Cerura vinula caterpillar, first instar · didysis dviuodegis, vikšras, pirma stadija «Cerura vinula caterpillar, first instar · didysis dviuodegis, vikšras, pirma stadija^Thumbnails»Cerura vinula caterpillar, first instar · didysis dviuodegis, vikšras, pirma stadija«Cerura vinula caterpillar, first instar · didysis dviuodegis, vikšras, pirma stadija^Thumbnails»Cerura vinula caterpillar, first instar · didysis dviuodegis, vikšras, pirma stadija«Cerura vinula caterpillar, first instar · didysis dviuodegis, vikšras, pirma stadija^Thumbnails»Cerura vinula caterpillar, first instar · didysis dviuodegis, vikšras, pirma stadija

Cerura vinula caterpillar, first instar · didysis dviuodegis, vikšras, pirma stadija

EN · puss moth
DE · Großer Gabelschwanz
LT · didysis dviuodegis
LV · pelēkā dakšaste
PL · widłogonka siwica

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cerura_vinula
The flight period extends from April to August, on location, with one generation per year. Host plants include willow and poplar, especially the aspen, Populus tremula. Females lay their chocolate-brown, 1.5 millimetres wide, hemispherical eggs on the upper side of the leaves of their food plants. The moth survives the winter as a pupa in a very solid wood-reinforced cocoon, usually attached to vegetation.
The caterpillars have a remarkable defensive behavior. When disturbed, they strike a defensive pose raising the head with a reddish area and waving the twin tails with pinkish extendable flagellae. They might squirt formic acid at the attacker if the defense warning is unheeded.
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