Ramadasa pavo (Walker, 1856) is a animal in the Erebidae family, order Lepidoptera, kingdom Animalia. Not known to be toxic.

Photo of Ramadasa pavo (Walker, 1856) (Ramadasa pavo (Walker, 1856))
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Ramadasa pavo (Walker, 1856)

Ramadasa pavo (Walker, 1856)

Ramadasa pavo is a moth species with distinct orange abdomens and patterned, differently sized wings in males and females.

Family
Genus
Ramadasa
Order
Lepidoptera
Class
Insecta

About Ramadasa pavo (Walker, 1856)

This species, Ramadasa pavo, has a wingspan of 45 mm in males and 50 mm in females. In male specimens, the forewing has veins 3, 4, and 5 curved at their bases. The membrane within the cell and the interno-median interspace is slightly ridged, a feature that is likely used for stridulation. The head and thorax are covered in mottled grey-brown scales. The frons is marked with bars of orange and metallic blue-black. The abdomen is orange. The basal area of the forewings is greyish, mottled with brown. The costa is orange, and bears five blue-black spots. An oblique medial black line is present, with vinous (wine-colored) suffusion along its outer edge. The outer area of the forewing is pale chestnut. The reniform spot is large and incomplete; it is outlined on its upper and inner sides by black and violet. The upper part of its outer edge is outlined by a black line, which terminates in a red speck, with two black specks positioned below it. A black striga runs from the costa to the reniform spot. Beyond this striga, a blue-black band extends from the costa to vein 6, where it bends outwards as a streak reaching the wing margin. A series of black and white sub-marginal specks is present on the forewing. The hindwings are orange.

Photo: (c) dhfischer, some rights reserved (CC BY), uploaded by dhfischer · cc-by

Taxonomy

Animalia Arthropoda Insecta Lepidoptera Erebidae Ramadasa

More from Erebidae

Sources: GBIF, iNaturalist, Wikipedia, NCBI Taxonomy · Disclaimer

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