Search found 15 matches
- Mon Aug 28, 2023 4:08 am
- Forum: Open Topics
- Topic: Plastazote Bottoms for Cornell Drawers
- Replies: 3
- Views: 755
Re: Plastazote Bottoms for Cornell Drawers
Sheets of plastazote can also be bought from the UK entomological equipment supplier Watkins & Doncaster at www.watdon.co.uk.
- Mon Aug 28, 2023 3:53 am
- Forum: Open Topics
- Topic: Plastazote Bottoms for Cornell Drawers
- Replies: 3
- Views: 755
Re: Plastazote Bottoms for Cornell Drawers
The Canadian entomological equipment supplier atelierjeanpaquet.com sells sheets of plastazote.
- Mon Jul 24, 2023 5:11 am
- Forum: Lepidoptera
- Topic: always learning- ova hatch times
- Replies: 3
- Views: 693
Re: always learning- ova hatch times
I happened to see a female Papilio rutulus ovipositing on an ornamental cherry tree. The female happened to lay an egg on a leaf growing low enough on the tree for me to recover it. The egg was laid June 8. It hatched June 17. I reared the caterpillar indoors on Prunus serotina. The caterpillar chan...
- Tue Jul 04, 2023 9:59 pm
- Forum: Lepidoptera
- Topic: Strange Pairing
- Replies: 3
- Views: 773
Re: Strange Pairing
Thanks very much for your reply, John.
In answer to your question, yes, this was a male-to-female pairing. A large, male, Pachysphinx modesta was found paired with a small, female, Paonias myops.
John
In answer to your question, yes, this was a male-to-female pairing. A large, male, Pachysphinx modesta was found paired with a small, female, Paonias myops.
John
- Mon Jul 03, 2023 11:25 pm
- Forum: Lepidoptera
- Topic: Strange Pairing
- Replies: 3
- Views: 773
Strange Pairing
A British Columbia lepidopterist on vacation in the interior of the province set up a light trap July 2nd and upon checking it in the morning found something unexpected. He found a female Paonias myops (a small species of hawk moth) paired with a male of the very much larger hawk moth species Pachys...
- Fri Jun 09, 2023 6:49 pm
- Forum: Lepidoptera
- Topic: Polyamorous Polyphemus?
- Replies: 4
- Views: 885
Polyamorous Polyphemus?
In early June, a friend and I put a female Hyalophora euryalus moth and a female Hyalophora columbia columbia moth in separate pop-up netting cages and drove them 2-hours northeast of Vancouver, British Columbia, to a location where we knew there to be wild, endemic Hyalophora euryalus moths. (Our f...
- Fri Jun 09, 2023 3:04 pm
- Forum: Lepidoptera
- Topic: Ornamental Cherry as Host Plant
- Replies: 1
- Views: 452
Ornamental Cherry as Host Plant
On the 8th of June here in Vancouver, Canada, I watched a Western Tiger Swallowtail butterfly (Papilio rutulus) laying eggs on the leaves of a very large, very old, ornamental cherry tree growing on a city boulevard. The leaves the butterfly was periodically pausing to lay its eggs on were high over...
- Thu May 25, 2023 4:45 am
- Forum: Insect identification
- Topic: old automeris
- Replies: 2
- Views: 353
Re: old automeris
The female Saturniid pictured is a member of the Saturniid genus Leucanella.
- Thu May 25, 2023 4:23 am
- Forum: Insect identification
- Topic: Peru Saturnids
- Replies: 4
- Views: 598
Re: Peru Saturnids
Your two, somewhat worn, Saturniid specimens from Peru are not an Automeris species. They are in the Saturniid genus Leucanella. They are likely Leucanella contempta contempta.
- Tue Aug 23, 2022 7:26 pm
- Forum: Lepidoptera
- Topic: Method to display already pinned specimens upside down
- Replies: 14
- Views: 527
Re: Method to display already pinned specimens upside down
Or do it in reverse. Run the second insect pin through the small piece of cork first.
- Tue Aug 23, 2022 7:23 pm
- Forum: Lepidoptera
- Topic: Method to display already pinned specimens upside down
- Replies: 14
- Views: 527
Re: Method to display already pinned specimens upside down
Another possibility. Remove the head from your specimen pin. Put some glue on the (now headless) shaft of the pin. Then push the pin into a small piece of cork. Let it set. Then run a second insect pin through the small piece of cork.
- Tue Aug 23, 2022 5:28 pm
- Forum: Lepidoptera
- Topic: Method to display already pinned specimens upside down
- Replies: 14
- Views: 527
Re: Method to display already pinned specimens upside down
If you could find a suitable glue, you could perhaps do the following. Take a fairly stout insect pin, say a number 3, and cut it down to the appropriate length. Remove the head from your specimen pin. Then glue your (now headless) specimen pin to the cut-down number 3 pin.
- Fri Jun 24, 2022 2:04 pm
- Forum: Insect Trading Reports
- Topic: Bad Trade with Otto Feldner
- Replies: 1
- Views: 1205
Bad Trade with Otto Feldner
Otto Feldner (o.feldner@a1.net) is currently running an ad on the Insectnet Classifieds. I recommend caution if you deal with him. In November 2021, I paid Otto Feldner for some overwintering eggs of Neoris huttoni shadulla. He accepted my payment and then told me that he didn’t actually have any Ne...
- Sun Jun 19, 2022 1:28 pm
- Forum: Lepidoptera
- Topic: Historis acheronta
- Replies: 2
- Views: 810
Re: Historis acheronta
Falcate forewings are a wonderful feature of the males of a number of Saturniid moth species, as well. Strongly falcate wings are very attractive, I find.
- Sat Jun 11, 2022 3:24 am
- Forum: Lepidoptera
- Topic: ova viability and animal age
- Replies: 3
- Views: 170
Re: ova viability and animal age
Coincidentally, I have been thinking about the same or very similar question. I rear Saturniid moths and for some time now I have suspected that a female Saturniid's first-laid eggs tend to produce caterpillars that grow better or that are perhaps bigger or more robust than the caterpillars that com...