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Maid Alice Wasp Moth from Namibia

Namibian Moth???
Location: Windhoek, Namibia
February 21, 2011 5:27 pm
Dear All,
I just found this insect and I have never seen anyting like it before – I don’t think its a butterfly but could it be a moth of some sort??
I found it during the day but we have had a very heavy rainy season (not sure if this is helpfull in any way)and its around 20mm in length and about 40mm wide.
Any advce in this regard ould be greatly appreciated.
Signature: Ernst A. Schnaitmann

arctiid namibia ernst 300x285 Maid Alice Wasp Moth from Namibia

Maid Alice Wasp Moth

Hi Ernst,
You are correct that this is a Moth.  We believe it is a Wasp Moth in the subtribe Euchromiina, so named because the diurnal adults mimic wasps.  We do not have time to try to identify the species at the moment, but perhaps on of our readers will have some success while we are at work.

arctiid namibia ernst 2 300x199 Maid Alice Wasp Moth from Namibia

Maid Alice Wasp Moth

Karl provides an identification
Hi Daniel and Ernst:
This looks like another ‘Handmaiden’ wasp moth, probably Amata alicia. Check out a previous WTB? post by Gabriel on November 18, 2010, or this excellent photo of a Maid Alice on the African Moths website. Regards. Karl

What's That Bug? does not endorse extermination

Moth from Australia

What type on God’s green earth is this moth?????
Location: Cairns, Queensland, Australia
February 18, 2011 3:48 am
This photo was taken last night on the screen door of my cousin’s apartment in Cairns, Australia. What sort of moth is it??? Is there something wrong with it – it looks like it has eggs or bubbles or something on it’s head. My cousin also said it has ’horns’
Signature: Researched Out!

noctuid australia blue head 300x241 Moth from Australia

noctuoid_australia

Dear Researched Out,
We are exhausted thinking about what it must be like to research this creature.  We believe it is a member of the superfamily Noctuoidea, and in a playful moment, we would call it a Noctuoid.  We can’t help but to wonder if that odd blue head is a trait of this moth, or if there is something alien going on.  We don’t have the time to research this at the moment, and we might even believe it would be a fruitless search.

Update from Karl
Hi Daniel and Researched Out:
I don’t know if I can advance this any further but I will give it a shot.  It is unfortunate that the photo isn’t a little sharper because there appear to be some fairly distinctive details that are frustratingly not quite discernible.  The overall appearance and color look a lot like the Fruit-piercing Moth (Noctuidae: Catocalinae), Eudocima iridescens (formerly Othreis iridescens). The front end of this moth is definitely strange and interesting and could perhaps, under certain conditions, be interpreted as covered in bubbles (if they really were bubbles then I remain stumped). It has a distinctive ruff of raised feathery hairs that looks similar to your photo. This could give the appearance of ‘horns’, and I did come across one site that described the females as having horns.  Does this look something like what you saw? Regards.  Karl.

Feeding Frenzy: Case Bearing Moth Larvae eat dog biscuit

Subject: What’s my bug?!
Location: Irvine, California 92612
February 17, 2011 6:34 pm
Hi,
Living in Southern California. Have searched and searched and can’t find anything resembling there. They have a papery outer shell, and the head protrudes by only a couple of mm.. These pictures are of them feeding off a dog biscuit – when I’ve left one they turn up within an hour from under the baseboard. This is the most so far (16). They are mobile but very slow as the head / thorax comes out and drags the rest of the papery shell along.
Signature: Many thanks, Toby

feeding frenzy case bearers toby 300x221 Feeding Frenzy:  Case Bearing Moth Larvae eat dog biscuit

Case Bearing Moth Larvae

Hi Toby,
Your image of an infestation of Case Bearing Moth Larvae has us aghast.  We have never seen documentation of so many in one place at one time.  Most identification quests for this cosmopolitan Household Intruder are of single individuals.  They feed on organic debris including shed pet hair.

feeding frenzy toby 2 300x206 Feeding Frenzy:  Case Bearing Moth Larvae eat dog biscuit

Case Bearing Moth Larvae

Hi Daniel, thank you so much for getting back to me.  This is very interesting.
From what I can gather from the internet they’re pretty harmless, so I’ll leave them be for now.  Incidentally I tried them on a Lucky Charm but they seem to prefer the dog biscuit..  I think I’ve seen a maximum of 20 at one time, there are 16 in the pic I sent you.  Note also in the pic that there’s one emerging from the baseboard at the top, as well as a juvenile in the lower left.  Right now there are also a couple more making their way towards the biscuit across the bathroom floor, but they still have a yard or so to go.
Interesting also that they are _very_ alert – any motion around them and they go hide in their casings for a good 10 minutes.
Many thanks again, Toby.

