Guardian Nature School Team Contact Blog Project Noah Facebook Project Noah Twitter

A worldwide community photographing and learning about wildlife

Join Project Noah!
nature school apple icon

Project Noah Nature School visit nature school

Tussock Moth

Halysidota sp.

Description:

Large moth, 3 cm long with orange body hair. Family Erebidae, Arctiinae.

Habitat:

Came to an ultraviolet light in the garden, San Cristobal de Las Casas, 2,200 meters. Pictures 3 through 6 were taken at the parking lights of a Shopping Mall, same city.

1 Species ID Suggestions



Sign in to suggest organism ID

10 Comments

LaurenZarate
LaurenZarate 10 years ago

Thank you Luis, Albert and Rob!
Thank you J, maybe I need to photograph a whole series of these and see what we have going on here.

RobThacker
RobThacker 10 years ago

Beautiful, thank you Lauren

AlbertKang
AlbertKang 10 years ago

Beautiful find!

LuisStevens
LuisStevens 10 years ago

Great find Lauren!

Jacob Gorneau
Jacob Gorneau 10 years ago

Beautiful, Lauren! I don't think geographical speciation will be possible because in New York, there are two species in this genus, and if the larvae are not raised to adults, or if they are not determined by DNA or genitalia, they are indistinguishable. I think the situation only gets more complicated as one travels further into the tropics.

LaurenZarate
LaurenZarate 10 years ago

Thank you Paul and Sckel :)

LaurenZarate
LaurenZarate 10 years ago

Thank you so much bayucca. Too bad they are so difficult to separate. What about geographical speciation for this one?

Sckel
Sckel 10 years ago

I love the patterns

bayucca
bayucca 10 years ago

Erebidae, Arctiinae, Arctiini, Phaegopterina, Halysidota sp.. Some of them can only be separated by DNA/genital dissection, meaning tricky to get closer than genus from only a picture.
http://bugguide.net/node/view/541

Paul Davis
Paul Davis 10 years ago

I would say it is a Tiger Moth -Arctiidae,of some kind .There are similarities with the Painted Tiger Moth(Arachnis picts),but not the same .Great find and lovely shot .

LaurenZarate
Spotted by
LaurenZarate

Chiapas, Mexico

Spotted on Apr 14, 2014
Submitted on Apr 18, 2014

Related Spottings

Banded Tussock moth Halysidota tessellaris Banded Tussock Moth Banded Tussock Moth

Nearby Spottings

House Sparrow Broad-nosed Weevil Crane Fly Caterpillar
Noah Guardians
Noah Sponsors
join Project Noah Team

Join the Project Noah Team