E-mail: Password: Create an Account Recover password

About Authors Contacts Get involved Русская версия

show

Insecta.pro Community

Pages: 1 ...551 552 553 554 555 556 557 558 559... 627

06.05.2012 14:03, БоюсьЖуков: comment on Bugs on the balcony

it's just that we only have seedlings and far enough from the house and windows, so I wonder where they came from...but for the info thank you

06.05.2012 8:26, Olga Averyanova: comment on photo #11532

:) Neither do I. Agree with you, many times I shot myself in the foot using its info of orchids.

05.05.2012 20:29, Lev Bely: comment on Bradley Elementary School (South Carolina) students released butterflies

The bee was always the mascot at Bradley Elementary School in Columbia, South Carolina, but last Friday it went on a small vacation. That Friday turned for a while into a butterfly day. Few weeks ago the 2nd grade students started raising butterflies to release them in the end some time later. Veronica Draft, a 3rd—5th grade teacher working with autistic children, hopes students that ...

05.05.2012 15:11, Peter Khramov: comment on photo #12277

Imago stage photos lack too. In fact, we've got not lots of some. So they are needed too. To. Upload.

05.05.2012 12:41, Dmitriy Pozhogin: comment on photo #3113

Thanks!

04.05.2012 19:09, Vasiliy Feoktistov: comment on photo #12557

Its wingspan is about 6cm (measured with a ruler). Bigger than those average I caught before. Most curious that I literally forgot its pupa that was left in the soil on a sill with no any care. Whatsoever, one morning I just saw it sitting over there!

04.05.2012 17:50, Vasiliy Feoktistov: comment on photo #12558

The underside of the female on #12557 photo.

04.05.2012 17:21, Peter Khramov: comment on photo #12524

The vulture goes to "identified successfully".

04.05.2012 17:21, Peter Khramov: comment on photo #12519

Moved to "identified successfully".

04.05.2012 17:21, Peter Khramov: comment on photo #12520

Moved to "identified successfully".

04.05.2012 17:20, Peter Khramov: comment on photo #12521

What a pokemon.

04.05.2012 10:00, Alexandr Zhakov: comment on photo #12522

Yes, this is Orthosia miniosa.

02.05.2012 22:00, Lev Bely: comment on “The caterpillar is not so hideous as its venom”, South Florida would say

We obviously get more cautious when we spot a wasp, bee or spider. Better take care, anyone could prudently think. Though you may easily add to this “could-be-dangerous” list one more critter that is a bright, colorful caterpillar innocently creeping up your hibiscus tree. Be sure, its venom could bring you most severe pain. There are four caterpillar species in South Florida having ...

02.05.2012 21:33, Peter Khramov: comment on photo #12542

Moved.

02.05.2012 19:13, Peter Khramov: comment on photo #12548

Goes to.

02.05.2012 19:13, Peter Khramov: comment on photo #12549

Wow. You seem to be coworking with Dmitry... Moved.

02.05.2012 18:34, Peter Khramov: comment on photo #12096

As the species is not databased yet, still we've got time to name it...

02.05.2012 0:21, Dmitriy Pozhogin: comment on Catopsilia pomona

synonyms.

01.05.2012 20:53, Lev Bely: comment on “Scoop net”-optera versus Lepidoptera: Part II

Done.

29.04.2012 20:08, Lev Bely: comment on Reading: few more decent butterfly books

Modern bookstores are ready to offer you a full range of whatsoever butterfly books from a thin brochure to a large heavy volume that might tell about anything but the butterflies. Yet a good home library should be rather made up of best and worth reading stuff what we're about to review right now. British Moths & Butterflies by Chris Manley (ISBN 9 780713 686364) is an illustrated ...

27.04.2012 20:58, Lev Bely: comment on The butterfly collection at the California Academy of Sciences

The California Academy of Sciences found in 1853 has a world's largest biological collection of over than 20 million specimens including 17 million insects. The video underneath gives an interesting short review from an Entomology Department Collections Manager Norman Penny who tells about amazing iridescent morpho butterflies (Morpho), Queen Alexandra's Birdwing butterfly (Ornithoptera ...

26.04.2012 21:17, Peter Khramov: comment on photo #4605

Bah, that's right. Updated.

26.04.2012 16:28, IchMan: comment on Ichneumon wasps

species of the tribe Polysphinctini (Hymenoptera, Ichneumonidae, Pimplinae)Alexander, this tribe has already been abolished. Polysphinctini Hellén, 1915 is now considered a junior synonym of Ephialtini Hellén, 1915 (Wahl & Gauld 1998), which includes the informal Polysphincta genus-group, which includes spider ectoparasites.

25.04.2012 13:19, Dmitriy Pozhogin: comment on photo #4126

Some of those moths fly in the daytime.

25.04.2012 13:19, Dmitriy Pozhogin: comment on 1st Butterfly Day to be celebrated in Moscow, Russia, on May 1

Irina Ishkhanovna won't practice such a nonsense.

