Blur... Aesthetics... Photoshop rules :) ACDSee has some special button, I tried that two years ago, quickly got fed up, also didn't see where to use such thing.
So Notodontidae...... Myself I added here three Notodontidae from Moscow region, had no idea........... Shame on me :( Wasted half yesterday to find.....
Eddie, thanks for the tip. Please unsubscribe at other times comments to leave it on the pages of these specific delivery.
Biologists wondered a lot why sloths known for their extraordinary inactivity came off trees... for a toilet procedures. Whilst these mysterious critters are evidently in more safe when staying atop rather then being down on the forest floor, once a week they still leave their secure monastery and descend on the floor. Some even have favourite trees to come again and again with their toilet ...
Vladimir, I wanted to ask you, please don't mark the checkboxes "confidently/tentatively" (don't use anyway that part of the upload form), same with not identified specimens, don't confirm them as there are bugs following. Thanks a lot for your pics, very helpful :)
Thanks, I though I collected all them out.......... And here is this. Congratulations! Considering current climate changes, we may see the areal spread :)
I noticed yesterday that chronological lapse. First there was a confirmation of the ID, then the very ID. Though that was just mere technical bug.
Why it's still there, the author noted that during upload, so the author is identifier whilst Alexandr did confirm.
Apparently there is still a discussion about the distribution of bicruris and capsincola. If we follow the Fauna Europaea, then the photos of the species of Serbia should be capsincola and not bicruris.
If there was no dissection of the genitalia, then it is impossible to make a difference between secalis and secalella.
A thumbnail could be placed by the Hemiceratinae subfamily to indicate that there are species shown.