Bowlander, I can't make out your insect clearly, but I think it might be a snakefly. I'd like to see a better shot though, or at least an enlargement.
Working on the caterpillar mcniac.
In case it makes any difference, I am in Argentina... the region is one of the oldest mountain ranges in the world.Ok, all my searches keep returning the answer Fox moth caterpillar, but I'm not yet convinced. Your specimen is too big and not hairy enough. This might take a while.
Ok, all my searches keep returning the answer Fox moth caterpillar, but I'm not yet convinced. Your specimen is too big and not hairy enough. This might take a while.
mcniac, I've just seen that you are in South America. No wonder I can't identify your caterpillar!
Lovely looking thing, but I've no idea what it is.![]()
Your spider looks to be the same as the one I posted earlier in the thread which Harvestman ID'd - a male Tegenaria saeva or Tegenaria gigantea (page 12ish)
The caterpillars look a lot like large whites.
A battered something, certainly. Not convinced by Buff Ermine, but then I don't really know what it is. The markings sort of suggest a Noctuid moth, but that doesn't narrow it down much.
I agree, probably not an Ermine - wrong coloured legs and no remenants of the spots, which one would expect to see even on a battered one.
Looking through my book, it could be so many! Probably too battered to get a positive ID