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Jon Rouse 06-05-2003 09:20 PM

Bug identification please
 
Sorry if you've down this one recently, but we've not been urgling of
late.

Whilst digging in the garden I've found quite a lot of mahogany coloured
things that look like chrysalises, but wiggle when you disturb them.
They are about 3/4 inch long and 3/8 in diameter, a smooth cylinder for
half the length and segmented in the other half.

Goodies or baddies?

Jon
--
E-mail bouncing? Make sure your mailer is set to 'plain text' and not 'html'.

Liz & Andy 06-05-2003 10:32 PM

Bug identification please
 

Jon Rouse wrote in message
...
Sorry if you've down this one recently, but we've not been urgling of
late.

Whilst digging in the garden I've found quite a lot of mahogany coloured
things that look like chrysalises, but wiggle when you disturb them.
They are about 3/4 inch long and 3/8 in diameter, a smooth cylinder for
half the length and segmented in the other half.

Goodies or baddies?

Jon


Leatherjackets. Baddies

Liz



Kay Easton 07-05-2003 08:44 AM

Bug identification please
 
In article , Liz & Andy liznandy@lizn
andy.freeNOSPAMTAserve.co.uk writes

Jon Rouse wrote in message
...
Sorry if you've down this one recently, but we've not been urgling of
late.

Whilst digging in the garden I've found quite a lot of mahogany coloured
things that look like chrysalises, but wiggle when you disturb them.
They are about 3/4 inch long and 3/8 in diameter, a smooth cylinder for
half the length and segmented in the other half.

Goodies or baddies?

Jon


Leatherjackets. Baddies


Are these the ones that are juvenile daddy-long-legs?

The leather jacket stage does look like a chrysalis - it doesn't look
capable of eating anything.

Which stage is the baddy? What does it to?
--
Kay Easton

Edward's earthworm page:
http://www.scarboro.demon.co.uk/edward/index.htm

Anthony E Anson 07-05-2003 11:08 AM

Bug identification please
 
The message
from Kay Easton contains these words:

Leatherjackets. Baddies


Are these the ones that are juvenile daddy-long-legs?


Yes.

The leather jacket stage does look like a chrysalis - it doesn't look
capable of eating anything.


It isn't.

Which stage is the baddy? What does it to?


The grub. Lives on roots, especially those of grass. Like a big grey maggot.

--
Tony
Replace solidi with dots to reply: tony/anson snailything zetnet/co/uk

http://www.users.zetnet.co.uk/hi-fi

Alison 07-05-2003 11:08 AM

Bug identification please
 

"Liz & Andy" wrote in message
...

Jon Rouse wrote in message
...
Sorry if you've down this one recently, but we've not been urgling of
late.

Whilst digging in the garden I've found quite a lot of mahogany coloured
things that look like chrysalises, but wiggle when you disturb them.
They are about 3/4 inch long and 3/8 in diameter, a smooth cylinder for
half the length and segmented in the other half.

Goodies or baddies?

Jon


Leatherjackets. Baddies

Liz

I beg to differ with Liz on the leatherjacket ID (though it's difficult
without a picture). IME leatherjakets are are only about 1/8 inch diameter
and are segmented all the way down and are a dull greyish brown.

I tend to think that what you have found is indeed chrysalis (the mahogany
colour and the smooth half 'body') that are beginning to get ready to hatch.
Last year I found a few wriggly ones and gave them to the two young boys
next door (with a suitable 'home') so that they could see what happened.
They were thrilled when they emerged and we let them fly off :-) This year
the oldest says to me every time I see him 'I think I saw one of our
butterflies yesterday' .

HTH

--A



Sue 07-05-2003 12:08 PM

Bug identification please
 

"Alison" o.uk wrote
I beg to differ with Liz on the leatherjacket ID (though it's difficult
without a picture). IME leatherjakets are are only about 1/8 inch
diameter and are segmented all the way down and are a dull greyish brown.

I tend to think that what you have found is indeed chrysalis (the
mahogany colour and the smooth half 'body') snip


I always thought those shiny, pointy, brown coloured thingies were
leatherjackets (they do rather look the part), but from previous urg
threads I gathered they probably are moth pupae.
Here's a site with some goodies and baddies which might help identify the
creatures concerned. Still don't know what a crane-fly pupa looks like,
though.

http://www.dgsgardening.btinternet.co.uk/leatherj.htm and click on the
'larval stage' link.

Sue




Warwick 07-05-2003 02:32 PM

Bug identification please
 
In article ,
says...

"Alison" o.uk wrote
I beg to differ with Liz on the leatherjacket ID (though it's difficult
without a picture). IME leatherjakets are are only about 1/8 inch
diameter and are segmented all the way down and are a dull greyish brown.

I tend to think that what you have found is indeed chrysalis (the
mahogany colour and the smooth half 'body') snip


I always thought those shiny, pointy, brown coloured thingies were
leatherjackets (they do rather look the part), but from previous urg
threads I gathered they probably are moth pupae.
Here's a site with some goodies and baddies which might help identify the
creatures concerned. Still don't know what a crane-fly pupa looks like,
though.

http://www.dgsgardening.btinternet.co.uk/leatherj.htm and click on the
'larval stage' link.


Hmm.. so that makes the things I dug up on Sunday *not*
leatherjackets...

Anyone got a clue what these are?...

http://www.affordable-afpers.co.uk/maystuff/bug002.jpg
http://www.affordable-afpers.co.uk/maystuff/bug003.jpg

There's a few heavily munched plants in the area where I dug them up.

