caterpiller id please
- Lee Hurrell
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Re: caterpiller id please
I'm afraid I can't see the images?
Cheers
Lee
Cheers
Lee
To butterfly meadows, chalk downlands and leafy glades; to summers eternal.
Re: caterpiller id please
can you see then on my profile? im new to this sorry
- Pete Eeles
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Re: caterpiller id please
Yes, the photos are on your profile. Not sure how you did that!
What is the date, location and foodplant?
Cheers,
- Pete
What is the date, location and foodplant?
Cheers,
- Pete
Life Cycles of British & Irish Butterflies: http://www.butterflylifecycles.com
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Re: caterpiller id please
2 days ago, in Bradford West Yorkshire, not found near any plants, just on path outside my drive
- Trev Sawyer
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Re: caterpiller id please
Difficult to tell as the photos are very small and won't blow up, but they could potentially be Buff Ermine moth caterpillars.
Trev
Trev
Re: caterpiller id please
i thought that aswell trev but most that iv seen have an orange stripe down there side, this one doesnt, very strange indeed
- Trev Sawyer
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Re: caterpiller id please
I reckon I've got it Ivor... Looking at the photos, your caterpillar has a darker end. I initially thought that the dark end was the head end, but if that is the tail end then it would exactly fit the Rosy Footman caterpillar. Google that and see what you think.
There is a picture in "The colour identification guide to caterpillars of the British Isles" by Jim Porter which looks very similar - page 28 (G)
Trev
There is a picture in "The colour identification guide to caterpillars of the British Isles" by Jim Porter which looks very similar - page 28 (G)
Trev
Last edited by Trev Sawyer on Wed Oct 05, 2011 10:14 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Re: caterpiller id please
sorry to say but the dark end is the head end, i think it looks like a white ermine moth caterpillar but it doesnt have any strippes???? it does however have orange feet??
Re: caterpiller id please
i think iv found it!!!!! could it be a great leopard moth caterpillar???? it looks exactly like one but doesnt have red rings when it curls
or a tiger moth caterpillar (arctia caja)
or a tiger moth caterpillar (arctia caja)
- Trev Sawyer
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Re: caterpiller id please
One small problem with the "Great Leopard moth" caterpillar is that it doesn't occur in the UK Ivor (lives in USA) and from what I can see It is dark all over (apart from the red rings on the body segments which you have mentioned). Our "Leopard Moth" in the UK is completely different to that and the caterpillar is a yellowish colour with virtually no hairs at all. The Garden Tiger moth caterpillar has long black hairs on top and brown ones on the side (and I believe would only be very small at this time of year as they hibernate when very young, before continuing their growth after their slumber).
Looking again at your photos, still suggests to me that the caterpillar has black hairs at one end and lighter (grey) ones at the other. I cannot find many photos of the Rosy Footman caterpillar on the web, but here is one:
http://www.lepidoptera.pl/show.php?lang=UK&ID=201 That still looks pretty close to me and these would be around at the moment. Can't think of what else it could be, but if the dark end of the caterpillar is a shadow, maybe someone else might venture a guess?
Trev
Looking again at your photos, still suggests to me that the caterpillar has black hairs at one end and lighter (grey) ones at the other. I cannot find many photos of the Rosy Footman caterpillar on the web, but here is one:
http://www.lepidoptera.pl/show.php?lang=UK&ID=201 That still looks pretty close to me and these would be around at the moment. Can't think of what else it could be, but if the dark end of the caterpillar is a shadow, maybe someone else might venture a guess?
Trev
Re: caterpiller id please
i'll try get another picture on but its about 3cm long, completely black, has 6 feet under its head, 8 under its midrift and 2 under its tail. its tail seems to be wider than its head hope this helps abit more
- Trev Sawyer
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Re: caterpiller id please
I've looked at the new photo and the larger versions of the original ones you posted, but as I'm sure you will agree, they are not really clear enough to make any identifiable characteristics visible Ivor. Your description of the layout of the legs is standard for caterpillars and unfortunately doesn't help to narrow it down. Unless you see a similar one and can get a clearer photo, you may not be able to work out what it is
Having shown a keen interest in identifying the little critter, you have hopefully been drawn a bit deeper into the wonderful world of butterflies and moths and the variety we have in the UK though... So maybe by the next time you see a similar caterpillar, you will be in a better position to put a name to it
Best wishes,
Trev
Having shown a keen interest in identifying the little critter, you have hopefully been drawn a bit deeper into the wonderful world of butterflies and moths and the variety we have in the UK though... So maybe by the next time you see a similar caterpillar, you will be in a better position to put a name to it
Best wishes,
Trev
Re: caterpiller id please
I have examined my caterpiller again but outside this time in natural sun light and have noticed something i overlooked down each side just above its feet it is infact a very dark brown colour and found an identical picture on this websitehttp://somethingscrawlinginmyhair.com/2 ... terpillar/. Indeed i have grown very intersted, i have even started looking into which plants and flowers attract weird and wonderfull caterpillers to my garden
Thank you everyone
John
Thank you everyone
John
Re: caterpiller id please
i have now taken a picture with a digital camera so you can see it better, i think it will explain alot
- Trev Sawyer
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Re: caterpiller id please
Aha!
That looks like a Cream Spot Tiger moth caterpillar (Arctia villica). With the coloured feet you mentioned, it would have looked like this?...
http://ukmoths.org.uk/show.php?id=1329
Trev
That looks like a Cream Spot Tiger moth caterpillar (Arctia villica). With the coloured feet you mentioned, it would have looked like this?...
http://ukmoths.org.uk/show.php?id=1329
Trev
Re: caterpiller id please
it took a while but we finaly got there, and by the sounds of it this one wont become an adult till may/june, thanks and ill keep u posted when it does.
- Trev Sawyer
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Re: caterpiller id please
Yeayy!... and the wait will be worth it - they are spectacular-looking moths John.
Trev
Trev