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Post by mantisboy on Oct 11, 2013 15:49:53 GMT -8
Various insects collected/photographed in Sabah, North Borneo, a lot more to come. All except the yellow moth are from Tabin Wildlife Preserve.
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Post by mantisboy on Oct 11, 2013 16:26:23 GMT -8
More insects
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Post by lepidofrance on Oct 12, 2013 0:17:10 GMT -8
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Post by Borja Gómez on Oct 20, 2013 15:28:41 GMT -8
Hello
I can't help you with the rest, but the cerambycidae for me looks like a Pericycos sp.
Regards
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Post by nomihoudai on Oct 20, 2013 23:19:15 GMT -8
The last one should be Junonia iphita.
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Post by lepidofrance on Oct 23, 2013 0:58:33 GMT -8
The butterfly with green patches on the FW (photo 10) : Polyura athamas (DRURY, 1770). According d'Abrera, the subspecies for Borneo is : P. athamas uraeus ROTHSCHILD. For P. athamas, Pisuth Ek-Amnuay ( Butterflies of Thailand) gives : (Drury, 1773). Photo 6 : Pandita sinope sinope MOORE, 1857 (d'Abrera). Following Ek-Amnuay : MOORE, 1858 Photo 1 : Probably Tanaecia godartii vacillaria (BUTLER, [1869]) Photo 15 : Almost sure : Cirrochroa emalea ravana MOORE, 1857 See : www.pbase.com/lcgoh/image/129246162 (from Danum Valley, Sabah). Photo 14 : Very probably Ypthima fasciata fasciata HEWITSON, 1865 Photo 17: Hesperiidae : probably Potanthus sp. Hoping it will help !
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Post by Adam Cotton on Oct 23, 2013 6:25:35 GMT -8
Inayoshi (http://yutaka.it-n.jp/cha/60080001.html) gives the date of publication of athamas Drury as [1773], which means that the publication was dated prior to 1773, but actually not published until 1773.
Bridges Bibliography states:
"No names were given in Vol. 1; they were supplied in the Index. Hence all new insects figured in Vol. 1 were not named until and date from - 1773."
Thus although Drury published the plates earlier, there were no names associated with them until the index was actually published in 1773.
Adam.
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Post by lepidofrance on Oct 23, 2013 13:51:09 GMT -8
The yellow moth (on the hand) could be a Drepanidae ?
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Post by mantisboy on Oct 23, 2013 17:41:51 GMT -8
The yellow moth (on the hand) could be a Drepanidae ? It could be. I was thinking a Eupterotid, possibly in the genus Eupterote, but I can't find a species that looks identical.
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Post by mantisboy on Oct 23, 2013 17:46:37 GMT -8
Hello I can't help you with the rest, but the cerambycidae for me looks like a Pericycos sp. Regards Thanks, Pericycos princeps seems to be a match if this is correct: www.cerambycoidea.com/forum2.asp?id=11399
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Post by nomihoudai on Oct 23, 2013 22:42:29 GMT -8
The yellow moth is an Eupterotidae, unfortunately I do not know about any proper literature that covers them. The other large moth is a Lasiocampidae of Lebeda genus, maybe L. cognata, don't take this as definite ID as I am no expert in South East Asian Lasiocampidae.
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Post by lepidofrance on Oct 23, 2013 23:17:57 GMT -8
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