Thanks for the update Toby.  We really enjoyed your observational account of the behavior of Case Bearing Moth Larvae.

What's That Bug? does not endorse extermination

Vapourer Eggs

registering
Location: Arcata,Ca USA: N 40.86652 and W -124.08284
February 10, 2011 12:15 am
I want to register on your sight but hitting the register button redirects me to the log in page again – I’ve tried it for a few days now. Am I missing something or are you having a problem? I love insects and the philosophy of your sight – I have a lot of photos and some stories – I can even donate something . Why am I denied WTB? Included here are some photos of the I found this cocoon on one branch and thought some cruel wasp had laid eggs on it. From what I can tell it is a cocoon of the Rusty Tussock Moth (Lymantriidae: Orgyia antiqua) Just guessing at the species but it seems a trademark for the genus. The female lays eggs on her own cocoon after emerging and mating. She is flightless apparently. She must just sit tight and use a pheromone to attract a male. I hope the host plum will manage to weather both its early blooming and the hungry caterpillars that start munching away when spring really does come
thanks,
R.
Signature: Rueka

rusty tussock moth eggs 300x239 Vapourer Eggs

Vapourer Eggs

Dear Reuka,
First, let us apologize on two counts.  First the delay in a response is due to our limited staff.  We are unable to even read all the requests we receive, and when we are very busy we tend to select emails based on the subject lines.  The subject line on your email did not immediately catch our eye.  Additionally, the editorial staff at What’s That Bug? is distinct from the technical staff.  We have an ace webmaster who does not answer any identification requests, and the editorial staff is quite inept at dealing with any website technicalities.  We will promptly forward your registration problem to the webmaster in the hope that he can guide you through the technical problems you are experiencing.  Now that we have finished begging for your forgiveness, we need to tell you we are positively thrilled to post your images of Tussock Moth Eggs from the genus
Orgyia.  We would not be able to positively provide a species identification, and we wonder how you arrived at the Rusty Tussock Moth, a European immigrant, as the correct species.  Other members of the genus Orgyia have a similar method of laying eggs.  We are linking to a FlickR posting of an adult female Rusty Tussock Moth shortly after laying her eggs, and BugGuide has photos of other members of the genus.  Though we do not think it is possible to provide a conclusive identification for your eggs, we would not eliminate the possibility that they belong to the Western Tussock Moth, Orgyia vetusta, which BugGuide does report from CaliforniaThe Rusty Tussock Moth has been reported from Oregon on BugGuide, which indicates the common name Vapourer  for the species, though that common name seems to be accurate for the entire genus. BugGuide also provides this information:  “Caterpillars are generalist feeders on the foliage of flowering trees in the Rosaceae, Fagaceae, Ericaceae, and Salicaceae.“  Plum is in the family Rosaceae, so your identification is entirely possible.

