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Updated as per Entomo Satsphingia |
Automeris occidentalis male, Guerrero, Mexico,
July, 1468m, wingspan approximately 60-65mm, courtesy of
Kelly Price.
Automeris occidentalis male, 65mm, Guerrero, Mexico,
on my home computer only.
TAXONOMY:Superfamily: Bombycoidea, Latreille, 1802 |
"Someone to Watch Over Me" |
Automeris occidentalis Draudt, 1929, was removed from synonymity with Automeris iris iris by Brechlin & Meister 2011.
The Kelly Price image at top of this page was originally place on Automeris iris iris page.
Recent DNA barcoding results, as reported by Brechlin and Meister, 2011, indicate that Automeris iris hesselorum,
which Lemaire treated as a synonym of A. iris iris, should be elevated as a distinct species, Automeris hesselorum, flying in
Arizona: Santa Cruz; and northwestern Mexico: Sonora, Chihuahua, Sinaloa and Nyarit.
The DNA results, as interpreted by Brechlin and Meister, 2011, also indicate that those specimens from northeastern Mexico: Tamaulipas
and probably Nueva Leon are another distinct species, Automeris tamaulipasiana. If I am translating Brechlin and Meister correctly, I think
Automeris tamaulipasiana corresponds to the "iris form ferruginea" which is from Mexico City, so Automeris tamaulipasiana would have a range as far to
the southeast as at least Mexico City.
These three moths, iris, hesselorum and tamaulipasiana, are also distinct from Automeris occidentalis (previously synonymized with iris),
which is reported from Guerrero, in western Mexico.
Lemaire, in his Hemileucinae, 2002, treated all of the above as forms of iris, rather than distinct species, and Lemaire indicates that Jalisco,
San Luis Potosi, Michoacan, Morelos and Distrito Federal are also home to what he considered to be nominate iris. Those locations are not necessarily vaild for
iris, and could apply to occidentalis and/or tamaulipasiana.
Kelly Price sends an image from Hidlago, Mexico, of what I considered to be Automeris iris iris, before publication of DNA results and interpretations
by Brechlin and Meister. I think it is more likely A. tamaulipasiana.
There seems some consistent differences in appearance between most of the four species, but it is not clear if any are sympatric or where exactly the range of
one species ends and another begins.
Automeris occidentalis ??, Michoacan, Mexico,
2011, 2500m, courtesy of Juan Carlos Garcia,
tentative id by Bill Oehlke, based mainly on location.
The following plate and notes will hopefully prove useful.
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