Cat ID

Discussion forum for getting a butterfly identified.
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Steve W
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Location: Nottinghamshire

Cat ID

Post by Steve W »

Whilst looking on Alder Buckthhorn for Brimstone caterpillars I found several of these. Can anyone help identify?
thanks
Steve
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caterpillars may 2010 006 copy.jpg
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Denise
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Re: Cat ID

Post by Denise »

That looks like a Vapourer to me. :D
see :- http://ukmoths.org.uk/show.php?id=1478
Steve W
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Joined: Fri Aug 24, 2007 8:55 pm
Location: Nottinghamshire

Re: Cat ID

Post by Steve W »

Thanks, that looks like it - strange looking things. The picture in my book wasn't anywhere near as clear.
On closer inspection this is on the pot the tree is sitting in which looks like the female's cocoon, I think.

Should I still be able to find the female or will she be gone now?

thanks
Steve
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vapourer cocoon 001 copy.jpg
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Pete Eeles
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Re: Cat ID

Post by Pete Eeles »

The female will have died after laying her eggs last year.

The old pupal case should still be inside the cocoon though!

Cheers,

- Pete
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Steve W
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Location: Nottinghamshire

Re: Cat ID

Post by Steve W »

So how does the female get there in the first place?
Also if any of these larvae develop into females they will stay roughly in the same area?

Steve
JKT
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Re: Cat ID

Post by JKT »

She climbed there as a caterpillar.

As to the area ... I believe they will fly around as small caterpillars - fly as in "Gone with the wind". :wink:
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Lee Hurrell
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Re: Cat ID

Post by Lee Hurrell »

So are they one of the caterpillars you see hanging from threads of silk when walking through woodlands? Or are those even moths?

I normally get covered in them!

Thanks

Lee
To butterfly meadows, chalk downlands and leafy glades; to summers eternal.
JKT
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Re: Cat ID

Post by JKT »

I think those are something else, but still probably moths - possibly Geometridae caterpillars.

I'm told that these release the silk thread to the wind and then let go. They have no way to control where they land and so it is quite useful to be able to eat almost anything as these are.
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Lee Hurrell
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Re: Cat ID

Post by Lee Hurrell »

Thanks JKT!
Cheers
Lee
To butterfly meadows, chalk downlands and leafy glades; to summers eternal.
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Dave McCormick
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Re: Cat ID

Post by Dave McCormick »

Steve W wrote:So how does the female get there in the first place?
Also if any of these larvae develop into females they will stay roughly in the same area?

Steve
The caterpillar creates the cocoon and pupates inside it, if female, when she hatches out, the female just sits and waits for a male to arrive, she will still be in the cocoon, once mated, she lays eggs on the cocoon and dies (sometimes falls to the ground). Females are wingless and look really different than males and being wingless can't do much else than wait for a male which can fly, mate, lay eggs and die in a short time.
Cheers all,
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