Threnosia heminephes

Halved Footman at O'Connor, ACT

Threnosia heminephes at O'Connor, ACT - 8 Apr 2018
Threnosia heminephes at O'Connor, ACT - 8 Apr 2018
Threnosia heminephes at O'Connor, ACT - 8 Apr 2018
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Identification history

Threnosia heminephes 9 Apr 2018 ibaird

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User's notes

Attracted to MV light at night.

5 comments

michaelb wrote:
   10 Apr 2018
Hi Ian
Your photos, as in this one, are often more yellow than others. Is there some reason for this?
ibaird wrote:
   10 Apr 2018
Hi Michael,
The common element in most my recent moth photos (last 6 months) is that they were taken under lighting provided by a mercury vapour light bulb at night. This is unlike (I suspect) most moth photos submitted to CNM which are taken under natural light in the daytime, or at night under a non-mercury vapour light. The yellowing effect you observe may be an artefact of that fact, especially under low light conditions. I don’t think there is much yellowing effect under bright MV light. Or it may be enhanced similarly by using an iPhone under low MV light, as in this case. Most of my moth photos at night have been taken using a Canon D6 camera using a macro lens. In general though (as we discussed with Glenn Cocking recently), colour is not very reliable as a diagnostic feature because it changes so much under ambient conditions in photos, and in any case often naturally varies so much between specimens of the same species. For example, see the three photos above, which are three photos of different specimens of the same species taken under similar lighting conditions.
Cheers, Ian B
donhe wrote:
   11 Apr 2018
Donald Hobern's photo shows a specimen that is more orange than these at
https://www.flickr.com/photos/dhobern/4466196084/
ibaird wrote:
   11 Apr 2018
Yes, orange or yellow colouring seems to be quite common in many Arctiidae; and moreover T. heminephes seems to be one of those species which is naturally quite variable in that respect anyway.
michaelb wrote:
   11 Apr 2018
I was curious because my sighting was shades of grey and brown:
Tiger moth (Arctiidae & Aganaidae) Threnosia heminephes (Halved Footman) on 9 Mar 2015

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  • 4 Abundance
  • 8 Apr 2018 11:31 PM Recorded on
  • ibaird Recorded by

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  • 12mm to 25mm Animal size

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