rusty tussock moth eggs rueka 300x222 Vapourer Eggs

Vapourer Eggs

Update from Rueka
Daniel:
Absolutely no  problem on the delay, I hardly felt there was one. It is wonderful to get a response at all and I am most happy for yours. Such detail and such an interest, and curiosity, in the little moth eggs I found, so much more gratifying than, ” Oh that’s kinda gross. What if they hatch or something?”  What is “or something” I wonder? Are caterpillars ominous beings? Am I blind to some lurking danger? Ok, yes there is “Tussockosis” I suppose but I am not planning on eating them or rubbing them in my eyes. I just can’t see putting this very high on my list of things to fear in the world. Now if I were a tree perhaps I would be a little more afraid of them.  As I am not a tree however, I really hope they do hatch so I can photograph that too and maybe get a more precise narrowing to species. The common names for so many of these Orgyians are a complete mess so I am going to avoid them now. I must admit to having  guessed as far as Orgyia antigua goes, the result of a few quick searches (possibly similar to yours) in Wikipedia and Bug Guide and maybe some other places where I compared the assumed range, and feeding habits, and my photographs to theirs.  The photos I found of O. antigua (eggs) looked “dead on” compared to mine and my ignorance of this behavior filled in the blanks. The host plant families (as you noted) seemed to match for O. antigua and rosaceae. Perhaps my identification to species was a bit hasty based on so little. However, There are at least three others in the genus Orgyia common here in N.W. California. One of my books, California Insects (Powell & Hogue, 1976), states that O,vetusta is (or was) restricted to sea coast dune habitats  while a much more common (literally garden variety) O. gulosa (often mistaken for O.vetusta) has a wider range. I am not finding what O. gulosa eats and, at the moment of writing this, I have no internet to reference ( how did we all make it so far before the internet?). Powell and Hogue, unfortunately, do not mention the common host plants for O. vetusta either. My eggs were about 2km inland and in town.  Alternately, I can’t ignore O. pseudotsugata  who may, or may not, be  limited (as larvae) to cocooning on conifers ( Insects of the Pacific North West Haggard &Haggard 2006). This one might be the true “native” but seems the least likely to lay eggs on a plum tree.  Yet, the conifer forests are closer than the dunes by a hair and a leaf. I wonder if they (the caterpillars) travel by silk balloon? What fun that would be. The Insects of the Pacific Northwest  does not even mention O.vetusta or O. gulosa but notes  O.antigua as being “very common” in costal areas et.al. and provides an eerily familiar looking photo of a cluster of cocoon nested eggs. I am glad that we all seem to have an easy way to agree on the genus anyway.  So, all that said, my money is still on O. antigua as the most likely depositor of these lovely cyclopian orbs; especially, considering the hapless plum picked by mum for her progeny to feed upon. Although I am still,clearly, guessing and maybe a little reluctant to let go of my half baked initial ID.  I think that all we can do is wait to see if they make it through the winter and hope that something identifiable emerges that doesn’t disperse itself while I’m sleeping or out stumbling upon, and being distracted, by some other arthropodic curiosity.
Thanks so much for your interest, and for hosting such a wonderfully entertaining and informative website full of great “bugs”.
Entomologically yours,
Rueka.

Thanks for the update Rueka.  We have one additional thought regarding dispersion of the caterpillars.  A caterpillar that is hatched from an egg that was laid on the food plant would have no need to balloon away to another location that might not have any suitable food.  Spiders often balloon away from the site of hatching, but they are predators.  We can’t help but to be reminded of that old adage “The fruit doesn’t fall far from the tree” when it comes to these Tussock Moths.  The female is flightless and cannot fly to a new location, so her eggs will be laid upon the same plant that she fed upon before her metamorphosis.  One begins to wonder how a species with flightless females can ever manage to change its range or location with such limited mobility.

Daniel and co.
I apologize for the reference to ballooning. My tongue was a little in my cheek there on that. I was waxing romantic. Your question regarding the motility of the female is a good one and stumped me a bit too while I thought of all this until I connected it to the Tussock moth “epidemics” that sporadically occur in western coniferous forests.  This is well documented and occurs specifically with O. pseudotsugata and related sub-species. I need not look this up. I have seen it. I had just almost forgotten. The caterpillars literally drop from the trees and travel en-mass over the ground presumably in search of more trees. I think most caterpillars avoid this out of fear of predation but most of the Orgyia are apparently toxic so are left alone by savvy predators.  I would conjecture that they leave the tree they hatch from when the food supply becomes scarce as a result of their over whelming numbers. But as the female is flightless it could also be an innate strategy to drop and crawl along looking for better pastures before metamorphosing.  Of course in most cases when the populations are balanced and there is plenty of food the female would have no reason to leave the tree unless she just felt genetically driven to move on.  I would be surprised if my little eggs are O. pseudotsugata though just because they are in a plum, but I wouldn’t rule it out entirely either. I think the caterpillars will seek out any high place during their final instar and make a cocoon regardless of food sources. I’ve seen them wedged in cracks in walls of concrete after an “epidemic”. However that was long ago and in mountains east of here.  It was the eggs I had not seen before – or had not noticed. I’m so glad I found them. It has been  a nice distraction to figure it out and piece it together a little. I still get to look forward to actually identifying these guys after they hatch. Thanks for the insights. I’ll be sure to let you know what happens.
R.

Oleander Hawkmoth

Kona BUG!!!
Location: Kailua Kona, HI
February 16, 2011 7:26 pm
This was one of the most BEAUTIFUL bugs I have ever seen. It was HUGE to boot.
What is it??
Signature: Mesha

oleander hawkmoth mesha 300x223 Oleander Hawkmoth

Oleander Hawkmoth

Hi Mesha,
This beautiful moth is an Oleander Hawkmoth.  It has become naturalized in Hawaii due to the cultivation of the larval food plant, Oleander.

