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Moths of the Amazon and Andes
 
Claudicula Joker
Cyllopoda claudicula  DALMAN, 1823
Family - GEOMETRIDAE
subfamily - STERRHINAE
Tribe - CYLLOPODINI
 
 introduction | habitats | lifecycle | adult behaviour
 

Cyllopoda claudicula ( or related species ), Rio Madre de Dios, 400m, Peru
 
Introduction
 
There are 14 species in the genus Cyllopoda, as reviewed by Lewis & Covell ( 2008 ). The members of the genus are distributed variously across Central & South America.
 
All share a common theme of bright saffron yellow streaks or patches on a black ground colour.
 
Cyllopoda claudicula is found in Peru, Brazil, Bolivia and Chile.
 
Both sexes are similar in appearance, but the females have thin unpectinated antennae, and lack the yellow markings on the thorax.
 
Habitats
 
This species occurs in primary rainforest at altitudes between about 200-800 metes.
 
Lifecycle
 
The lifecycle and larval foodplants are unknown. Other members of the subfamily Sterrhinae, which includes the 'Waves' and 'Mochas' of the Holarctic region, generally have thin green caterpillars, and are disguised as green stems. They rest in typical Geometrid fashion, gripping a stem with the rearmost prolegs and anal claspers, and with their bodies held straight at an angle of about 45° to the stem.
 
Adult behaviour

 

Males are often seen in one's and two's aggregating on sandbanks or dry riverbeds with Xanthiris flaveolata, Atyria albifrons ( both Geometridae ), Seriocastnia amalthea ( Agaristidae ) and other black and yellow diurnal species. This strongly suggests a Mullerian or Batesian mimicry complex, where unrelated genera have evolved a common aposematic colour scheme to advertise their actual or supposed toxicity to insectivorous birds.

 

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