Insects


A guide to Australian insect families (from CSIRO) can be found at:
http://anic.ento.csiro.au/insectfamilies/

Daley, A. & Ellingsen, K., 2012. Insects of Tasmania: An online field guide

A useful introduction to Insects, visit:
http://australianmuseum.net.au/uploads/documents/9362/invertebrate_guide.pdf

A diagram of Insect morphology illustrating terminology with legend of body parts:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Insect_morphology#/media/File:Insect_anatomy_diagram.svg

A diagram of an insect illustrating terminology based on a worker ant, see:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gaster_(insect_anatomy)#/media/File:Scheme_ant_worker_anatomy-en.svg

Photographing insects

There are two main ways to photograph insects with a camera: using a macro close-up lens or a zoom lens. If the insect tolerates your getting very close, then you can use the macro lens. For example, some moths will remain quite still when approached, believing they are camouflaged and invisible. However, many insects, especially those that can fly, will move away when you approach. This is especially true for insects like butterflies and dragonflies. So a good zoom lens is very useful for photographing many insects. If you are using a smartphone, then use a macro lens or a macro attachment. E.g. OlloClip for iPhone. If you want to have an insect identified to species then clear photographs are usually needed because minute parts of the anatomy may need to be checked. It is valuable to take several photos from various angles so that these anatomical details can be seen. Many insects are have particular plants that they feed on, and they can be identified more easily when the associated plant is known. So if the insect is resting or feeding on a plant, take note of what the plant is or ensure that a photo shows the plant clearly.

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Discussion

53 min ago
Edited, fixed address to 15 Ridley St Turner ACT.

Faveria tritalis
1 hr ago
Hi Con. Corrected to 15 Ridley St, as per your email.

Epiphyas caryotis
donhe wrote:
9 hrs ago
I have more faith in BOLD images than iNaturalist, as their classifications are based on DNA rather than wing pattern.
I think this looks more like
https://v4.boldsystems.org/index.php/Taxbrowser_Taxonpage?taxid=89480
than
https://v4.boldsystems.org/index.php/Taxbrowser_Taxonpage?taxid=364899
which has a partial black line along the forewing inner margin.

Lichenaula melanoleuca
donhe wrote:
9 hrs ago
@Dron : please can you submit the photos of each individual moth as separate sightings, so that we can try and identify the species of each one.

Unverified Moth (Lepidoptera)
donhe wrote:
9 hrs ago
@Dron : please could you crop the other moth off the first photo? You might like to submit that as a separate sighting, especially if you have more photos of it/

Oxycanus dirempta
818,031 sightings of 22,340 species from 14,058 members
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