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Updated as per Lemaire's Ceratocampinae 1988, September 25, 2006 SHILAP: Notes on some Saturniidae from Albania (Caqueta Department), Racheli and Vinciguerra, 2005 Updated as per L. Racheli & T. Racheli, SHILAP, Vol. 33, # 130, 2005, March 2007 Updated as per communication from Jean Michel Maes (Nicaragua), March 2007 Updated as per communication from Ronald D. Cave (Honduras), August 2007 Updated as per communication from Kirby Wolfe, August 2007 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 Norm Smith (Las Cuevas, Cayo; female: 4.75 inch wingspan); December 2009 Updated as per personal communication with Johan van't Bosch (Brownsberg, Brokopondo District, Suriname, July 7, 2011); August 25, 2011 Updated as per CSIRO PUBLISHING: Invertebrate Systematics, 2012, 26, 478–505 http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/IS12038: "What happens to the traditional taxonomy when a wellknown tropical saturniid moth fauna is DNA barcoded?; Dan Janzen, et.al.; Received 8 May 2012, accepted 22 September 2012, published online 19 December 2012; April 23, 2013 Updated as per Rio Grande do Sul: Arsenurinae and Ceratocampinae; April 25, 2013 |
TAXONOMY:Superfamily: Bombycoidea, Latreille, 1802 |
"What.A.Wonderful.World" |
Othorene purpurascens male (Probably Othorene vanschayckorum), courtesy of Leroy Simon.
Othorene purpurascens male, Yasuni National Park (Napo), Ecuador,
October 1, 2003, courtesy/copyright
Charles Bordelon and Ed Knudson.
Othorene purpurascens female, Honduras, courtesy of Ronald D. Cave.
Othorene purpurascens?? female, Las Cuevas, Cayo District, Belize,
121mm, courtesy of Art Gilbert and Norm Smith.
Specimens have been taken in January-February and September-October in Rio Grande do Sul in southeastern Brazil.
Othorene purpurascens male, Brownsberg, Brokopondo District, Suriname,
July 7, 2011, courtesy of Johan van't Bosch, id by Bill Oehlke.
Larvae feed upon Manilkara chicle, Psidium and Terminalia catappa. Mike Buczkowski reports success with larva on Red Bud crabapple/Siberian crabapple (Malus baccata).
Host families in Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil: Combretaceae, Myrtaceae, Sapotaceae.
Both sexes come in to lights with peak activity from 11:30 pm until 2:00 am.
Othorene purpurascens female, French Guiana, courtesy of Carlot Didier.
Othorene purpurascens pair, Franz Ziereis.
There is an additional larva image which you can access by clicking here.
Mature larvae descend trees to form a very rough pupa underground.
Malus baccata |
Red Bud crabapple/Siberian crabapple (MB) |
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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.
The species name "purpurascens" probably refers to the
purplish scales near the apex, basal area and on the forewing
lines near the inner margin.