Hyposmocoma

Hyposmocoma is a genus of moths with more 350 species endemic to the Hawaiian Islands. The genus was first described by Arthur Gardiner Butler in 1881. Most species of Hyposmocoma have plant-based diets, but four species, such as Hyposmocoma molluscivora, eat snails. The caterpillars spin silk, which they then use to capture and eat snails. These are the first caterpillars known to eat snails (or mollusks of any kind).[2]

Hyposmocoma
Scientific classification
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Hyposmocoma

Butler, 1881
Synonyms
  • Bubaloceras Walsingham, 1907
  • Euperissus Butler, 1881
  • Neelysia Walsingham, 1907
  • Hyposmochoma
  • Agonismus Walsingham, 1907
  • Aphthonetus Walsingham, 1907
  • Rhinomactrum Walsingham, 1907
  • Dysphoria Walsingham, 1907
  • Euhyposmocoma Swezey, 1913
  • Hyperdasysella T. B. Fletcher, 1940
  • Hyperdasys Walsingham, 1907
  • Phthoraula Meyrick, 1935
  • Euperissus Butler, 1881
  • Semnoprepia Walsingham, 1907
  • Petrochroa Busck, 1914[1]
  • Diplosara Meyrick, 1883

Some species are amphibious. This trait has evolved at least three times within this genus.[3]

Species

There are a number of undescribed species.

gollark: That has basically never worked because, weirdly enough, people don't seem to be good at dealing with complex long-term consequences when doing sex things.
gollark: Which I disagree with, yes.
gollark: If it became possible to grow babies externally or conveniently move them, that might be an acceptable solution too.
gollark: To rethingy: I think that, regardless of whose body or creation or whatever it is, the person who is actually carrying it and bears the associated issues of having it glued to their circulatory system and such should get to decide whether to keep doing that.
gollark: A fetus contains some of your genes but ~all of its materials come from what the mother eats/processes, so that isn't relevant either.

See also

References

  1. Busck, August (1914). "New Microlepidoptera from Hawaii". Insecutor Inscitiae Menstruus. 2 (7): 104–105.
  2. Rubinoff D, Haines WP (July 2005). "Web-spinning caterpillar stalks snails". Science. 309 (5734): 575. doi:10.1126/science.1110397. PMID 16040699.
  3. Roach, John (July 21, 2005). "Flesh-Eating Caterpillars Discovered in Hawaii". National Geographic News. Archived from the original on July 22, 2011.
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