Lappet Moth from Thailand

Yellow moth
Location: Sri Racha, Chonburi, Thailand
February 12, 2011 10:28 pm
I recently collected some large, hairy yellow striped caterpillars for my grade 3 Science class. One of them has just emerged from its cocoon as a yellow moth about 3 centimeters in length. When I googled ”yellow moth”none of the images showed a moth quite like this one.
Signature: Alan Walmsley

lappet cat thailand1 268x300 Lappet Moth from Thailand

Possibly Lappet Moth Caterpillar

Hi Alan,
Both your caterpillar and the adult moth remind us of the North American Lappet Moths in the family Lasiocampidae, and even more specifically, those in the genus
Phyllodesma.  Here is a comparison photo of a North American caterpillar from BugGuide, and here is an adult moth also from BugGuide.  Though the coloration is quite different, the manner in which the moth holds its underwings in relation to the upper wings is strikingly similar.  Again, this is just a guess, and we hope to be able to provide you with additional information on our own as well as through reader contributions.

lappet moth thailand alan1 268x300 Lappet Moth from Thailand

Lappet Moth

We immediately tried a search of the family in Thailand and found a Moths of Borneo website, and on Plate 6, and there is an image of a mounted specimen identified as a female Trabala ganesha that looks remarkably like your moth.  Here is a photo from the Foto Biodiversitas Indonesia website and an even better match are these images of Trabala vishnou from Thailand on this Taxonomy website: http://193.166.3.2/pub/sci/bio/life/insecta/lepidoptera/ditrysia/bombycoidea/lasiocampidae/trabala/index.html.

lappet moth thailand alan 21 300x194 Lappet Moth from Thailand

Lappet Moth

Gardenia Bee Hawkmoth from Australia

Australian Wasp?
Location: Riverina, NSW, Australia
February 11, 2011 4:22 am
This insect was collecting nector from Agapanthus flowers in exactly the same manner and speed you would expect of a humming bird. Approx 40-50mm (1 1/2” to 2”) long
Signature: Dionne

gardenia bee hawkmoth australia dionne 300x206 Gardenia Bee Hawkmoth from Australia

Gardenia Bee Hawkmoth

Hi Dionne,
Diurnal Moths in the family Sphingidae are frequently called Hummingbird Moths because they are frequently mistaken for the tiny birds while hovering around blossoms to gather nectar.  We believe your moth is a Gardenia Bee Hawkmoth,
Cephonodes kingii, and you can see photos of its entire life cycle on the Butterfly House website of Australian species.

Hawkmoth found at sea off of Angola

Moth?
Location: At sea, off Angola
February 3, 2011 9:34 am
Dear Mr. Bugman,
I met this fellow on an oil tanker today, about 75 miles off the coast of Angola, West Africa. It is 5-6 cm long, and was found on deck just after a thunder storm had gone by.
I believe it is a moth, but what is the full name?
Signature: Geir

sphinx angola ship geir 300x182 Hawkmoth found at sea off of Angola

Unknown Hawkmoth might be Convolvulus Hawkmoth

Hi Geir,
Upon working on this posting, we realized that this is the second time you have sent us an image of a Hawkmoth found at sea off of Angola.  Your first specimen was eventually recognized as a Verdant Hawkmoth.  Hawkmoths in the family Sphingidae are very powerful fliers, and that combined with with wind may have caused both specimens to alight on your oil tanker.  Hopefully, we will be able to eventually provide you with a species identification for this individual as well.

Update thanks to Karl
Hi Daniel and Geir:
Your hawkmoth doesn’t show many distinguishing features and unfortunately the hind wings and abdomen are not visible. However, I think it looks very much like a Convolvulus Hawkmoth (Agrius convolvuli). This is a common and very wide spread species ranging from southern Europe and all of Africa, across southern Asia to Australia (perhaps trying to extend its range further by jumping ship?). Not surprisingly, given its range, both adults and caterpillars show considerable variation, although adult color and pattern are generally fairly drab. That said, the pattern on the thorax, the pale checkering along the trailing edge of the forewing and the banded legs appear consistent in most images. If that isn’t the correct species, I believe Agrius is at least the right genus. Regards.  Karl


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