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Puss Moth

Cerura vinula

Species ID Suggestions



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19 Comments

bealeiderman
bealeiderman 10 years ago

They are now very yellow. I posted anew spotting on Wednesday. I will look at the suggested species and change the ID accordingly. Thank you!

ultramohn
ultramohn 10 years ago

I agree with ForestDragon's suggestion. I had missed the statement that Cerula vinula is not found in N. America. On the other hand, bugguide did list Furcula and one other Cerura (scitiscripta) as found in Virginia specifically. Examining the pics in an image search, turned up many more of the red and cream 2nd instar form for Fucula, and more especially, also the yellow and brown form for a 3rd instar, neither of which forms was displayed for the Cerura genus found in Virginia

ForestDragon
ForestDragon 10 years ago

I think there is a very good chance that you are looking at a caterpillar from Genus Furcula. Most of the caterpillars in that Genus look very similar and have overlapping ranges so it might be difficult to tell exactly which one it is. Here is a link:
http://bugguide.net/node/view/283
http://bugguide.net/node/view/283/bgpage... (same genus on the "Browse" tab)

Hope this helps!

ForestDragon
ForestDragon 10 years ago

Hi beacantor, this is a very cool caterpillar! While it does look similar to Cerura vinula, I don't think it is likely since Cerura vinula is not a species found in North America (you can see on the EOL link the locations of where it has been reported to have been found).

There are similar looking caterpillars found in the US and I am looking now for a possible ID but until then you may want to consider leaving this in the unknowns.

Leonardo Castro
Leonardo Castro 10 years ago

Many thanks for the extra information, beacantor!

bealeiderman
bealeiderman 10 years ago

So, for anyone interested, they are about three times the size now, and the green is more like yellow. Still have all the brown markings and the head has not changed.

Love that!! Thank you for sharing this beautiful creature, beacantor

Caleb Steindel
Caleb Steindel 10 years ago

what the heck...?

Jason Alexander
Jason Alexander 10 years ago

Very Amazing! I've never seen this before! Great found beacantor!

bayucca
bayucca 10 years ago

In the scientific field there should only be the scientific name Cerura vinula. The rest you can add in the description section, thanks.

KarenL
KarenL 10 years ago

Nice series!

bealeiderman
bealeiderman 10 years ago

Found it! Cerura vinula. 2nd instar. Stay tuned for updates. I have four of them in a box.

Wow! wonderful!

ultramohn
ultramohn 10 years ago

This moth larvae is either a Drepanidae (cf diff sp, but with similar VERY odd appearance with twin "tails" -- http://www.hkwildlife.net/viewthread.php...) or else a Notodontidae Stauropinae (most of which are not nearly so odd looking, but yet have a similar twin-tail structure -- http://ccs-hk.org/DM/butterfly/Notodont/...).

Dan Doucette
Dan Doucette 10 years ago

What a unique caterpillar!

Leonardo Castro
Leonardo Castro 10 years ago

Incredible! Eager to know the ID too!! Great work, beacantor!

Sintija Valucka
Sintija Valucka 10 years ago

So weird!!!
Amazing!: :))

MartinL
MartinL 10 years ago

this makes me think of a clown

Billo-kun
Billo-kun 10 years ago

<3

bealeiderman
Spotted by
bealeiderman

Virginia, USA

Spotted on Sep 7, 2013
Submitted on Sep 7, 2013

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