Hi Dr Seow,
Would require some help in identifying this one. Is it a E.acroleuca apicalis or E. torus?
Thank you.
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Hi Dr Seow,
Would require some help in identifying this one. Is it a E.acroleuca apicalis or E. torus?
Thank you.
Male Erionota acroleuca apicalis.
E. acroleuca. Relatively small FW 25 -27 mm. Palm feeder.
Male antennal club all white above.
Female antennal club half white.
HW bnad narrower in the upper half ,often ground heavily dark mottled.
FW mid termen (outer margin) straight.
http://yutaka.it-n.jp/hes/92340010.html
Male & female.
http://www.butterflycircle.com/check...nny%20Chir.jpg
http://www.butterflycircle.com/check...lt_male_02.jpg
E. thrax. Large FW 31 - 37 mm.
Male antennal club 2/3 white above, female half-white.
HW band nearly of uniform width; ground less heavily dark.
FW mid termen straight.
http://yutaka.it-n.jp/hes/92330001.html
Males.
https://encrypted-tbn0.gstatic.com/i...GlmUs&usqp=CAU
http://www.farelli.info/pages_books/...nota_thrax.htm
Female.
http://www.butterflycircle.com/check...2012--0060.jpg
E. torus. Large FW 30 - 36 mm.
Male antennal club 2/3 white; female half white.
HW band nearly of uniform width.
FW termen rounded, ie convex.
http://yutaka.it-n.jp/hes/92320001.html
Male India.
https://indiabiodiversity.org/files-...0torus/178.jpg
Females.
http://www.butterflycircle.com/check...0879-Copy5.jpg
https://alchetron.com/cdn/erionota-t...esize-750.jpeg
In some area form may have very broad wings eg HK female.
https://inaturalist-open-data.s3.ama...8022/large.jpg
TL Seow :Cheers.
Thank you Dr Seow for the detailed explanations and comparisons!
Hi Dr Seow,
I shot this Erionota, the markings do resemble E.acroleuca, however the size was much larger than usual (estimated FW size 30+mm). I have raised a couple E.acroleuca before but they were never quite this large. Would like to hear your inputs.
Attachment 27604
Attachment 27605
Post 4.
This is a typical male E. acroleuca.
An occasional giant.
Male E. acroleuca. Antennal club wholly white above; HW patch irregular & much dark edged. FW margin straight.
http://www.butterflycircle.com/check...0-%20sunny.jpg
http://www.butterflycircle.com/check...drick%20Ho.jpg
Male E. thrax ;Antennal club 3/4 white above; HW patch fairly regular; FW margin straight.
http://www.butterflycircle.com/check...20-%20Khew.jpg
https://wanderingbutterflyeffect.fil...0f3c25860d.jpg
Male E. torus. Antennal club 3/4 white above; HW patch fairly regular ;FW margin convex.
India & Thailand.
https://indiabiodiversity.org/files-...0torus/178.jpg
https://a4.pbase.com/g6/98/670198/2/...8.2B9wFlm4.jpg
Females of all three species have the antennal club 1/2 white above.
TL Seow: Cheers.
Thank you Dr Seow, did not know they could get this large, very cool to see in the field!
Another thing to note.
As far as it is currently known, E. acroleuca only feeds on palms, while E. thrax & torus feed on Banana (Musa sp.)
Mis-identification in the past was said to be the cause of palms included in the hostplants of E. thrax & torus.
TL Seow: Cheers.
Hi Dr Seow,
Is this E. torus (female)? It was raised on banana leaves.
Attachment 27607
Post 8.
Yes. E. torus. FW margin is convex .A female from the abdominal end.
TL Seow: Cheers.
Thank you Dr Seow!