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Updated as per Bernhard Wenczel communication September 12, 2006 Updated as per personal communication with Reinhard Foerster, April 2007, December 2, 2008 Updated as per personal communication with Kirby Wolfe, April 20, 2007 Updated as per Nachr. entomol. Ver. Apollo, N.F. 26 (1/2): 31-33 (2005) courtesy K. Wolfe, May 4, 2007 Updated as per personal communication with Carlos Mielke (Parana), April 2008 Updated as per personal communication with Fernando Penco (San Pedro City, Misiones), May 2008 |
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 |
"What.A.Wonderful.World" |
Copaxa flavobrunnea male, San Pedro City, RN Nš14, Misiones, Argentina,
courtesy of Fernando Penco.
The males can be extremely variable in their colouration, but the antennae rami of the diurnal Copaxa flavobrunnea are always dark as compared to the pale rami of the closely related, but nocturnal Copaxa canella and Copaxa joinvillea.
Male Copaxa flavobrunnea can be 1) yellow with a very dark brown-grey-black postmedian area; 2) an almost uniform dark brown; 3) orange or 4) coppery with a dark postmedian area; 5) very dark with a yellow to coppery cell area.
Male Copaxa flavobrunnea are consistently smaller than noctural canella, which are consistently fawn coloured. The forewing apex is considerbly more acute in C. flavobrunnea as compared to C. canella, but of the three species C. joinvillea has the most elongated and pointed apex.
Male Copaxa flavobrunnea are about the same size as the nocturnal joinvillea which, so far, are consistently orange-coppery with dark scales on the forewing veins and are a consistent pinkish-grey in the postmedian area. This last character seems lacking in C. flavobrunnea.
to Copaxa flavobrunnea courtesy of Bernhard Wenczel.
"I send a picture from male and female (normal color). The breeding occurs twice in the year. The first flight begins in March and continues to this time, 15-April. The spring generation flies in September (southern hemisphere spring)."
Copaxa flavobrunnea male, Misiones, Argentina, courtesy of
Reinhard Foerster,
id confirmed by Kirby Wolfe.
Copaxa flavobrunnea female, Misiones, Argentina, courtesy of
Reinhard Foerster,
id confirmed by Kirby Wolfe.
Reinhard reports these brown males report to grey females between 8:00 am and 10:00 am.
The cocoons of the above moth are of a very thin mesh. It is very easy to see the pupa and shed skin through the weave of both the distinct inner and outer cocoons.
I believe this moth was originally described as a subspecies of Copaxa canella, then synonymized with C. canella, but it has recently been recognized as its own species according to Stefan Naumann, Ulrich Brosch and Thibaud Decaens. Kirby Wolfe presents full life history images of this moth in the publication (2005) where he elevates it to full species status.
Most of the Copaxa brood continuously so I suspect flavobrunnea would be on the wing every month of the year. In Argentina Reinhard Foerster reports two flights: March til mid April and September (spring in Argentina).
Visit Copaxa flavobrunnea female, Parana, Brazil, courtesy of Thibaud Decaens.
Copaxa flavobrunnea ?? brown male
??, Misiones,
Argentina,
courtesy of Reinhard Foerster.
Copaxa flavobrunnea, yellow male, Dos de Mayo, Misiones, Argentina,
September 12, 2008, courtesy of Reinhard Foerster.
Kirby Wolfe notes that males of new world Saturniidae are usually diurnal if the antennae ramni are dark as in flavobrunnea.
Females of all three species have pale antennae. Female canella are larger, a consistent fawn colouration, and call at night.
Female flavobrunnea and joinvillea would be more difficult to determine. Both females have a nocturnal flight, but flavobrunnea call in the morning, while joinvillea call at night.
When larvae reach the fourth instar, they demonstrate single, long, dark hairs emanating from the scoli. The knobbed terminal ends of these hairs are quite evident in the images below. They have not proven to be urticating.
Copaxa flavobrunnea first, third, fifth instars, Misiones,
Argentina,
courtesy of Reinhard Foerster.
Copaxa flavobrunnea fifth instar, Misiones,
Argentina,
courtesy of Reinhard Foerster.
Copaxa flavobrunnea fifth instar, Misiones,
Argentina,
courtesy of Reinhard Foerster.
In my opinion (Bill Oehlke), it would seem this opens the propect of subsequent interbreeding on a generational level, ie, a male or female that remains dormant for four months might pair with offspring of a sibling that has only been dormant for a month. Dirk Bayer has observed that some of his early brood Callosamia securifera, a multi-brooded species in Alabama, go into a prolonged diapause (even overwinter) while siblings progress through one or two more broods before diapausing.
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