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Announcements

13 Dec 2024

Hi All,Brand new mobile app experience is VERY close and in the final stages of testing.If you would like to get an early sneak preview, we have a couple of spots left for people to participate in the...


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New category hubs now live!

Opportunity! Help build NatureMapr!

Historical data import tool now live!

ALA data matching improvements

Events

25 Oct 2024

Yuma birdos. There are many places across our ACT Reserve System that have limited to no bird data. We would like to fill in these data deficient zones to inform a Canberra Woodland Bird Quality Index...


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Discussion

arjay wrote:
just now
Thanks. I thought the green one was injured and has since died. Not parasitised. The other is still out there. I will watch out for a pupa. Very likely won't see it. And actually I also saw a much smaller similar larva a week or so ago (on a gardening glove not a leaf but maybe the glove had been near a leaf). Hawk moths are some of the best. Along with a whole heap of other moths.

Sphingidae
RogerF wrote:
20 min ago
Good idea

Acrididae sp. (family)
KMcCue wrote:
21 min ago
Ok Don, I found it again and have put it in a large glass jar with some of the acacia stem to which it was attached. Now what? When might I expect to see a moth emerge? days or weeks?

Hemibela (genus)
KMcCue wrote:
21 min ago
Ok Don, I found it again and have put it in a large glass jar with some of the acacia stem to which it was attached. Now what? When might I expect to see a moth emerge? days or weeks?

Hemibela (genus)
trevorpreston wrote:
22 min ago
perhaps should be marked as Acrididae? The more I look at it, there's not much to go on for ID.

Acrididae sp. (family)

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