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Updated as per Witt Museum Type Specimens, January 2012 Updated as per Entomo Satsphingia Jahrgang 4 Heft 4 21.10.2011; June 24, 2014 |
TAXONOMY:Superfamily: Bombycoidea, Latreille, 1802 |
"Someone to Watch |
This moth is very similar to Molippa bertrandi from Amazonas and San Martin, and the slightly smaller Molippa bertrandoides from Pasco, Peru.
In M. bertranjunensis the forewing and hindwing discal marks tend to be smaller than in either of the other two species, and M. bertranjunensis is a much darker species.
Visit Peru: Molippa Chart.
Molippa bertranjunensis female, Peru, courtesy of Bernhard Wenczel,
id revised from bertrandi to M. bertranjunensis by Bill Oehlke.
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. 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 or reason for the genus name "Molippa" chosen by Walker in 1855.
The species name "bertranjunensis" is probably indicative of a close affiliation with Molippa bertrandi and M. bertrandoides, and a specimen type
location in Juno, Peru.
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