Transtillaspis neelys

Transtillaspis neelys is a species of moth of the family Tortricidae. It is found in Ecuador in Napo and Tungurahua provinces.

Transtillaspis neelys
Scientific classification
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T. neelys
Binomial name
Transtillaspis neelys
Razowski & Pelz, 2005[1]

The wingspan is 18.5 mm. The ground colour of the forewings is white, preserved in form of numerous dots and spots. The forewings are strigulated (finely streaked) with grey brown and grey along the costa and proximally. The remaining area is cinnamon with browner strigulae (finely streaked). The hindwings are creamy grey, but brownish grey on the periphery.

Etymology

The species name refers to the late recognition of the species and is derived from Latin neelys (meaning lately arrived).[2]

gollark: I mean, it fits with your name.
gollark: There might just not be weather radar data around for the UK.
gollark: The trouble with using the containment class system for tornadoes is that it's not exactly very granular. You're not going to seriously have any Safe-class tornadoes, which means you can just say they're Euclid or Keter.
gollark: No, those are still there, it's an extra thing added on top. http://scp-wiki.wikidot.com/anomaly-classification-system-guide
gollark: There's actually a shiny new containment class/disruption class/risk class system in place now.

References

  1. tortricidae.com
  2. Razowski, J. & Pelz, V., 2005: New species of Gorytvesica Razowski, 1997 and Transtillaspis Razowski, 1987 (Lepidoptera: Tortricidae: Euliini) from Ecuador. Acta Zoologica Cracoviensia 48B (1-2): 57-94. Full article:


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