Warwick

JennyC 07-05-2003 03:56 PM

Bug identification please
 

"Warwick" wrote
Hmm.. so that makes the things I dug up on Sunday *not*
leatherjackets...

Anyone got a clue what these are?...

http://www.affordable-afpers.co.uk/maystuff/bug002.jpg
http://www.affordable-afpers.co.uk/maystuff/bug003.jpg

There's a few heavily munched plants in the area where I dug them

up.
Warwick


No idea Warwick.........but these might be useful :~)

Bug ID :
http://www.ex.ac.uk/bugclub/bugid.html

http://info.ag.uidaho.edu/keys/plate...s_contents.htm

Jenny





Anthony E Anson 07-05-2003 04:32 PM

Bug identification please
 
The message
from Warwick contains these words:

Hmm.. so that makes the things I dug up on Sunday *not*
leatherjackets...


Anyone got a clue what these are?...


http://www.affordable-afpers.co.uk/maystuff/bug002.jpg
http://www.affordable-afpers.co.uk/maystuff/bug003.jpg


Looks like a beetle larva - but my beetle book doesn't illustrate too
many larvæ and no pupæ at all. Pah! Charity shops!

--
Tony
Replace solidi with dots to reply: tony/anson snailything zetnet/co/uk

http://www.users.zetnet.co.uk/hi-fi

Anthony E Anson 07-05-2003 04:32 PM

Bug identification please
 
The message
from "Sue" contains these words:

I always thought those shiny, pointy, brown coloured thingies were
leatherjackets (they do rather look the part), but from previous urg
threads I gathered they probably are moth pupae.
Here's a site with some goodies and baddies which might help identify the
creatures concerned. Still don't know what a crane-fly pupa looks like,
though.


Since I was knee-high to a grasshopper I've known the shiny
conker-coloured pupæ as leatherjackets, but all my dictionaries say
leatherjackets the larvæ.

So then I think, are the grubs I've always presumed were their
antecedants crane-fly grubs at all? They remind me neither of leather
nor a jacket, whereas the conker-coloured pupa does - of both. (My
mother and grandmother, and my father all referred to that pupa as a
leatherjacket.)

Next one I find I'm going to keep until it breaks out!

--
Tony
Replace solidi with dots to reply: tony/anson snailything zetnet/co/uk

http://www.users.zetnet.co.uk/hi-fi

Kay Easton 07-05-2003 05:20 PM

Bug identification please
 
In article , Anthony E Anson
writes
The message
from Kay Easton contains these words:

Leatherjackets. Baddies


Are these the ones that are juvenile daddy-long-legs?


Yes.

The leather jacket stage does look like a chrysalis - it doesn't look
capable of eating anything.


It isn't.

Which stage is the baddy? What does it to?


The grub. Lives on roots, especially those of grass. Like a big grey maggot.

Thanks
I think I'm rather in favour of something that lives on the roots of
grass :-)
--
Kay Easton

Edward's earthworm page:
http://www.scarboro.demon.co.uk/edward/index.htm

Pete The Gardener 07-05-2003 08:32 PM

Bug identification please
 
On Wed, 7 May 2003 14:26:05 +0100, Warwick
wrote:


Anyone got a clue what these are?...

http://www.affordable-afpers.co.uk/maystuff/bug002.jpg
http://www.affordable-afpers.co.uk/maystuff/bug003.jpg

There's a few heavily munched plants in the area where I dug them up.


Dunno, but they look as though they could be the laval stage of
earwigs?

--
Pete The Gardener
A room without books is like a body without a soul.


Pam Moore 07-05-2003 08:32 PM

Bug identification please
 
On Wed, 7 May 2003 15:51:21 +0100, Anthony E Anson
wrote:

I always thought those shiny, pointy, brown coloured thingies were
leatherjackets (they do rather look the part), but from previous urg
threads I gathered they probably are moth pupae.


Leatherjackets are a dull greyish brown whereas the "conker-coloured"
ones are moth or butterfly pupae (chrysalis)

The other weird thing that was pictured (I seem to have lost that
post) was probably a beetle larva and beetles are generally friends!


Pam in Bristol
pamdotmooreatvirgindotnet

Jane Ransom 07-05-2003 09:32 PM

Bug identification please
 
In article , Alison alison.freeth@NoS
pAm.wideopenwindows.fsbusiness.co.uk writes

I beg to differ with Liz on the leatherjacket ID (though it's difficult
without a picture).


Same here.

IME leatherjakets are are only about 1/8 inch diameter
and are segmented all the way down and are a dull greyish brown.

Yep - a leather jacket always reminds me of a tiny, and very dirty
penis!


--
Jane Ransom in Lancaster.
I won't respond to private emails that are on topic for urg
but if you need to email me for any other reason,
put jandg dot demon dot co dot uk where you see deadspam.com



Kay Easton 07-05-2003 09:32 PM

Bug identification please
 
In article , Pete The Gardener
writes
On Wed, 7 May 2003 14:26:05 +0100, Warwick
wrote:


Anyone got a clue what these are?...

http://www.affordable-afpers.co.uk/maystuff/bug002.jpg
http://www.affordable-afpers.co.uk/maystuff/bug003.jpg

There's a few heavily munched plants in the area where I dug them up.


Dunno, but they look as though they could be the laval stage of
earwigs?

You're going from the spanner-like tool at one end? ;-)
--
Kay Easton

Edward's earthworm page:
http://www.scarboro.demon.co.uk/edward/index.htm


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