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Updated October 14, 2005 Polillas Saturnidas de Colombia, 1997, Angela R. Amarillo-S. Updated from Lemaire's Arsenurinae, 1980, October 13, 2005; January 12, 2007 Updated as per communication from Jean Michel Maes (Nicaragua), March 2007 Updated as per personal communication with Carlos Mielke, April 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 and El Salvador), July 2007 Updated as per personal communication with Ulf Drechsel (Paraguay), August 2007 Updated as per personal communication with Dr. Arthur Anker (Copan, Honduras), August 2007 Updated as per "An update checklist for the Saturniidae of Ecuador. Part II: .... " in SHILAP Revta. lepid 34 (135), 2006: 197-211 L. & T. Racheli, September 2007 Updated as per personal communication with Paul Smith (Paraguay: Itapua), February 2008 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 Jose Monzon (Ixpanpajul, Peten, Guatemala, June 2008), May 2009 Updated as per personal communication with Sergio Rios (La Niña, Amambay, Paraguay, February 18, 2002), August 2009 Updated as per personal communication with Juan Ramon Collart (108mm; Cerro Azul-Meambar National Park, Dept. of Cortés, Honduras, 800m; May-06) December 21, 2009 Updated as per personal communication with Norm Smith (male: 114mm; female: 127mm; Punta Gorda, Toledo, Belize); April 21, 2010 Updated as per Rio Grande do Sul: Arsenurinae and Ceratocampinae; April 25, 2013 Updated as per personal communication with Brian Fletcher (Yankuam Lodge, Rio Nangaritza Valley, Zamora-Chinchipe, Ecuador, 969m, February 4, 2014) March 10,2014 Updated as per personal communication with Nigel Venters (male: 134mm; Campo Ramon, Misiones, Argentina, January 23, 2015, 330m); February 17, 2015 Updated as per personal communication with Ezequiel Nunez Bustos (Itaoby Private Reserve, Misiones, Argentina, November 2, 2015); February 3, 2016 Updated as per personal communication with Miguel Angelo Biz (Laurentino, Santa Catarina, Brazil, November 4, 2016); November 5, 2016 |
This site has been created by
Bill Oehlke.
Comments, suggestions and/or additional information are welcomed by Bill.
TAXONOMY:Superfamily: Bombycoidea, Latreille, 1802 |
The specimen type for Arsenura armida is Suriname. Very similar species have recently been described from other areas: Arsenura arianae from Central America; Arsenura fuscata from Peru and Boliva. I do not know if there are species overlaps or if the new determinations replace A. armida in the designated locations.
Visit Arsenura armida, Cortes, Honduras, courtesy/copyright Eduardo Marabuto.
Visit Arsenura armida 108mm; Cerro Azul-Meambar National Park, Dept. of Cortés, Honduras; 800m; May-06; courtesy of Juan Ramon Collart.
Arsenura armida male, 132mm, Campo Ramon, Misiones, Argentina,
January 23, 2015, 330m, courtesy of Nigel Venters.
Arsenura armida male (verso), 132mm, Campo Ramon, Misiones, Argentina,
January 23, 2015, 330m, courtesy of Nigel Venters.
Arsenura armida Paraguay, courtesy/copyright Ulf Drechsel.
Arsenura armida male, Itaoby Private Reserve, Misiones, Argentina,
November 2, 2015, courtesy of Ezequiel Nunez Bustos.
This is the same moth as A. cassandra.
This species is quite variable. I believe the specimen below, from Cusco, Peru, is nominate armida.
With the elevation of Arsenura armida archianassa to full species status, there is no need for a designation of A. armida armida.
Arsenura armida male, Cochabamba, Bolivia,
wingspan 118mm,courtesy of Kelly Price.
copyright, id by Carlos Mielke
Arsenura armida male, French Guiana,
March 31, 2011, courtesy of Andres Urbas.
Arsenura armida male, French Guiana,
March 31, 2011, courtesy of Andres Urbas.
If my identification of the moth directly below is correct, there is a November flight in Santa Catarina, Brazil.
Arsenura armida, Laurentino, Santa Catarina, Brazil,
November 4, 2016, courtesy of Miguel Angelo Biz, id by Bill Oehlke.
Arsenura armidamale, Yankuam Lodge, Zamora-Chinchipe, Ecuador,
February 4, 2014, 969m, courtesy of Brian Fletcher.
Larvae of armida eat Annona, Bombacopsis quinatum, Bombax ceiba, Ceiba pentandra. Chorisia insignis and Chorisia speciosa.
In Europe, Bernhard Wenczel reports Tilia cordata and Prunus padus are used with some success. They have also reared on Tilia (Kirby Wolfe) in the lab.
Arsenura armida female, Volcan, Chiriqui, Panama,
November 14, 2006, courtesy of Rich Young, id by Bill Oehlke.
Arsenura armida moth (male) courtesy of Carlot Didier.
Large clusters of eggs are deposited on foliage or stems or twigs, resulting in large numbers of larvae hatching almost simultaneously. |
Larvae are very gregarious in the early instars and line up like boxcars on the undersides of foliage.Thoracic spines and posterior horn are suggestive of Ceratocampinae. |
Arsenura armida, Venezuela, courtesy of Bernhard Jost.
Arsenura armida copyright protected, Kirby Wolfe.
Visit Arsenura armida female, Ixpanpajul, Peten, Guatemala, courtesy of Jose Monzon.
Visit Arsenura armida male, Itabo Itaipu Reserve, Alto Parana, Paraguay, courtesy of Paul Smith.
Visit Arsenura armida male 114mm and female 127mm, Punta Gorda, Toledo, Belize, courtesy of Norm Smith.
Visit Arsenura armida male, female, eggs and larvae, Guatemala, courtesy of Leroy Simon.
Annona |
Custard apple |
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 "Arsenura" chosen by Duncan in 1841.
The species name "armida" may be for Armida, a beautiful sorceress and seductress in Torquato Tasso's epic "Gerusalemme liberata".
Return to Arsenura Genus
Return to Main Saturniidae Index
Goto additional images of Arsenura armida courtesy of Hubert Mayer.
Arsenura armida at rest, courtesy of Entomo Service