Fri, Jan 24, 8:35 AM CST

Imperial Moth 1

Photography Insects posted on Sep 01, 2008
Open full image in new tab Zoom on image
Close

Hover over top left image to zoom.
Click anywhere to exit.


Members remain the original copyright holder in all their materials here at Renderosity. Use of any of their material inconsistent with the terms and conditions set forth is prohibited and is considered an infringement of the copyrights of the respective holders unless specially stated otherwise.

Description


Nikon 7900 pocket camera, hand-held image. This week has no “official” theme, but it mostly about big colorful Royal Moths, lol. I saw this Moth during daylight so I thought something was wrong since it is a night flyer. It was holding on to the side of a tree and twitching every so often. I approached slowly, hoping to get a shot and when I got close enough, I noticed a couple of ants biting it on the legs. I now was positive something was wrong. I put out a finger and it climbed on. I moved to a better lit area and took a couple of shots then it weakly fluttered off and landed on a Sumac seed head. I took some more shots and then let it be. Apparently it had reached the last stage of its short life and I am sad but sure it did not survive the night. Classification: Kingdom Animalia (Animals) Phylum Arthropoda (Arthropods) Class Insecta (Insects) Order Lepidoptera (Butterflies and Moths) No Taxon (Moths) Superfamily Bombycoidea Family Saturniidae (Giant Silkworm and Royal Moths) Subfamily Ceratocampinae (Royal Moths) Genus Eacles Species imperialis (Imperial Moth) Size: adult wingspan 80-174 mm; female larger than male larva length to 100 mm Identification: Adult: wings yellow, variably spotted and shaded with pinkish, orangish, or purplish-brown; male more heavily marked than female, especially in the south Larva: two variable color forms - green form varies from light green to dark green; brown form varies from orangish to chocolate brown to almost black; pair of spined dorsal tubercles on second and third thoracic segments, and sometimes first few abdominal segments; spiracles prominent, yellowish-white, ringed with black; many long whitish hairs dorsally, and shorter less dense ones laterally; short middorsal horn on ninth and tenth abdominal segments; prolegs larger on tenth segment than on other segments Range: eastern United States plus Ontario and Quebec Habitat: deciduous, mixed, and coniferous forests; adults are nocturnal and come to light Food: Larvae feed on leaves of Bald Cypress, basswood, birch, cedar, elm, hickory, Honeylocust, maple, oak, pine, Sassafras (Sassafras albidum), Sweetgum (Liquidambar styraciflua), sycamore, walnut. Adults do not feed. Life Cycle: Large yellow eggs are laid singly or in groups of 2-5 on both surfaces of host leaves, and take two weeks to hatch. Larvae are solitary feeders. Pupation occurs in underground burrows. It over winters in the soil, as a pupa. Adults emerge before sunrise and mate after midnight the next day. One generation per year in the north; one or two generations in the south Thanks to those who take the time to comment. Lee

Comments (15)


)

tennesseecowgirl

12:31AM | Mon, 01 September 2008

he is going to have to go on a diet after that feast.. :) great shot~

)

flora-crassella

12:51AM | Mon, 01 September 2008

...ein ganz wundervolles Macro - und eine ausführliche Information! Danke!

)

praep

12:57AM | Mon, 01 September 2008

Great capture and infos. Thanks for sharing, Lee.

MrsLubner

1:48AM | Mon, 01 September 2008

You continue to amaze me with the things you come up with. The body on this is so interesting and you managed a perfect pov to show it off!

)

durleybeachbum

2:33AM | Mon, 01 September 2008

A great pic of this lovely creature.

)

Alz2008

2:38AM | Mon, 01 September 2008

Wonderful image, Excellent well done..

)

tizjezzme

10:23AM | Mon, 01 September 2008

Interesting facts on this hairy guy .. excellent macro Lee.

)

bpclarke

11:14AM | Mon, 01 September 2008

What a little beauty! Excellent capture. Bunny

)

MrsRatbag

12:09PM | Mon, 01 September 2008

Great macro!

)

GBCalls

4:18PM | Mon, 01 September 2008

Excellent capture Lee!

)

RobyHermida

7:15PM | Mon, 01 September 2008

Very nice image! Well done

)

skyla824

8:35PM | Mon, 01 September 2008

awesome macro work... wonderful moth... most of the time you won't find these guys in the day. sad to say it was at the end of the life cycle. great find....

)

JDoc

9:10PM | Mon, 01 September 2008

A wonderful shot. JDoc

)

lorandbartho

4:42AM | Sat, 06 September 2008

Fantastic macro!

)

Cgaynor

11:23AM | Sun, 07 September 2008

Amazing!


2 53 0

01
Days
:
15
Hrs
:
24
Mins
:
41
Secs
Premier Release Product
Possimpoble - Poses for Genesis 8 and 8.1 Female
3D Figure Assets
Top-Selling Vendor Sale Item
$13.00 USD 40% Off
$7.80 USD

Privacy Notice

This site uses cookies to deliver the best experience. Our own cookies make user accounts and other features possible. Third-party cookies are used to display relevant ads and to analyze how Renderosity is used. By using our site, you acknowledge that you have read and understood our Terms of Service, including our Cookie Policy and our Privacy Policy.