Heliotrope Moth
Common name
for a 2.5 centimeter sized tiger moth, with the scientific designation Utetheisa
pulchelloides and belonging to the family Arctiidae. It has a wingspan of up to
3 centimeters. Its forewings are blotched with pinkish-orange and black spots,
whilst the hindwings are white with two brownish-black spots and an irregular
brownish-black margin. Its body is pale greyish-white, with a row of tiny black
spots lining the lower flanks. The adult moth is superficially similar to the
Crotalaria Moth (Utetheisa lotrix), though there are subtle anatomical
differences, and the pattern of pinkish-orange and black spots is different,
with the second row of black spots from the apex of the forewing being somewhat
larger and much more intense in the latter, which also has a reddish-orange spot
at the shoulder or tornus, i.e. the corner of a wing where the outer margin
meets the inner margin, of each forewing. Its caterpillars are black with orange
spots and broken cream lines along the body, and the larvae contain poisonous
alkaloids that discourage predators from eating them. This moth is active by day
fluttering low over the ground like a small butterfly. Its common name derives
from the fact that it feeds on plants from Boraginaceae family, which includes
the Garden Heliotrope (Heliotropium arborescens) and the Indian Heliotrope (Heliotropium
indicum), of which the latter –due to the shape of its coiling inflorescence of
small flower clusters– is in Thai known as
ya nguong chang, i.e. ‘elephant-trunk weed’ (fig.). This moth is found in the Indo-Australian region,
including India,
China, and most of Southeast Asia and Australia. Adults are
known to frequently embark on extensive migratory flights and can reach the most
remote oceanic islands.
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