Dysdaemonia boreas
Updated from Lemaire's Arsenurinae, 1980, October 15, 2005; July 24, 2006
Polillas Saturnidas de Colombia, 1997, Angela R. Amarillo-S., January 2007
Updated as per L. Racheli & T. Racheli, SHILAP, Vol. 33, # 130, 2005, March 2007
Updated as per communication from Jean Michel Maes (Nicaragua), March 2007
Updated as per personal communication with Robert Lehman, (Honduras departments and wingspan), May 7, 2007
Updated as per personal communication with Ronald D. Cave (Honduras), July 2007
Updated as per French Guiana Systematique, February 2008
Updated as per http://www.inbio.ac.cr/bims/k02/p05/c029/o0119/f00885.htm IB
Updated as per personal communication with Vladimir Izersky (Atalaya, Ucayali, Peru, 350 m, November 1, 2008), November 2008
Updated as per Entomo-Satsphingia 2 (1): 56 – 61 (März 2009), (australoboreas), Ron Brechlin, July 2009
Updated as per personal communication with Jason Weigner (20-25 km W of Santa Cruz, Santa Cruz Department, Bolivia, January 4, 2010, 1000m); January 12, 2010
Updated as per personal communication with Norm Smith (male: 140mm; female: 127mm; Punta Gorda, Toledo, Belize); April 21, 2010
Updated as per personal communication with Brian Fletcher (Umbrellabird Lodge, Jocotoco Foundation Buenaventura Reserve, nr. Pinas, El Oro, Ecuador, February 28, 2014, 1200m); March 12, 2014
Updated as per personal communication with Geraldo Lukas (Curionopolis, Para, Brazil, March and April 2016); April 25, 2016

Dysdaemonia boreas
diz-day-MOH-nee-uhMBOR-ee-as
(Cramer, 1775) Phalaena Attacus

Dysdaemonia boreas male, copyright protected, Kirby Wolfe.

This site has been created by Bill Oehlke at oehlkew@islandtelecom.com
Comments, suggestions and/or additional information are welcomed by Bill.


TAXONOMY:

Superfamily: Bombycoidea, Latreille, 1802
Family: Saturniidae, Boisduval, [1837] 1834
Subfamily: Arsenurinae, Jordan, 1922
Tribe: Arsenurini, Jordan, 1922
Genus: Dysdaemonia, Hubner, [1819]

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"The.Girl.from.Ipanema"
midi by Mel Webb

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DISTRIBUTION:

The Dysdaemonia boreas moth (wingspan: males: 92-136-140mm (NS); females: 106-140mm) (forewing length: males: 62-72) flies from
Mexico: Sinaloa, Morelos, Guerrero, Veracruz, Yucatan, Quintana Roo and Chiapas; and throughout Central America:
Honduras: Atlantida (RL), Cortes (CL): San Pedro Sula, and Francisco Morazán (RC);
west coastal Nicaragua: Chinandega, Leon, Managua, Carazo, Granada, Rio San Juan, probably Rivas;
Costa Rica San Jose (CL), Alajuela, Puntarenas, Guanacaste, Heredia, Limon (IB);
Belize: Cayo, Corozol, Toledo;
Guatemala, and
probably El Salvador and
Panama: Barro Colorado Island; to most of South America:
Colombia: Choco, Valle del Cauca, Antioquia;
Ecuador: Esmeraldas LR, Carchi WO, Imbabura WO, El Oro BF, Pichincha CL, Sucumbios WO/LR, Napo CL, Orellana WO/LR, Pastaza WO, Cotopaxi WO, Tungurahua WO/LR, Chimborazo WO, Canar CL, Bolivar LR, Morona Santiago CL; and in
Peru: Amazonas (LTR), Cajamarca, Loreto, Junin, Huanuco, Cuzco, Madre de Dios, Ucayali (VI) and probably San Martin;
Bolivia: Cochabamba and Santa Cruz;
Venezuela: Aragua, Miranda, Sucre, Bolivar, Territorio Delta Amacuro;
Trinidad;
Guyana;
Suriname;
French Guiana: Territoire de Guyane and Inini, Kaw; and
Brazil: Para and Mato Grosso in low elevation habitats, excluding only Paraguay, Uruguay and Argentina.

Dysdaemonia boreas male, Umbrellabird Lodge, Jocotoco Foundation Buenaventura Reserve,
near Pinas, El Oro, Ecuador,
February 28, 2014, 1200m, id by Bill Oehlke

Dysdaemonia boreas male, Atalaya, Ucayali Peru,
November 1, 2008, 350m, courtesy of Vladimir Izersky.

