help identifying caterpillar!
shulamis at my-deja.com
shulamis at my-deja.com
Fri Oct 13 20:14:21 EDT 2000
Thanks for the suggestion, but I'm definitely sure from the pictures
that it's the oleander caterpillar, Syntomeida epilais. It has actually
started spinning it's cacoon in the envelope. I'm really excited, but a
little nervous about weather conditions. Will it be OK at room
temperature, or does it need the heat of Florida?
Shulamis
In article <39E39C17.28A91304 at gate.net>,
viceroy at gate.net wrote:
> Or it could be a zebra longwing; Heliconius charitonius. Was it on
> passionvine? Did you notice what it was eating? When you adopt a
> caterpillar it is a good idea to make sure that you know, and will be
> able to provide, plenty of its host plant ... otherwise you wind up
> wringing your hands and watching your little one starve.
> The ifas site will doubtless help you decide ... and you may be able
to
> find the host plant at a nursery. If it's S. epilais, it will also eat
> Adenium obesum, the Desert Rose, which you can buy as a house plant.
It
> ain't cheap. I assume you're back in New Jersey? If in Florida, you
> should have no trouble providing host plant for either possibility.
> Good luck
> Anne Kilmer
> South Florida
>
> Richard Worth wrote:
> >
> > Hi there,
> >
> > It sounds like you may have the infamous oleander caterpillar,
> > Syntomeida epilais. Check out the following website to see if it
> > looks right:
> >
> > http://www.ifas.ufl.edu/~insect/ORN/Ole_cpillar.htm
> >
> > This site has all you probably want to know about it. It is
> > considered a pest, although it is a native. It increased in numbers
> > and distribution when people started planting ornamental oleanders.
> > The native host is Echites umbellata found in South Florida. Good
> > luck. Rich
> >
> > >Hi Everyone! I was in Tampa, Florida this weekend and found a
> > >great-looking caterpillar, and I'm wondering what exactly it is.
It's
> > >bright orange with long black, hairly looking spikes all over it.
It's
> > >about and inch and a half long. I'm sure it's probably very common
in
> > >Florida, but being a girl from New Jersey, it looks totally exotic
and
> > >mysterious to me. :) Any help in feeding and rearing would be VERY
much
> > >appreciated. Thanks!
> > >
> > >
> > >
> > >
> > >-Shulamis
> > >
> > >shulamis at visto.com
> > >
> > >
> > >
> > >Sent via Deja.com http://www.deja.com/
> > >Before you buy.
> >
> > Richard A. Worth
> > Oregon Department of Agriculture
> > Plant Division
> > rworth at oda.state.or.us
> > (503) 986-6461
>
>
Sent via Deja.com http://www.deja.com/
Before you buy.
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