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Updated October 15, 2005 Updated from Lemaire's Arsenurinae, 1980, October 13, 2005; January 11, 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 Vladimir Izersky (Junin, Peru; December; 662m), November 29, 2008 Updated as per personal communication with Brian Fletcher (ChristalinoLodge, Alta Floresta, Northern Mato Grosso, Brazil, September 23, 2014); November 21, 2014 |
TAXONOMY:Superfamily: Bombycoidea, Latreille, 1802 |
"The Girl from Ipanema"
midi by Mel WebbON.OFF |
Records exist for
Guyana: Kartabo;
Brazil: Para and Amazonas (Northern Mato Grosso, Brian Fletcher); and the
eastern side of the Andes in
Ecuador:
Sucumbios,
Napo (uncommon to rare (LTR)),
Morona-Santiago,
Pastaza and maybe
Orellana (LTR?)
and Zamora Chinchipe (LTR?); and in
Peru: Loreto, Pasco, Junin (VI) and Cusco; at elevations
up to 900m.
Arsenura mossi male, Coviriali, Junin, Peru,
December 21, 2007, 662m, courtesy of Vladimir Izersky.
Arsenura mossi male, Christalino Lodge, Alta Floresta, Mato Grosso, Brazil,
September 23, 2014, courtesy of Brian Fletcher, tentative id by Bill Oehlke.
I have tentatively identified the image from Mato Grosso as mossi, mostly because of the presence of a third lobe on the pm line.
Lemaire does not mention this (perhaps they are not valid characters),
but all his images of armida show a wider, dark forewing band
than present in his images of mossi. I also notice definite lighter areas between the cell
mark and the antemedial line, and there seems to be a consistently lighter patch along the forewing
inner margin, abutting the pm line.
The dark markings, capping the projections into the male hindwing subterminal area, seem to be more discontinuous
in mossi than in other species. This same discontinuous feature is not evident in the female, but the caps of the projections
are well extended in black.
Racheli and Racheli indicate A. mossi always shows a light brown color. They expect it will be recorded at low elevations in Orellana and Zamora Chinchipe.
Mossi is also supposed to be characterized by third and fourth lobes on forewing cells M2 and M1 respectively and an enlarged white triangle near the anal angle. The specimens below, courtesy of Charles DeRoller, are in line with characters of mossi.
Arsenura mossi male (verso), Hollin, Napo, Ecuador,
October 28, 2008, 1000m, courtesy of Horst Kach.
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 "mossi" is honourific for A. M. Moss.
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