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Updated as per Pinhey's Emperor Moths of South and South-Central Africa, 1972, January 19, 2006 Updated as per Bouyer's Catalogue of African Saturniidae, 1999, January 19, 2006 Updated as per Cooper's The Emperor Moths of KwaZulu-Natal, 2002, January 19, 2006 Updated as per personal communication with Alan Marson (Quercus robur), July 2007 Updated as per personal communication with Alain Coache (Senegal); June 8, 2015 |
Male copyright Kirby Wolfe
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 |
Wind Beneath My Wings |
Alain Coache reports it from Senegal. It might ?? also be present in Ghana, Benin, Togo, Equatorial Guinea (including Bioko Island) and Nigeria.
With the advent of DNA barcoding analysis (2008), many new Saturniidae species have been named, including many Pseudobunaea species from the various mountain ranges in Tanzania.
The following link, Tanzania Pseudobunaea Comparison Chart, will hopefully help me
and others to determine species as they become available for posting.
I will be using information on Wiki Species and scientific journal publications to post information and write my own descriptions of the
Tanzanian Pseudobunaea. If you have digital images that you can submmit with data (wingspan, elevation, date, precise location), I will do my best to
confirm your ids or offer suggestions, and will incorporate your images, credited to you, into the respective files. Please help improve the scope and accuracy of
this site by submitting images. All photos remain the property of respective photographers.
Pseudobunaea irius male, courtesy of Hubert Mayer.
Pseudobunaea irius female, courtesy of Hubert Mayer.
This species is highly variable throughout its range. The following images were sent to me by Jiri Zabokrtsky. The moths are all from Comoe env. of Ivory Coast. The genus Pseudobunaea is in need of revision. Thierry Bouyer indicates (March 12, 2006) that the specimens are most likely subspecies of P. irius or P. heyeri. I will also post them to the P. heyeri file.
I lean toward P. irius for the third image due to the smaller forewing clear spots and straighter outer lines on the forewing.
Pseudobunaea irius male, Senegal,
courtesy of Alain Coache, id by Thierry Bouyer.
Pseudobunaea Irius.
Jan-Willem Smienk reports a November 30, 2009, flight in Hazyview, Mpumalange, South Africa, not far outside the southern gate of Kruger National Park.
Pseudobunaea irius, Hazyview, Mpumalange, South Africa,
November 30, 2009, courtesy of Jan-Willem Smienk.
Pseudobunaea irius, female, Kenya, courtesy of Eric van Schayck.
Pseudobunaea irius female, Kenya, copyright Martin Jagelka.
Orange-brown first instar larvae are gregarious but become solitary and green as they develop up to 80 mm.
Pupation is in the soil.
Pseudobunaea irius, second instar, courtesy of Franz and Julian Renner
Pseudobunaea irius, Tanzania, fourth instar on Quercus robur, courtesy of Alan Marson.
Pseudobunaea irius, Tanzania, fifth instar on Quercus robur, courtesy of Alan Marson.
Larva copyright Kirby Wolfe
Pseudobunaea irius more likely P. santini, October 29, 2004,
Usumbara Mountains, Tanzania,
courtesy of Norbert Cordeiro.
Acacia mearnsii |
Black wattle |
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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.
Many of these moths were placed, at one time, with
Lobobunaea, but Pseudobunaea lack spines (present on
Pseudobunaea tibia) on the legs, and the hindwing eyespot is
grey and/or black without the coppery colour of the Lobobunaea.
The species name, irius, is probably from mythology where
Iris is the goddess of the rainbow. (Pinhey)