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Cinnabar moth; Polilla cinabrio

tyria jacobeae

Description:

This moth is named after the red mineral cinnabar (mercury sulphide, HgS) because of the red patches on its predominantly black wings. Cinnabar moth is about 20mm long and has a wingspan of 32–42 mm. It is a day-flying moth. Like many other brightly coloured moths, it is toxic; the larvae (https://www.projectnoah.org/spottings/16...) use Senecio plants (https://www.projectnoah.org/spottings/86...) as foodplants and extract the powerful toxic cyanide and assimilate it, becoming toxic themselves. The bright colours of both the larvae and the moths act as warning signs, so they are seldom eaten by predators. The cinnabar caterpillars, due to lack of food, can turn cannibalistic.

Habitat:

Spotted at an oak forest. Reserva de la Biosfera del Real Sitio de San Ildefonso-El Espinar

Notes:

Camera Model: NIKON D300. Exposure Time: 1/500 sec.; f/5.6; ISO Speed Rating: 1600. Exposure Bias: 0 EV. Focal Length: 300.0 mm. No Flash fired. DSC_4533

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1 Comment

arlanda
arlanda 4 years ago

Spotting no. 2500

arlanda
Spotted by
arlanda

Castilla y León, Spain

Spotted on Jun 30, 2019
Submitted on Oct 22, 2019

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sint-jacobsvlinder (Tyria jacobaeae) Cinabrio, polilla cinabrio Tyria jacobaeae Cinnabar Caterpillars

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