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Thread: Some Moths That Need ID (Part 4)...

  1. #31
    Join Date
    Nov 2010
    Location
    Malaysia
    Posts
    6,846

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    Quote Originally Posted by Lanzz View Post
    Today i found another moth, Lymantriidae (Tussock Moth)...
    - http://www.flickr.com/photos/111006196@N05/12817880123/



    So, this moth under the family Erebidae or Noctuiidae?

    No. 18 male Somena similis.
    http://www.mothsofborneo.com/part-5/...gmiini_2_1.php
    http://www.boldsystems.org/index.php...e?taxid=160992
    (I actually happened to find a male in my bathroom a few weeks ago.)

    Under the latest revision backed by DNA studies Erebidae now includes
    Lymantriinae.
    Arctiinae.
    Erebinae (formerly Catocalinae)
    many smaller subfamilies including Herminiinae.

    TL Seow

  2. #32
    Join Date
    Apr 2006
    Location
    Hong Kong
    Posts
    357

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    Quote Originally Posted by Lanzz View Post
    Wow, another luck... Thanks you very much...
    currently, E. cyclota is only known from China (see Fauna Sinica Insecta volumes..., Fang, 2000). I would be inclined to refer to the Malay Eugoa as sp. cf. cyclota until such time as voucher material has been dissected. It is not beyond the realms of impossibility that the one in your photo is cyclota, or a new species.

    cheers,
    Roger.
    Roger C. KENDRICK Ph.D.

    C & R Wildlife, Lam Tsuen, Tai Po, N.T., Hong Kong S.A.R.
    HK Moths website: http://www.hkmoths.com
    HK Moths Recording Project on i-Naturalist: http://www.inaturalist.org/projects/hong-kong-moths
    HK Moths Flickr site: http://www.flickr.com/groups/hongkongmoths/

  3. #33
    Join Date
    Apr 2006
    Location
    Hong Kong
    Posts
    357

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    Quote Originally Posted by Psyche View Post
    No. 18 male Somena similis.
    http://www.mothsofborneo.com/part-5/...gmiini_2_1.php
    http://www.boldsystems.org/index.php...e?taxid=160992
    (I actually happened to find a male in my bathroom a few weeks ago.)

    Under the latest revision backed by DNA studies Erebidae now includes
    Lymantriinae.
    Arctiinae.
    Erebinae (formerly Catocalinae)
    many smaller subfamilies including Herminiinae.

    TL Seow
    see Reza Zahiri (et al) . . . http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/1...1.00607.x/full
    Roger C. KENDRICK Ph.D.

    C & R Wildlife, Lam Tsuen, Tai Po, N.T., Hong Kong S.A.R.
    HK Moths website: http://www.hkmoths.com
    HK Moths Recording Project on i-Naturalist: http://www.inaturalist.org/projects/hong-kong-moths
    HK Moths Flickr site: http://www.flickr.com/groups/hongkongmoths/

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