Afdera jimenae

Afdera jimenae is a moth in the family Oecophoridae. It was described by Ogden and Parra in 2001.[1] It is found in Chile,[2] where it has been recorded from the Peninsula of Hualpén.

Afdera jimenae
Scientific classification
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A. jimenae
Binomial name
Afdera jimenae
Ogden & Parra, 2001

The wingspan is 13–16 mm for males and 15–18 mm for females. Both the fore- and hindwings are dark brown. Adults are on wing from October to December in one generation per year.

The larvae feed on fallen leaves of various species of plants, including Cryptocarya alba, Aextoxicon punctatum, Peumus boldus and Lithrea caustica.

Etymology

The species name is dedicated to Jimena C. Ogden, spouse of T. Ogden, one of the authors.[3]

gollark: A dodecahedron's the dual polyhedron of an icosahedron IIRC. But then you have to ask "why an icosahedron", so that doesn't really answer things.
gollark: Not unless you want to enter the farlands.
gollark: These are clearly different colors.
gollark: Ridiculous. The debug overview *clearly* says the biome. You can't fake that.
gollark: There's not an xkcd about there being an xkcd for everything, is there?

References

  1. Beccaloni, George; et al., eds. (February 2005). "Scientific name search". The Global Lepidoptera Names Index. Natural History Museum, London.
  2. Afdera at funet
  3. Ogden, T. Heath & Parra, Luis E., 2001, Revista Chilena de Historia Natural 74: 533-538.


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