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Updated as per Lemaire's Hemileucinae 2002, February 5, 2007 Updated as per L. Racheli & T. Racheli, SHILAP, Vol. 33, # 130, 2005, March 2007 Updated as per personal communication with Horst Kach (Rio Landayacu, Pastaza, Ecuador, April 5, 2008), June 2008 Updated as per personal communication with Frederic Beneluz, November 4, 2013; November 6, 2013 Updated as per personal communication with Brian Fletcher, (Copalinga Lodge, Podocarpus NP, Zamora-Chinchipe, Ecuador, February 5, 2014, 1100m); March 10, 2014 |
Automeris duchartrei
courtesy of Dan Janzen.
Automeris duchartrei male, Satipo, Junin, Peru,
September 5, 2007, 632m, courtesy of Frederic Beneluz.
TAXONOMY:Superfamily: Bombycoidea, Latreille, 1802 |
"Someone to Watch Over Me" |
I suspect there are also populations in Guyana and Suriname.
I suspect it also flies in Panama (WO?).
Lemaire groups hamata, balachowskyi, wayampi, rostralis, duchartrei, goodsoni, meridionalis, jucunda, tamsi, chacona, chacona rectilineata and rectilinea based on genitalia, with all having the yellow ring of the eyespot very narrowly surrounded with black as well as a suffusion of black scales on the inner side of the hindwing yellow postmedial band. These moths do not have ringed abdomens.
* Frederic Beneluz (2013) reports that A. duchartrei is not found in French Guiana, but is replaced there by very similar species: Automeris despicata and Automeris goodsoni. My extrapolations for Guyana, Suriname, Venezuela, could be incorrect.
Automeris duchartrei male (verso), Satipo, Junin, Peru,
September 5, 2007, 632m, courtesy of Frederic Beneluz.
Natural larval hosts are unknown; Kirby Wolfe reports rearing success with Robinia pseudoacacia.
Automeris duchartrei females, Napo, Ecuador, courtesy of Luigi Racheli.
Automeris duchartrei female, Copalinga Lodge, Podocarpus NP, Zamora-Chinchipe, Ecuador,
February 5, 2014, 1100m, courtersy of Brian Fletcher, id and slight digital repair by Bill Oehlke.
Automeris duchartrei female, Copalinga Lodge, Podocarpus NP, Zamora-Chinchipe, Ecuador,
February 5, 2014, 1100m, courtersy of Brian Fletcher, id by Bill Oehlke.
Automeris duchartrei female, Shima, Junin, Peru,
mid May, 2014, 450m, courtesy of John Christensen.
Automeris duchartrei female, Shima, Junin, Peru,
mid May, 2014, 450m, courtesy of John Christensen.
Automeris duchartrei copyright Kirby Wolfe.
Robinia pseudoacacia........ | False acacia |
The pronunciation of scientific names is
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merely a suggestion. It is based on commonly
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fairly well accepted "rules" for latinized scientific names.
The suggested pronunciations, on this page and on other pages,
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There are many collectors from different countries whose intonations and accents would be different.