Identify my bug, pl...
 

  You don't need to be an 'investor' to invest in Singletrack: 6 days left: 95% of target - Find out more

Identify my bug, please.

15 Posts
10 Users
36 Reactions
232 Views
Posts: 33325
Full Member
Topic starter
 

Just noticed what looks like a caterpillar of some sort, on a Pelargonium I’ve got on the kitchen windowsill. iOS can’t identify it, and I’d like to know if it’s something that I could allow to keep eating holes in the leaves, or chuck it outside to leave to its own devices.


 
Posted : 11/12/2024 10:55 pm
Akers and Akers reacted
Posts: 15315
Full Member
 

It looks very hungry.

Chuck it out.


 
Posted : 11/12/2024 11:15 pm
hardtailonly, Yak, tall_martin and 5 people reacted
Posts: 7086
Full Member
 

Have you got the iNaturalist app?

It's generally better than the iOS and when you add an observation the AI component gets backed up by other users. Sometimes they've corrected observations for me.

I've just used it to identify this as an Australasian side-necked turtle (i'm not convinced). iOS thinks it's a Pond Slider which seems less likely. But now i've uploaded it to iNaturalist someone will verify or correct it.

IMG_9181IMG_9182


 
Posted : 11/12/2024 11:28 pm
Akers and Akers reacted
Posts: 1759
Full Member
 

Has it reached the chocolate cake, ice cream cone, and pickles stage yet ? Or merely on an apple or a couple of pears stage yet ?


 
Posted : 12/12/2024 12:22 am
hightensionline, susepic, hardtailonly and 15 people reacted
Posts: 7086
Full Member
 

Has it reached the...pickles stage yet

Sliced or whole?


 
Posted : 12/12/2024 1:12 am
dyna-ti and dyna-ti reacted
Posts: 33325
Full Member
Topic starter
 

Has it reached the chocolate cake, ice cream cone, and pickles stage yet ? Or merely on an apple or a couple of pears stage yet ?

It hasn’t moved, so probably still thinking about it.

If it turns out to be the larva of something interesting, I’ve got the parent plant in the kitchen, which is about twenty times bigger, so it could probably lose a few leaves, but if it’s just something that is just likely to cause harm, I’ll happily put it outside for the Robin.


 
Posted : 12/12/2024 2:22 am
Posts: 33325
Full Member
Topic starter
 

Best I’ve been able to track down is it could be a member of the cutworm moths or owlet moths, of which there seem to be a significant number. The RHS says it’s worth tolerating them if significant damage isn’t being caused for biodiversity purposes, so I might put it onto the parent plant, which sheds large numbers of leaves anyway, and it’s so big it probably won’t notice losing a few more.


 
Posted : 12/12/2024 3:06 am
Posts: 3284
Free Member
 

What the caterpillar calls the end of the world, the Master calls a butterfly


 
Posted : 12/12/2024 7:45 am
steveb and steveb reacted
Posts: 2304
Full Member
 

If it turns out to be the larva of something interesting, I’ve got the parent plant in the kitchen, which is about twenty times bigger, so it could probably lose a few leaves, but if it’s just something that is just likely to cause harm, I’ll happily put it outside for the Robin.

Racist! Life or death based on the colour of its skin, eh?


 
Posted : 12/12/2024 9:53 am
Posts: 17915
Full Member
 

Sure it's not a stray chip?


 
Posted : 12/12/2024 10:48 am
Posts: 1877
Free Member
 

Google lens usually does a pretty good job of IDing stuff, if you have an android phone...


 
Posted : 12/12/2024 11:13 am
Posts: 2324
Full Member
 

Google lens usually does a pretty good job of IDing stuff, if you have an android phone…

Tried that, it directed me straight back here!


 
Posted : 12/12/2024 11:59 am
Posts: 6884
Full Member
 

Amazing website! https://www.ukmoths.org.uk/

Can't find cutworm or owlet on there


 
Posted : 12/12/2024 3:55 pm
Posts: 6884
Full Member
 

This one? https://www.ukmoths.org.uk/species/noctua-pronuba/larva-yellow-form/


 
Posted : 12/12/2024 4:05 pm
Posts: 33325
Full Member
Topic starter
 

This one?

No, the one on my plant has no black markings, the photo is pretty clear as to colour and markings, which are a pale creamy beige. It still hasn’t moved, so I’m leaving it alone, it’s not harming the plant at the moment; maybe it’s hibernating.

Stet that, I’ve just had a closer look, and there are lots of droppings all over the soil, and leaves are starting to turn brown in places. It’s a fairly young plant, grown from a small cutting taken from a plant that was my partner’s, so the creature can go outside and take its chances in the wild, where it came from.


 
Posted : 13/12/2024 1:38 am
Posts: 7086
Full Member
 

I just tried iNaturalist, but without uploading it fully - its initial suggestion is Genus Phlogophora.

If you upload it with a location you'll get other people that will verify or correct that identification.

That turtle i uploaded yesterday has been confirmed now as an Eastern Saw-Shelled Turtle (after the AI function mis-identified).


 
Posted : 13/12/2024 2:03 am

6 DAYS LEFT
We are currently at 95% of our target!