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Top view grass moth, acronicta rumicis larvae, caterpillar climbing on leaves. Macro colored photo of animal
Virginia ctenucha caterpillar in his natural environment in spring.
The larvae of moths are covered with bristles and look terrible
a black and rust colored catapillar isolated on white. some call it the wooly bear. I've heard it is for a Tiger Moth.
A Cinnabar Caterpillar feeding on Ragwort which is its only food source. These caterpillars will eat the leaves, growing flowers or the seeds and seem to thrive on either part.\nRagwort (Jacobean vulgaris) is found by the roadside and other uncultivated sites. It is poisonous to horses. Well focussed with a natural blurred to black background. The caterpillar is regarded as being a biological control for Ragwort.
Papilio Demoleus caterpillar (Lemon butterfly)
Salt marsh moth caterpillar (Estigmene acrea) insect eating dead leaves, fuzzy nature Springtime pest control.
nettle butterfly caterpillars climbing up a flower
This caterpillars are very beautiful with feathers that bloom around their bodies with very attractive colors, but behind their beauty they are dangerous, because these feathers can cause skin blisters when touched.
A leaf caterpillar
Apple tree damaged by caterpillars of Brown tail moth Euproctis chrysorrhoea. Eaten leaves and damaged young, immature fruit. This is a pest of increasing importance in orchards, gardens and roadside alleys.
Caterpillar Nest in a tree with cocoon.
Oak processionary (Thaumetopoea processionea) caterpillars in a row on procession in june, the Netherlands
Spiny elm caterpillar on a fan palm plant view from above
Monarch butterfly caterpillar with black, white, and yellow stripes is wrapped around a triangular shaped green milkweed stalk while feeding on the leaf.
The lackey moth (Malacosoma neustria) is a moth in the family Lasiocampidae. It was first described by Carl Linnaeus in his 1758 10th edition of Systema Naturae. It is common across southern Britain and central Europe. Malacosoma species are notable for their caterpillars which are brightly coloured and form silken tents to regulate their temperature. Malacosoma neustria caterpillars are brown with blue, orange and white stripes. The adults are a fairly uniform brown. The larvae feed mainly on trees and shrubs from within their tents.\nDistribution and habitat:\nThe lackey moth is widely distributed across Europe, Asia and North Africa. Its habitat is the edges of woodland, bushy grassland, coppices, hedgerows and road verges. The caterpillar's food plants include apple, pear, plum, willow, hornbeam, lime and oak.\nLife cycle:\nEggs of the lackey moth are laid in ring-like bands in late summer on twigs of the host trees where they overwinter. On hatching, the larvae are gregarious and weave for themselves a silken canopy of webbing. They eat the young foliage of the tree and moult several times as they grow larger. When ready to pupate they drop to the ground and undergo metamorphosis, each forming a pupa sandwiched between leaves of plants growing beneath the tree. In both Britain and Germany the flight period is from June to August (source Wikipedia).
saddleback caterpillar (Acharia  Hyperoche), shot in Costa Rica.
3 caterpillars climbing branch - animal behavior.
Lepidoptera larvae in the wild, North China
Macro image of a garden tiger moth caterpillar which is also known as woolly bear caterpillar living in its natural environment on a fresh green leaf. The insect is captured in horizontal composition under natural lighting condition using the aperture f/4.5.
Nettle caterpillar an insect with green spikes color with yellow and black stripe on the body stays on green leaf
Yellow hairy caterpillar isolated on white.
close up of oak processionary moth caterpillar on a plant
A question mark shaped caterpillar
Caterpillar of Box tree moth, cydalima perspectalis, on Boxwood, Buxus sempervirens, close-up of a destroyed boxwood branch with green caterpillar.
Zerynthia polyxena, the southern festoon, is a butterfly belonging to the butterfly family Papilionidae.\nDescription:\nThe southern festoon can reach a wingspan of 46–52 mm. The females have slightly longer wings, usually lighter colored than males. The basic color of the wings is yellow, with a complicated pattern of several black bands and spots. \nOn the edges of the hindwings they have a black sinuous line with a series of blue and red warning spots to deter potential predators (aposematism). The body is dark brown and bears red patches on the sides of the abdomen. \nThis species is rather similar to, and can be confused only with, the Spanish festoon (Z. rumina). The differences are in the presence of blue on the hind wings of Z. polyxena and the relatively lower amount of red on its forewings compared with Z. rumina. The ranges of these two species overlap only in southeast France. \nThe caterpillars of Z. polyxena are up to 35 millimeters long. They are initially black, then they are yellowish with six rows of fleshy orange and black spikes all over the body. \nHabitat:\nThese rare butterflies can be found in warm, sunny and open places such as grassy herb-rich meadows, vineyards, river banks, wetlands, cultivated areas, brushy places, wasteland, rocky cliffs and karst terrains, at an elevation of from 0 to 1,700 meters above sea level but usually below 900 meters.\nDistribution:\nZ. polyxena is widespread in the middle and southern Europe (southeastern France, Italy, Slovakia and Greece) covering all the Balkans and reaching the south of Kazakhstan and the Urals. Although they are widespread they occur only locally (source Wikipedia).\n\nThis Picture is made during a Vacation in Bulgaria in May 2018.
Caterpillar of the Brown Bear
Firefly larva, Lampyris noctiluca
Monarch Butterfly Caterpillar-Indiana
4 caterpillars climbing branch - animal behavior.
Free Images: "bestof:Caterpillars of a Cinnabar Moth (Tyria jacobaeae) on Ragwort (Jacobaea vulgaris), Arnhem, the Netherlands.jpg 51 950719 5 851765 en Caterpillars of a Cinnabar"
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Caterpillars of a Cinnabar Moth (Tyria jacobaeae) on Ragwort (Jacobaea vulgaris), Arnhem, the Netherlands.jpg
Caterpillar of a Cinnabar Moth (Tyria jacobaeae) on Ragwort (Jacobaea vulgaris), Arnhem, the Netherlands.jpg
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