25.04.2012 13:15, Dmitriy Pozhogin: comment on photo #8024

Gah, there's the rub!

25.04.2012 0:43, Peter Khramov: comment on Photos uploading

Due to the taxa databases underwent synchronization, photos uploading was temporarily disabled hence photos could be signed wrongly. The synchronization now is finished both as to databases of the Russian and English versions of the website, so users of the English version may upload photos in the usual way.

24.04.2012 18:21, Peter Khramov: comment on photo #12384

Goes to A. aristolochiae.

24.04.2012 18:20, Peter Khramov: comment on photo #12383

Moved to A. aristolochiae.

24.04.2012 18:18, Peter Khramov: comment on photo #12387

Goes to.

24.04.2012 18:18, Peter Khramov: comment on photo #12385

Thanks, moved.

24.04.2012 1:24, Peter Khramov: comment on New URLs

Previously wrongly linked families in "Hot butterflies and moths" section now fixed.

23.04.2012 23:27, Peter Khramov: comment on photo #12419

Wow. Right snap!

23.04.2012 16:58, Lev Bely: comment on Storms showered Nebraska (USA) with butterflies

Strong storms moved through the Midwest (USA) lately and brought unwelcome guests to Nebraska. Leon Highley, an entomologist from the University of Nebraska-Lincoln, said that butterflies and moths which presently flutter around Lincoln and Lancaster County were carried with a recent storm from Gulf Coast. One day later, Highley found a dead painted lady butterfly (Vanessa) on campus. “My ...

22.04.2012 22:22, headshotboy: comment on Who do you keep in the house?

Oh, shit... Total recall... It's nice to remember-I kept a lot of people...If the larvae of ant lions do not make craters, it is cold and the sand is a little wet, but the temperature is more important. I kept them repeatedly, from the very first ages to imago - without any problems. Cool animals, the main thing is that they don't require much space At +35-38, they even tried to dig frankly ...

22.04.2012 13:35, Peter Khramov: comment on 50 more bugs of the taxonomic tree fixed

Yury, I can perfectly see all recent comments as to photos, topics, species on http://lepidoptera.pro/community page, no worries.

22.04.2012 13:34, Peter Khramov: comment on photo #7895

Moved to Nymphalis vaualbum.

22.04.2012 9:55, fayst79: comment on How to get I. io imago from a pupa?

collect in June, on nettles (usually they live in a cluster) such caterpillars as shown in the picture, on nettles you feed (the pupa is shown here and in the second half of summer you have a butterfly Everything is correct writes Vasily find a good thicket of nettles, usually 50 caterpillars are fed or maybe more.I used to see two species feasting onnettles.

20.04.2012 23:09, Lev Bely: comment on Damien Hirst's great and terrible butterflies

It was butterflies who brought fame to Damien Hirst, a fancy English artist and famous provocateur who in turn demonstrates his devotion putting them in an empty, unanimated windowless space at the Tate Modern gallery* in London, just to amuse idle gapers and tourists. Surrounded by this “fancy” society they are to emerge from their cocoons and die few days later right here, before the eyes ...

20.04.2012 3:16, Peter Khramov: comment on photo #12348

Ok, I suffered.

19.04.2012 23:11, Peter Khramov: comment on photo #12359

Goes to O. incerta.

19.04.2012 23:11, Peter Khramov: comment on photo #12363

Goes to O. incerta.

19.04.2012 23:11, Peter Khramov: comment on photo #12360

Moved to O. incerta.

19.04.2012 23:10, Peter Khramov: comment on photo #12317

Moved out of "undetermined" to O. populeti.

19.04.2012 23:10, Peter Khramov: comment on photo #12316

Leaves "undetermined" for O. populeti.

19.04.2012 23:10, Peter Khramov: comment on photo #12319

Moved out of "undetermined" to O. populeti.

19.04.2012 23:09, Peter Khramov: comment on photo #12318

Moved to O. populeti.

19.04.2012 23:09, Peter Khramov: comment on photo #12349

Goes to O. populeti.

19.04.2012 23:09, Peter Khramov: comment on photo #12351

Moved to O. populeti.

19.04.2012 23:07, Peter Khramov: comment on photo #12313

Goes to.

Next page

Insecta.pro: international entomological community. Terms of use and publishing policy.

Project editor in chief and administrator: Peter Khramov.

Curators: Konstantin Efetov, Vasiliy Feoktistov, Svyatoslav Knyazev, Evgeny Komarov, Stan Korb, Alexander Zhakov.

Moderators: Vasiliy Feoktistov, Evgeny Komarov, Dmitriy Pozhogin, Alexandr Zhakov.

Thanks to all authors, who publish materials on the website.

© Insects catalog Insecta.pro, 2007—2024.

Species catalog enables to sort by characteristics such as expansion, flight time, etc..

Photos of representatives Insecta.

Detailed insects classification with references list.

Few themed publications and a living blog.