Maceda is a genus of moths of the family Nolidae first described by Francis Walker in 1857.[1]
Maceda | |
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Maceda mansueta | |
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Genus: | Maceda Walker, 1857
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Description
editPalpi slender, and reaching just above vertex of head. Antennae ciliated. Abdomen with coarse hair on dorsum of proximal segments. Tibia nearly naked. Forewings tuftless. Apex almost rectangular. Male with bar-shaped retinaculum. The end of the cell rounded and dilated with a small patch of ribbed hyaline (glass-like) membrane, probably for stridulation with the spines of the mid-tarsi. Hindwings with stalked veins 3 and 4.[2]
Species
edit- Maceda mansueta Walker, 1858 (Australasia)
- Maceda ignefumosa Warren, 1912 (from New Guinea)
- Maceda rufibasis Warren, 1912 (from New Guinea)
- Maceda ignepicta Hampson, 1914
- Maceda savura Robinson, 1968 (from Fiji)
References
editWikimedia Commons has media related to Maceda (moth).
- ^ De Prins, J. & De Prins, W. (2018). "Maceda Walker, 1857". Afromoths. Retrieved January 20, 2019.
- ^ Hampson, G. F. (1894). The Fauna of British India, Including Ceylon and Burma: Moths Volume II. Taylor and Francis – via Biodiversity Heritage Library.
- Walker, 1858. List of the Specimens of Lepidopterous Insects in the Collection of the British Museum. (13): 1122, 1140
- Papua-Insects.nl
- Savela, Markku (ed.). "Maceda Walker, [1858]". Lepidoptera and Some Other Life Forms. Retrieved January 20, 2019.