I should not be surprise to see you here.....heh heh....since you shoot many butts! Good to see you!Originally Posted by stingrey
I should not be surprise to see you here.....heh heh....since you shoot many butts! Good to see you!Originally Posted by stingrey
Let's wait for Dr Kendricks to come in and help ID this critter...
Nice cage!
Hi Tchuanye ,
Interesting Cat you have there....
hmm maybe fluorite can help too...
Hi Tchuanye ,
Welcome to BC.
Great shots there. So have you seen the final "cage" ?
Federick Ho
www.peacockroyal.blogspot.com
Thanks! Unfortunately have not seen the final cage.
But some have said that the cat will build a cocoon in the cage rather than the cage being the final cocoon.....can't confirm that.
Hi All,
Can't really tell from the front view.
CY - could you take a side (lateral) shot - this would give a view of the prepupal larva that shows the whole animal in focus.
There are several groups that have been observed to create these lattice like structures before pupating, namely Atteva and Plutella spp. (family Yponomeutidae) and Cyana spp. (Arctiidae). Your larva looks bigger than any of these and the lattice work is very different. I wonder if it is an Arctiidae though - some of the species are called woolly bears owing to the profligate amount of long hairs they sport in the larval stages. Other options might be in Lymantriidae or even Lasiocampidae.
May have to await the adult's emergence to get a firm i/d, though.
cheers,
Roger.
Roger C. KENDRICK Ph.D.
C & R Wildlife, Lam Tsuen, Tai Po, N.T., Hong Kong S.A.R.
HK Moths website: http://www.hkmoths.com
HK Moths Recording Project on i-Naturalist: http://www.inaturalist.org/projects/hong-kong-moths
HK Moths Flickr site: http://www.flickr.com/groups/hongkongmoths/
Wow, thanks for the info. Here is a side view. Hope this can confirm the ID.Originally Posted by hkmoths