Based on the convex am line and location of the Vladimir Izersky image, I feel that specimen is more likely the recently (March 2009) described species Dysdaemonia australoboreas.

Dysdaemonia boreas male, Barro Colorado Island, Panama,
May 1, 2008, courtesy of "Artour A".

HABITAT:

This species flies on both sides of the Andes, but seems restricted to lower elevations.

FLIGHT TIMES AND PREFERRED FOOD PLANTS:

Larvae feed upon Red silk cotton tree (Bombax ceiba), White silk cotton tree (Ceiba pentandra) and Chorisia

In Costa Rica there appears to be at least two broods with moths on the wing from May through August.

Robert Lehman reports them on the wing in Honduras in February-March-April.

FGS reports flights in February and May in French Guiana.

Jason Weigner reports a January flight 20-25 km W of Santa Cruz, Bolivia.

Lorenzo Comoglia reports an April flight in Alluriquin, Pichincha, Ecuador.

Brian Fletcher reports a February flight in El Oro, Ecuador.

Geraldo Lukas reports March-April flight in Curionopolis, Para, Brazil.

Visit Dysdaemonia boreas male, 20-25 km W of Santa Cruz, Bolivia, January 2010, 1000m, courtesy of Jason Weigner.

Visit Dysdaemonia boreas male 140mm and female 127mm, Punta Gorda, Toledo, Belize, courtesy of Norm Smith.

Visit Dysdaemonia boreas female, Union del Toachi-Otongachi, Alluriquin, Pichincha, Ecuador, April, courtesy of Giampaolo via, Lornezo Comoglio.

Dysdaemonia boreas female, copyright protected, Kirby Wolfe.

Brant Reif sends this image of a female, taken June 23, 2006, at Pook's Hill Reserve, Cayo District, Belize.

Gus A. Rentfro confirms an April flight in Puerto Morelos, Qunitana Roo, Mexico, in April, at the onset of the rainy season.

Dysdaemonia boreas male, Puerto Morelos, Quintana Roo, Mexico, April, courtesy of Gus A. Rentfro.

ECLOSION, SCENTING AND MATING:

Males use their antennae to locate females at night by tracking her airbourne pheromone plume.

EGGS, LARVAE AND PUPAE:

Eggs are apple green when first deposited but shortly turn red, maintaining a white-cream coloured equatorial line.

The incubation is short in the tropical heat and lasts only six days.

Early instar larvae are well adorned with thoracic and anal horns and colouration is that of a bird dropping.

I am convinced there is either an external intelligence or an internal one that provides for camouflage.

This third or fourth instar larva has picked up the rust-brown colouration of host stem junctures and may well hide in their proximity during the day.

Yellow dorsal and lateral lines match the main leaf stems in colour.

Larval images are courtesy of Dan Janzen.

The "horns", before their departure in the final instar, are coloured as and are the thickness of main stem veins.

In the final instar larvae are very plump and dorsal and lateral lines are perfect thickness and colour to match central leaf veins on Ceiba pentandra.

Larvae descend tree trunks at maturity to pupate in subterranean chambers. Larvae that pupate during the summer can eclose as moths in as few as sixteen days.

Dysdaemonia boreas, third instar on Ceiba pentranda,
Ecuador, courtesy of Horst Kach.

Dysdaemonia boreas, third instar on Ceiba pentranda,
Ecuador, courtesy of Horst Kach.

Dysdaemonia boreas larva, copyright protected, Kirby Wolfe.

It is hoped that this alphabetical listing followed by the common name of the foodplant will prove useful. The list is not exhaustive. Experimenting with closely related foodplants is worthwhile.

Bombax ceiba
Ceiba pentandra.....
Chorisia

Red silk cotton tree
White silk cotton tree
Chorisia

The pronunciation of scientific names is troublesome for many. The "suggestion" at the top of the page is merely a suggestion. It is based on commonly accepted English pronunciation of Greek names and/or some fairly well accepted "rules" for latinized scientific names.

The suggested pronunciations, on this page and on other pages, are primarily put forward to assist those who hear with internal ears as they read.

There are many collectors from different countries whose intonations and accents would be different.

Some of the early describers/namers chose genus and species names indicating some character of the insect, but more often, they simply chose names from Greek or Roman mythology or history.

Those species names which end in "ensis" indicate a specimen locale, and those which end in "i", pronounced "eye", honour a contempory friend/collector/etc.

I do not know the source of the genus name "Dysdaemonia" chosen by Hubner in 1819. It could be a combination meaning 'bad spirit'.

The species name "boreas" is the Greek god of the North Wind who lived in Thrace. He is depicted as being winged, extremely strong, bearded and normally clad in a short pleated tunic.

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