8 October 2012
7 October 2012 – Growing
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Yellow-tail (Euproctis similis)? |
The caterpillars continue to grow and their identity remains uncertain. When the eggs were laid they were covered with hairs – which is a characteristic of the Lymantriidae family. The hairs were brown, not yellow, but the larvae seem to look more like the Yellow-tail than the Brown-tail. The orange colour is really very bright – especially the two protruding lumps next to the head.
This group photograph shows their discarded skins and the remaining eight or nine larvae in various stages of development.
This caterpillar news replaces a proper mothblog because there is so little to report. Last night the temperature fell and the resulting globules of ice on the lawn give an indication as to how cold it was. A Pink-barred Sallow, four Green-brindled Crescents, a Large Yellow Underwing and two Angle Shades – nothing more. How will the bats fare?
Recent Moths
- Rise of the AI Naturalist
- Best Moths for a Haunted Abbey
- The Real and Fake Deaths of Moths
- The Colonizers of Yorkshire
- Glamour in the Dark: Two Newcomers Arrive at Shandy Hall
- 25 July 2023 – Collective Noun for Hawkmoths
- MOTH LIST to August 2023 with links
- 28 July 2023 – TRIPLE New Species Alert!
- 18 July 2023 – A Golden…Plusia!
- 13 July 2023 – Arts and Sciences
- 10 July 2023 – Rise of the Yellow Underwings
- 4 July 2023 – Cold-weather Catch